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Kansas Basketball's 5-Star Commit Catches Attention on Wednesday
Kansas Basketball's 5-Star Commit Catches Attention on Wednesday

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Kansas Basketball's 5-Star Commit Catches Attention on Wednesday

Kansas Basketball's 5-Star Commit Catches Attention on Wednesday originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Kansas entered the NCAA Tournament in March as a No. 7 seed in the West Region but fell to No. 10 seed Arkansas, 79-72, in the first round, ending a campaign that fell short of preseason expectations (21-13 overall, 11-9 in Big 12). Advertisement Following the loss to Arkansas, Bill Self's program saw a lot of turnover, leaving the Jayhawks with only a handful of returners slated to suit up in 2025-26. Thus, the staff made it clear that freshmen would be asked to fill significant roles next fall. Among the newcomers is five-star high school recruit Darryn Peterson. On Wednesday, Kansas men's basketball took to X to post a brief video clip of Peterson working out in the Allen Fieldhouse facility with the caption,"Your morning fix → Darryn Peterson. Kansas sure does look good on him. Rock Chalk 🔴🔵 ". Within minutes, the post garnered thousands of views and comments. Advertisement "So excited to watch this years team run the big 12 🔥🔥😤," replied one user. "Yes Fast Tempo on offense and in your face athletic defense. #rockchalk," said another fan. "We finally have a team that can make a three?," one other fan joked. "The passing. SO FREAKING BEAUTIFUL," commented another user. "Half this spoiled fanbase better be writing some apology's to the goat come November," another commenter replied. Another fan simply responded, "NPOY." McDonald's All American West guard Darryn Peterson (22) and McDonald's All American East forward Cameron Boozer (12).Pamela Smith-Imagn Images A 6-foot-5, 195-pound combo guard out of Prolific Prep (Napa, Calif.), Peterson emerged as the No. 1 prospect in the 2025 class, per 247Sports. As a senior at Prolific Prep, he averaged 23.1 points, 9.1 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 2.9 steals per game, earning McDonald's All-American honors in April 2025. Advertisement On November 1, 2024, Peterson announced his commitment to Kansas, selecting Bill Self's program over finalists Kansas State, Ohio State and USC. Related: Duke Announces Exciting News on Cameron Boozer's Dad This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 5, 2025, where it first appeared.

Kansas hires former Brooklyn Nets coach Jacque Vaughn as assistant on Bill Self's staff
Kansas hires former Brooklyn Nets coach Jacque Vaughn as assistant on Bill Self's staff

New York Times

time21-05-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Kansas hires former Brooklyn Nets coach Jacque Vaughn as assistant on Bill Self's staff

Kansas is following the recent trend of college programs bringing on a coach from the NBA, only the Jayhawks have landed one as an assistant. Former KU point guard Jacque Vaughn, who has three head coaching stints in the NBA, most recently with the Brooklyn Nets from 2022 to '24, has agreed to join Bill Self's staff at Kansas, replacing top assistant Norm Roberts, who announced his retirement earlier this month. Advertisement 'We wanted somebody that was different than what we are when Norm left,' Self told The Athletic. 'And (assistant Chase Buford) obviously has an NBA background, coaching for three franchises and winning the NDL twice in Australia. But I thought we could do more from an NBA standpoint, and who better than a KU alum that's a beloved player here? Won a world championship with the Spurs, and oh yes, been an assistant to coach (Gregg) Popovich and a NBA three-time head coach. 'So yeah, we're fired up about Jacque. He wants to be here, he's excited about it. We think he helps us Day 1 in all areas, not just on the floor.' Self also sees Vaughn as a mentor for incoming five-star guard Darryn Peterson, who is considered the favorite to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. Vaughn was a two-time All-American at Kansas, playing on one of KU's greatest teams ever his senior season in 1996-97. He played 12 seasons in the NBA, winning a title with the San Antonio Spurs in 2007. After retiring with the Spurs in 2009, he moved into a coaching role with the team. He quickly earned an opportunity as a head coach in 2012 with the Orlando Magic but was fired after three seasons there. In Brooklyn, Vaughn eventually became Kenny Atkinson's top assistant and was named interim head coach in March 2020 after Atkinson stepped down. Vaughn stayed with the Nets when they hired Steve Nash in 2020, moving back to an assistant role, then took back over as interim head coach in 2022 after Nash and the Nets agreed to part ways. He coached the Nets to a playoff appearance that season and then was fired midway through the 2023-24 season amid a 21-33 start. Vaughn went 71-68 with the Nets, who are 37-73 since he was fired. The NBA-to-college pathway has been popular among coaches lately. Former Phoenix Suns assistant Kevin Young took BYU to the Sweet 16 in his first year in charge. This spring, Utah (Alex Jensen) and Florida State (Luke Loucks) both hired head coaches off NBA benches.

