Month: April 2018

From Strongsville to Virginia to Boston to Kent State: Core of Class of 2022 averaged 83 points a game

Kent State’s 2018 recruiting class looks as if it could be the best in school history.

KSU added three players — a freshman post player and two junior college transfers — in the late signing period earlier this month. I’ll wrap that up in the next post. But the five who signed letters of intent in November will be the core of the Class of 2022.

I wrote the coaches of the five players or sportswriters who covered them. Here’s what I learned:

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Hannah Young

5-10 guard-forward from Brookville High School, outside Lynchburg in south central Virginia

Young finished her career with 1,998 points in an overtime loss in the state quarterfinals. She was first team all-state in Virginia Class 3 for the third year in a row, Class 3 player of the year as a junior and second-team all-state as a freshman. Her teams went 97-12 over four years.

As a senior, she averaged 19.5 points, 7.8 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 3.5 steals and 1.3 blocks on a team that went 24-4.

As a junior, Young averaged 19.8 points and 7.9 rebounds as state player of the year in her class. Made 53 percent of her field goals and 43 percent of her three-point shots. Team went 27-2 and reached state semifinals.

As a sophomore, she averaged 18.8 points and 7.3 rebounds on the first team in school history to make the state tournament. As a freshman, she averaged 17 points a game on 21-1 team.

From Ben Cates, who covered her as a sportswriter for the News & Advance in Lynchburg:

“Hannah can post up inside, drive through the lane for high-percentage shots or drain shots from beyond the arc. A fierce competitor who cares for her teammates, she has always displayed a high degree of sportsmanship.

“Not only will Hannah go down as one of the most talented athletes in her school’s history, she will be remembered for her kind spirit and ability to lead effectively while serving as a role model for young students and athletes.”

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Asiah Dingle

5-3 point guard, Archbishop Williams High School, Braintree, Massachusetts (outside Boston)

Dingle averaged 19 points, 4.5 assists, five rebounds and five steals per game during her senior year in leading her team to the state championship. Boston Globe player of the year in Massachusetts. Dingle shot 52 percent on two-point shots and 25 percent on three-pointers.

She scored more than 1,500 points in her career, and her team won three state championships in four years.

In her junior year, she was the only 11th grader on the Globe’s all-scholastic team and averaged 20 points, six rebounds, five assists and five steals a game.

From her coach, Matt Mahoney:

“Asiah was the most dynamic player in the state. She had the ability to take over a game at any time offensively and defensively. As one sportswriter said at the state championship game, she has a smile on her face like she was in her backyard playing pickup. She just loves to play the game.”

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Lindsey Thall

6-2 forward, Strongsville (Ohio) High School

Thall averaged 13.5 points, 7.0 rebounds. 1.6 blocks, 1.6 assists and 1.7 steals on team that went 21-5 and reached regional finals for the second time in school history. She led her team in three-point baskets (36) and three-point percentage (36.2) and overall shot 39 percent from the field. She was on Plain Dealer’s all-area first team, was third-team all-district, honorable mention all-state.

As a junior, Thall averaged 15 points, 8.3 rebounds and 3.1 blocks and once blocked 14 shots during a game. She was listed as a three-star recruit by ESPN. Her mother, Dawn, is one of the leading scorers in Strongsville basketball history.

From her coach, Jeff Eicher:

“Kent State is not only getting an outstanding basketball player but, more importantly, an outstanding individual. Besides Lindsey’s skills on the court, her positive leadership qualities were the main reason we had one of the best season’s in school history.

“She is a versatile player who can pass very well and shoot the three-point shot.  Inside she is a great rebounder and has the instincts and timing to block shots. As a leader, she makes everyone feel they have an important role on the team. Lindsey is a program changer. I can’t wait to see what she accomplishes at Kent.”

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Annie Pavlansky

5-11 guard-forward, Lakeview High School, Cortland (Ohio)

Pavlansky averaged 21.4 points, 8.8 rebounds and 1.8 assists a game in her senior year. She had a 36 percent field goal shooting percentage and 85 percent free throw percentage on team that went 9-13. Pavlansky was all-state third team her senior year, second team her sophomore year, and honorable mention as a junior, when she was hurt half the season.
She averaged 19.1 points as a junior, 15.8 as a sophomore, 13.1 as a freshman, with rebounding average between 8 and 9 every year. She has reputation as an excellent shooter.
From her coach, Jason Senedak (via Warren Tribune sportswriter John Vargo):

“Annie is the most deserving athlete I have ever had the privilege of coaching. Her work ethic can only be overshadowed by her willingness to be the best teammate possible.

