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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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Saturday / December 14.
  • The Zion Williamson Sweepstakes will extend into the spring.

    Williamson, the 6-foot-5 forward from Spartanburg (S.C.) Day, will sign his National Letter of Intent in the spring, his stepfather told ZAGSBLOG Thursday morning.

    “Yes,” Lee Anderson said.

    The early signing period ended Wednesday, and the late signing period runs April 11-May 16.

    Ranked the No. 2 prospect on the 2018 ESPN 100, Williamson is considering Duke, Kentucky, Kansas, North Carolina, Clemson and South Carolina.

    “I know Signing Day is next month, and, hey, if I’m ready I’ll definitely sign,” Williamson wrote in his USA Today blog last month. “But I don’t want to feel rushed by a date so I’m just seeing how everything goes.

    “My heart has to tell me which school I am supposed to be at.

    Moses Brown, the 7-foot-2 senior big man from Archbishop Molloy High School and the New Heights AAU program, has cut Louisville from his list in the wake of the FBI investigation into bribery in college basketball and is now focusing on Maryland and UCLA.

    Brown visited Maryland last weekend and will trip to UCLA the weekend of Oct. 28 as will Zion Williamson and Darius Garland.

    “They’re out,” Brown told ESPN’s Jeff Borzello in reference to Louisville at the USA Basketball minicamp in Colorado Springs, Colo. “I didn’t want to be associated with anything negative. I really don’t need that.”

    Brown had visited Louisville last month, but Louisville head coach Rick Pitino and assistants Kenny Johnson and Jordan Fair were all placed on administrative leave after the FBI complaint revealed Adidas and Louisville allegedly were set to pay the family of Brian Bowen $100,000 in return for Bowen’s commitment to Louisville and his subsequent signing with Adidas when he turned pro. (For more, read our New York Times story here.)

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