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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 / January 11.
  • By ADAM ZAGORIA

    Josiah James, the 6-foot-5 combo guard from Charleston (S.C.) Porter-Gaud School, committed to Rick Barnes and Tennessee on Wednesday.

    James chose the Vols over Clemson and Duke.

    “Yes, I’m committing to the University of Tennessee,” he wrote in MoultrieNews.com.

    James said he’s remaining loyal to the coach who offered him a scholarship when he was 13.

    “Loyalty is something that goes deep with me. Relationships are everything,” he wrote. “When we got to Tennessee for my official visit, the whole coaching staff and all the players were waiting to meet me and my family. We played pickup with some of the team one morning while the coaches were still at breakfast. Lamonte Turner was guarding me and I remember I got by him one time but I got fouled on the layup. He pulled me aside and showed me a little trick to get more space at the rim. He didn’t have to do that. Little things like that matter to me, man.

    “Coach Barnes sat in the gym with me for about an hour after. When I get tired, I start to sling the ball instead of having it in the high pocket. He noticed that right away and tried to help me fix it. I swear Tennessee has the best player development in the country. What other coach will sit in the gym with me for an hour and point out my weaknesses instead of just talking me up? That really stuck out to me on my visit. It wasn’t just a show.”

    He explained why he chose the Vols over Duke and Clemson.

    “It really isn’t anything against Duke or Clemson,” he wrote. “They both were great. Really great. But people always said when you know, you’ll know. And I knew. I already knew in my heart so I didn’t think it was fair to waste anybody’s time. That wouldn’t be a cool move on my part.”

    James is a physical guard who likes to get to the hoop. He also is noted for excelling in transition as he displays great court vision. His length is another attribute that stands out away from other guards. His length helps on the defensive end as he plays great on ball defense.

    By ADAM ZAGORIA

    WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — During an open gym Thursday afternoon at Archbishop Stepinac High School, A.J. Griffin dribbled up court, spun around a defender above the foul line and drained a 12-foot jumper.

    As a half dozen Division 1 head and assistant coaches sat watching on the sideline, one said to me, “He could help us right now.”

    The 6-foot-7, 196-pound Griffin is only a sophomore but he and teammate R.J. Davis, a Class of 2020 point guard, are already drawing a parade of coaches to Stepinac, the reigning New York State Federation champs. And assuming both players stay there until graduation, that will be the case for the next couple of years.

    “At the age he’s at, his skillset, his mindset is definitely more mature than what his actual age puts him at,” Stepinac coach Pat Massaroni said of Griffin, who looks like a man among boys already. “He has unbelievable upside. To be skilled as he is, not only shooting the ball at the two, but being able to back guys down, finish at the rim,, defend, rebound, deflect passes, he’s got high-major, pro-level upside.”

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