“In her senior year, she was the sole focus of the opposing team’s defensive strategies. Annie handled that burden with great maturity and strength. Her leadership helped bring a very young core of varsity athletes into the game of basketball. Throughout this season, the team looked to Annie for everything, and she always delivered her best as an athlete and person.

“I could always depend on her to set the best example as a leader. She is one of the best students that has passed through Lakeview High School.”

 

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Mariah “Ri” Modkins

5-foot point guard, Solon (Ohio) High School

Modkins averaged 9.6 points, 2.6 rebounds, 4.6 assists and 2.3 steals on a team that went 26-3 and lost in the state finals by four points. The Comets averaged 22.2 points more than their opponents, so, the writer who covered them said, Modkins and the other starters rarely played a lot in the fourth quarter.

Modkins played with four other senior starters, including all-stater Valencia Myers, who is bound for Florida State. So her role was definitely not as a scorer.

From Tony Lang, who covered her as sports editor of the Solon Times:

“Mariah Modkins is a kinetic guard who provides relentless effort in all facets of the game. She has the ball-handling skills to break ankles and create space for her go-to running floater, she shoots the three with confidence and her on-ball defense produces turnovers time and time again.

“She draws charges, anticipates passing lanes and simply competes at a high level from start to finish. And perhaps most notable, Modkins understands and accepts her ever-changing role. She doesn’t care about individual spotlight. She does whatever it takes to help her team win.”

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When the class was announced in November, I did two long posts on how the Flashes recruited these five players. Here’s the post on Young and Dingle, and the one on Thall, Pavlansky and Modkins.

A first look at the 2018-19 Flashes: Very young, very different, very Starkey

The biggest thing we know about next year’s women’s basketball team is it will be very different from this year’s.

Three starters are gone, including Jordan Korinek, the Flashes’ leading scorer and one of the top players in Kent State history. So is McKenna Stephens, who started with Korinek at forward for most of the last three years,

Six freshmen are incoming, in what looks like the best recruiting class in school history.

It will be the first true Todd Starkey team. The coach inherited a complete roster his first season and won a MAC East championship with it. Every starter in the 2017-18 season was a Danny O’Banion recruit; none of the five freshmen Starkey’s staff brought in averaged more than 10 minutes a game.

That sure won’t be true next year.

I’m guessing three freshmen will start.

So the question of the next season is simple: Can Kent State win with freshmen, even very good freshmen?

First, let’s talk about the key players returning. They’re a solid base but can’t carry the team by themselves. Key people are:

  • Senior guard Alexa Golden, who has started 76 games in her three years at Kent. You think of Golden as a defensive specialist, and that was her role for her first two years. She started to show more scoring at the end of her sophomore year (she led the team in three-point percentage) and in non-conference play this season, when she averaged just over 9 points a game. But she scored nine or more only three times in KSU’s 18 conference games. Part of that was because of her role shifted when Megan Carter returned to the lineup; part was the fact Golden played the last half of the season was severe shin splints. Golden is a critical piece for the 2018-19 team; she’ll likely be the main senior leader and anchor the defense. She also is a tenacious and determined rebounder for a 5-9 guard.
  • Junior guard Megan Carter, the team’s second-leading scorer (10.2 points per game) and the first player off the bench this season. Carter was the team’s go-to perimeter player after she became eligible second semester. At times she was very good; at times she would miss 10 shots in a game.
  • Junior guard Ali Poole, probably KSU’s most improved player this season. Poole was the only new starter on this season’s team and averaged 7.1 points per game, four points more than her freshman year. Her defensive was markedly better. Poole, like Carter, was a big scorer in high school.

Two other key returnees:

  • Senior wing Tyra James, KSU’s third-leading scorer two years ago as a sophomore. James missed all of 2016-17 with a injury and barely played in the conference season until the last five games, when she averaged more than 20 minutes and eight points a game. James can have turnover problems and a tendency to try too hard to make things happen
  • Senior Merissa Barber-Smith, the teams ‘s tallest player at 6-4. Barber-Smith missed the last 15 games of the season with a medical issue but told me late in the season that she planned to return. At times during her junior year she could be dominant in rebounding and defense and seems to play her best against tall and talented opponents. She’s the only post player returning with any experience. She’s never been a big scorer in college or high school.

Of the five freshmen who finished the season (one left after the end of the semester), point guard Erin Thames played the most minutes — 9.7 a game. But two of the incoming freshmen play the point, including the player of the year in Massachusetts. So Thames will have lots of competition for playing time. I still think the best of the class is Monique Smith, a 5-11 forward-guard from San Diego who averaged a double-double her last three years in high school.