AJ Dybantsa's impact on Big 12? Can Kevin Willard win at Villanova? College basketball mailbag
AJ Dybantsa's impact on Big 12? Can Kevin Willard win at Villanova? College basketball mailbag

New York Times

time13-05-2025

  • Sport
  • New York Times

AJ Dybantsa's impact on Big 12? Can Kevin Willard win at Villanova? College basketball mailbag

We talked SEC and Big East in the first of of our two-part mailbag. Let's dive into the Big 12, Kansas, Michigan State, the new Pac-12 and more in Part 2. (Note: Submitted questions have been lightly edited for clarity and length.) How much does adding AJ Dybantsa affect BYU and the rest of the Big 12? — Sarah K. Let's establish a couple of realities. First, the reigning Big 12 player of the year, JT Toppin of Texas Tech, is coming back for the 2025-26 season. Second, there is always an adjustment period, no matter how talented you are, when you move from high school to college or college to the pros. Advertisement Dybantsa, one of the top recruits nationally and a heralded NBA prospect, has drawn a lot of intrigue since he got a reported $7 million in name, image and likeness money to pick BYU. (In April, Dybantsa told a fan that the $7 million payday is a 'false rumor.') He is obviously very good … but is he even the best player in the 2025 class? At the Hoop Summit in April, the World Team had no answer for Cam Boozer, the former No. 1 player in the 2025 class who is headed to Duke. Dybantsa scored 24 points in Team USA's 124-114 overtime win; Boozer had 22, plus 16 rebounds. What happens when Dybantsa is the top player on the scouting report? And don't forget that Dybantsa won't be the only superstar rookie in the Big 12: Kansas is bringing in guard Darryn Peterson, who 247Sports currently rates as the top recruit in the country. Dybantsa is going to have plenty of competition for both conference and national freshman of the year honors, which benefits us, the people who love watching good basketball. He'll also play alongside All-Big 12 selection Richie Saunders, who has announced he'll be back. But given Toppin's return and how much talent Houston is bringing in, plus the fact that both of those programs made deep runs in the NCAA Tournament, I don't see BYU finishing higher than third in the Big 12 … which is exactly where the Cougars were at the end of the 2024-25 season. But it is plausible that they make a deep postseason run — they lost in the Sweet 16 to Alabama this year — when matched up with teams that aren't as familiar with guarding Dybantsa. Peterson should help KU with that, too. A deep run from either (or both!) of these teams could ultimately help the Big 12 recapture the claim as the best men's college basketball conference. — Lindsay Schnell Do you think Kevin Willard can bring Villanova back to the top of the Big East? National contender status? — Brian S. Yes, and we'll see. I'm not quite willing to go there yet on the second one — at least at the level of consistency of what Jay Wright reached — but I do think hiring Willard was a lot smarter than going with an unproven assistant. I'm always wary of in-the-family hires. Some have gone brilliantly. Tom Izzo, Mark Few, Matt Painter, Jon Scheyer (on track). But others have really crashed. Advertisement When you're one of the best programs in the sport, why limit yourself to one or two candidates when theoretically you should be able to attract some awesome candidates? Willard made sense because he had success in the Big East at one of the toughest places to win (Seton Hall), and then he was off to a solid start at Maryland. I'm not sure he's Wright, but the floor is a lot higher than hiring a Kyle Neptune. Villanova has been willing to put resources — i.e., NIL funds — toward basketball, and Willard has done a nice job of roster building at his past two stops. The league has more depth at the top than when Wright had it rolling, so maybe how Villanova is judged should be slightly different. But if Villanova can consistently be a top-four team in the league with a league championship every four or five years, then that should be considered a success. And a league winner is usually going to be a national title contender. — CJ Moore How does Michigan State keep up after the losses of Tre Holloman and Jase Richardson? Tom Izzo doesn't usually get big talent from the portal, so I feel like we're stuck. — Kaiden B. Losing Richardson hurts much more than Holloman, IMO. By season's end, Richardson was Sparty's best player, and I thought there was a decent chance that he might run things back in East Lansing for a second season. Instead, with a first-round landing spot seemingly guaranteed, Richardson is testing his luck, and then Holloman's departure only exacerbated MSU's backcourt situation. So far, the only true guard Izzo has added is journeyman Trey Fort (Samford), who at least has high-major experience from his lone season at Mississippi State. Fort brings much-needed scoring and shooting punch — he shot 37.9 percent from 3 last season on five attempts per game — but he's not a true point guard. Fellow perimeter addition Kaleb Glenn (Florida Atlantic) is more of a wing, meanwhile, and even less suited to run MSU's offense. If Fort had to serve as a temporary lead ballhandler, he probably could. But you'd rather find someone a bit more natural at creating behind Jeremy Fears Jr., who is going to