Only a rising junior, DeAndre
Ayton is considered the top prospect in high school basketball. He spent
this past weekend at the Top 100 camp and while he did not dominant the
competition he was still named to the All-Star team and had several opponents’
state that he was the toughest player to guard in camp.
photo by NBPA |
Standing at 6’11” with an already chiseled frame and an
athletic grace when he flies up and down the court, Ayton does not want to be
labeled as just a back to the basket player and wants to fancy his game after
the soon to be number one draft pick in Karl
Anthony-Towns.
“Yeah, I picture my game as Karl Towns,” said Ayton. “He
runs the floor, plays defense, and shoots the outside jumper.”
When asked his thoughts on another soon to be top pick in Jahlil Okafor, Ayton noted “He did
alright, I think he could’ve done more. I’m an athletic big. A stretch four. I
don’t like to be in the post that much. I can play in the post, but someone else
can play in the post while I’m outside.”
Both Kentucky and Duke have reached out to Ayton along with
schools such as San Diego State and Kansas. When asked what schools do the best
job developing big men, Ayton quickly said “Coach K and Kentucky, for sure. I
mean Kentucky and Duke do a great job with their bigs. Just them two that’s
it.”
While the recruiting pitches will certainly start to
pick-up, Ayton is not in a rush to make any rash decisions and doesn’t have any
plans to follow the Emmanuel Mudiay
path overseas.
“Where I grew up and since I’ve been in the United States
education is first,” said Ayton. “Got to have something to fall back on if
basketball don’t work out. That’s really on my mind. I just got off my injury
after I broke my patella. That really got me thinking. I spent two to three
months thinking about what I have to fall back on. This was a serious injury.
I’m still thinking about college. Maybe like next year I’ll make a decision. My
family back home don’t really know much about it, but the family I have in the
United States they know a lot and they just tell me to take my time and not
rush. We were going to take our time. Step by step. Get as many visits as we
can.”
Due to his injury, Ayton did not play in front of coaches in
either of the live April recruiting periods; however he did make his return to
the court over Memorial Day weekend. Playing for the Supreme Court AAU team on
the Under Armour circuit, Ayton wasted no time showing observers why he will
most likely be the number one pick in the 2018 NBA Draft as he averaged 16.5
points on 53% shooting to go with 13.5 rebounds per game.
Putting together a string of double-doubles is nothing new
for Ayton. His legend started to grow last July during the LeBron James Skills
Academy and then in the fall he showed up for a scrimmage in the Bahamas
against the University of North Carolina. Going against players four to five
years older, Ayton ended up with 17 points and 18 rebounds.
“At first I didn’t want to play, but then I’m like nah I got
to get better,” said Ayton. “I was getting banged up pretty bad a little bit,
but then I said nah, I’m playing. I’ve got to give these boys buckets. It’s
just all natural. I started making baskets and was doing what I do on the
boards. Just playing my role. Not doing too much. It was tough at first, but it
doesn’t really matter who I’m guarding or who my opponent is and I tell myself
I’m the best on the court and no one is going to guard me. I keep that to
myself and stay with that the whole game.”
Ayton has all of the natural talent in the world, but sometimes
it’s easy to forget how young the talented prospect really is.
“Yeah, I’m easy going,” said Ayton. “I like to meet new
people. I play video games a lot. Spend time with my family a lot. Talk about
the future. What’s going to happen in the long run. I try to keep humble, keep
my head on Earth. It’s great, but being in 10th grade, a rising
junior, I’ve got a lot to think about.”
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