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Adam Zagoria covers basketball at all levels. He is the author of two books and an award-winning journalist whose articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, SLAM, Sheridan Hoops, Sports Illustrated, Basketball Times and in newspapers nationwide.
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Friday / November 22.
  • WASHINGTON, D.C. – Lance Stephenson may be the most talented player at the USA U18 National Team Trials, but he is also the most enigmatic.

    The 6-foot-5, 200-pound Stephenson has mixed brilliant play, especially on the offensive end, with scowls, flashes of frustration and behavior that is viewed by the coaches as antithetical to the team concept.

    On one occasion during the trials at the Verizon Center, head coach Bob McKillop pulled Stephenson aside in the middle of a scrimmage — in full view of players, coaches and the media — and whispered firmly into his ear. On another, McKillop unloaded a series of expletives in Stephenson’s face after he hissed at one of his teammates during a drill.

    “I think he has a chance to be a superb, superb player,” said McKillop, the Davidson coach. “A lot of times guys with his level of talent don’t have the competitive fire that he has. But the competitive fire burns other ways, too, and if he can channel that competitive fire completely into his performance, he can be very special.” 

    Nolan Dennis has committed to Memphis, according to Evan Daniels of Scout.com.

    The 6-foot-5, 180-pound Texas native chose the Tigers over a slew of schools, including Texas, Kansas, UCLA and North Carolina.

    He is the Tigers’ first commit from the Class of 2009, a class that Memphis hopes will include four or five of the top prep players in America.

    “I think it’s because of coach (John) Calipari,” his mother, Carol Dennis, told the Memphis Commercial Appeal. “He’s a great man, great coach and great human being, period. He brought the best out, as far as my son felt, when he went to his camp. He just fell in love with (Calipari) and the style, the fit of the game and the way he coaches.”

    Dominic Cheek has WASHINGTON, D.C. – Dominic Cheek just made the first cut for the USA U18 national team that will head to Formosa, Argentina later this month, so he is not really focusing on his list of colleges just yet.

    Still, Cheek said “Villanova is showing me the most love” and added that he plans to cut his list to about 10 after Argentina.

    “Villanova (is) recruiting me the hardest. (Villanova) showing me the most love,” the 6-foot-5 Cheek, a rising senior wing at St. Anthony in Jersey City, said Thursday after the morning session at the Verizon Center. “They stuck with me since Day One.”

    A slew of schools are after Cheek, the No. 4 shooting guard and No. 11 recruit in the Class of 2009. He is a long, athletic player who can shoot accurately from outside and is also a stellar defender.

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – The USA U18 team cut three players Wednesday night, and they weren’t much of a surprise. Uncommitted forward Ari Stewart of Marietta, Ga.; Georgetown commit Hollis Thompson, a 6-6 forward out of Los Angeles Loyola; and Tennessee commit Kenny Hall, a 6-8 big man out of Stone Mountain Ga. Redan, were let go, paring the roster to 14. Reeves Nelson,  a 6-7 UCLA commit from Modesto (Ca.) High, is injured and out of the mix as well. Head coach Bob McKillop said they will keep that number until July 7, when two more players will be cut.

    New York area players Lance Stephenson, Kemba Walker and Dominic Cheek all seem locks to make the team, barring some unforseen circumstances.

    Lance is telling reporters here that his top three schools are Kansas, Memphis and Tennessee, which is different from the list his father recently gave out of Kansas, USC, UCLA and maybe St. John’s.

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