almost singularly have the keys to Izzo's offense. Even with Kur Teng returning, I'd be surprised if Izzo doesn't add at least one more ballhandling guard who can set up his offense when Fears needs a breather. As for Michigan State's outlook at large, though? I pegged the Spartans as a mid-tier Big Ten team last season, before Richardson's emergence and the team's incredible depth made clear they could play above that level. That might be more what reality is for this team. Purdue and Michigan already look like the clear Big Ten favorites, with Iowa and Illinois also looking dangerous. While I'm a big fan of Coen Carr, Jaxon Kohler and Fears, the two things that made MSU special this season — a dynamic lead guard and depth — just don't seem like they'll be there. Maybe some late portal additions change that, but this should only underscore just how special a season Michigan State just had. — Brendan Marks Advertisement From a basketball perspective, which school would be a great addition to the Revised Pac-12: Another Mountain West team, Saint Mary's, University of San Francisco, UC Irvine or another school? — Z77Pwjpycd As both a Pac-12 alum and someone constantly trying to look at the glass half full, I was holding out hope that UNLV would join the Pac-12 2.0. The league is already slated to be excellent in men's basketball, with programs like Gonzaga, Colorado State, Boise State, San Diego State and Utah State set to join Oregon State and Washington State. (This is also a pretty good women's basketball conference.) Of the schools you listed as a possible pickup, Saint Mary's has been the most consistent. The issue is that if the Pac-12 wants to be taken seriously, it can't have teams playing in high school gyms, which is essentially where Saint Mary's plays (I understand this is part of the Gaels' charm, but it's a branding issue). New Mexico would be a solid choice from a men's basketball perspective, but given how important football is, you can't invite a school that's gone a combined 16-39 the past five years. Now, is this pipe dream given that UNLV is getting as much as $24 million to stay in the MWC when other schools were fleeing? Technically, yes. But I'm going to hold out hope. In the history of realignment, things that once seemed impossible are now a reality. (I will never have a truly satisfactory answer to, 'Why is Nebraska in the Big Ten instead of the Big 12?') With the way things have gone, it seems like only a matter of months before we have another major shakeup in the college sports conference landscape — maybe then that $24 million becomes irrelevant. — Schnell I saw recently on ESPN that Kansas was projected to be a 7-seed again. Additionally, I haven't seen anybody discussing it as a legitimate Elite Eight threat, let alone a title threat. Is this an overreaction to KU underachieving in the past two years? Or is the roster that it built around Darryn Peterson simply not good enough to contend? — Sam W. Bracketology in April and May is hilarious. Just like Top 25s this time of year, it's all guesswork, and there are a lot of picks that will look dumb in about seven months. But yes, you're right in both regards: This is probably a slight overreaction to what KU has been the past two years, and also on paper, the portal class looks slightly underwhelming. I think not just chasing names has been a sign of progress when it comes to the portal class. This is Bill Self approaching the portal more like Duke's Scheyer did last year. Scheyer got some criticism because his portal additions were not ranked highly on any portal lists, but he was intentional in finding players who he thought fit around Cooper Flagg, and he also wanted positional size. That approach ended up working out great, and an addition like Sion James was one of the steals of the 2024 portal cycle. KU's grade is still incomplete because Self still needs to add one or two more players. But what's apparent is that athleticism/ability to guard mattered more this time around than just trying to add scoring/top names on a list. He got a shooter in Jayden Dawson; he got a point guard/secondary handler who can guard and also generate paint touches in Melvin Council Jr., which addressed a weakness from this past year; and then he got a Swiss Army knife kind of wing in Tre White, whose size (6-foot-7) and position 3/4 type have been really important pieces on Self's best teams. The Jayhawks could still use another scorer, and they had Dame Sarr on campus last week. A 6-7 shooting guard, Sarr is one of the most talented unsigned players left who are planning to play college hoops next season. He would allow Self to lean into playing two to three big wings at a time, mimicking the approach in 2022-23, which is the last time KU was a No. 1 seed. KU could also still be in the mix for former Texas Tech wing Darrion Williams, who is in the portal but also considering the NBA. If Self lands either of those players, I'd likely bump KU into the top 10. So let's wait to see what the final product looks like, but you are correct to assume that just like KU's preseason ranking is usually inflated because of past success, there's a hint of recency bias right now and also the hesitancy that comes with ranking a team whose best player is someone we haven't seen play at this level yet. — Moore (Top photo of AJ Dybantsa: Soobum Im / Getty Images)