As for the incoming freshmen:

  • Start with point guard Asiah Dingle, the Boston Globe’s player of the year in Massachusetts. She’s 5-3 (I’ve seen her listed up to 5-5) and helped her team to three state championships in four years. 19.5 points a game, 5 assists, 5 rebounds, 5 steals. “Most dynamic player in the state,” her coach wrote me.
  • Perhaps just as good is 5-10 guard Hannah Young, who was Virginia’s Class 3 player of the year in 2016-17. She was first-team all-state for three years, second-team as a freshman and never averaged less than 17 points a game.
  • Annie Pavlansky, a 5-11 guard-forward from Lakeview High School in Cortland. All-state third team as a senior, second team as a sophomore (she was hurt her junior year). Averaged 21 points as a senior, 19 as a junior and about nine rebounds a game throughout high school.
  • Lindsey Thall, a 6-2 forward from Strongsville whose highlight film was as much three-point shots as inside moves. Strong rebounder and shot blocker (once blocked 14 shots in a game). “A program changer,” her coach says. With Korinek and Stephens graduating, Flashes will need her.
  • Mariah “Ri” Modkins, a 5-foot point guard from Solon whose high school team was one of the best in the state. She averaged about 9.6 points and 4.6 assists as a senior and is tough on-the-ball defender. 

The Flashes added two players in the April signing period — 6-2 post player Ijah Fletcher from Hicksville High School on Long Island and junior college transfer Jessee Wallis, a 5-10 guard from Walters State Community College, a perennial junior college power in Tennessee. Fletcher averaged about 21 points a game her senior year; Wallis was a 1,000-point scorer in high school. It’s very difficult to evaluate April signees; the best players usually commit before their senior years. I’ll have more on Fletcher and Wallis when I round up the senior-year performances of the recruiting class.

So here’s the roster. I’d think someone will be transferring out because I count 16 scholarship players, and the team can have 15 scholarships. I haven’t heard anything official; the new roster is posted at the start of summer, when the freshmen arrive.

POST: 6-4 senior Merissa Barber-Smith;  6-3 sophomore Amanda Sape, who scored one point as a freshman; 6-2 freshman Lindsey Thall; 6-2 freshman Ijah Fletcher.

GUARD-FORWARD: 6-1 senior Tyra James, 6-foot junior Ali Poole, 5-11 sophomore Monique Smith, 5-11 freshman Annie Pavlansky, 5-10 freshman Hannah Young, 5-10 junior Jessee Wallis. (I’ll explain the “guard-forward” in a minute.)

SHOOTING GUARD: 5-9 senior Alexa Golden, 5-7 junior Megan Carter, 5-10 sophomore Kasey Toles, 5-11 sophomore walk-on Margaux Eibel.

POINT GUARD: 5-6 sophomore Erin Thames, 5-3 freshman Asiah Dingle, 5-foot freshman Mariah Modkins.

By class, it’s:

  • Freshmen (6): Thall, Fletcher, Young, Pavlansky, Dingle, Modkins.
  • Sophomores (5): Sape, Smith, Toles, Thames, Eibel.
  • Juniors (3): Poole, Carter, Wallis.
  • Seniors (3): Golden, James, Barber-Smith.

So what kind of team will next year’s Flashes be (besides very young)?

Without Korinek, it certainly will look very different on the court. She averaged 20 points a game; Kent’s offense went through her. There’s nobody remotely like that on next year’s roster. Even Thall is a very different kind of player.

That’s why I emphasized “guard-forward,” which may be more than the traditional wing. All of the players I listed have some size and most played some post in high school (though it’s a lot easier to be a 5-10 forward in high school than college). All have solid rebounding statistics at some point in their career.

I can see the team playing, at least some of the time, what coaches call a “four-out” — a post and four players on the perimeter. Ohio has played that kind of offense successfully for several seasons.

The team has a lot more outside shooters; it — I hope — is likely to move out of last in the MAC in three-point shooting.

I think the team will have considerably more speed and quicker hands on defense.

I’m sure Starkey and his staff have been retooling his offense and defense to reflect the new personnel.

A contender? Unlikely. A .500 team? Maybe. Better than this year’s 13-19 record. Maybe. With so much new, it’s impossible to guess.

The team is probably at least a year away. But Starkey is so high on the freshmen (as are their high school coaches) that I’m looking forward to seeing what will happen next November.