Watch: Incoming KU basketball guard Darryn Peterson drills go-ahead shot at Nationals
Watch: Incoming KU basketball guard Darryn Peterson drills go-ahead shot at Nationals

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Watch: Incoming KU basketball guard Darryn Peterson drills go-ahead shot at Nationals

Prolific Prep guard Darryn Peterson (24) shoots a free throw during the second half of the Grind Session High School Basketball World Championships against DME Academy at Coffin Sports Complex Kansas, on Saturday, March 22, 2025, in Lawrence. Future Kansas basketball guard Darryn Peterson, the co-MVP of Tuesday night's McDonald's All-America game in Brooklyn, New York, two days later was instrumental in leading Prolific Prep (California) to a victory in the quarterfinals of the 16th-annual Chipotle Nationals in Fishers, Indiana. The 6-foot-5 native of Canton, Ohio, scored 28 points with 12 rebounds and eight assists in No. 6 seed Prolific Prep's 81-80 overtime victory over No. 3 seed Long Island (New York) Lutheran at Hamilton Southeastern High School. Advertisement 'It's almost normal. That stuff all comes with it,' Peterson told Jason Jordan of ESPN in referring to a hectic travel schedule. Peterson is ranked No. 2 in the recruiting Class of 2025 according to ESPN. 'It's been pretty crazy over the last couple of days. McDonald's was nonstop just with intense practices and a lot of different things they had us doing, then I came straight here and had practice,' Peterson added, speaking after the victory. 'I tried to sleep the rest of the day to be ready for today. I usually have at least some time to rest in between, but it's just been nonstop.' Peterson, the first high school athlete to sign an NIL deal with Adidas, scored 10 points in the fourth quarter of a close game. Advertisement 'I just love the game, everything about it,' Peterson told ESPN. 'I just focus on the task at hand. I don't think about anything but what I'm doing right now. I don't think about next year or the future or anything like that. I was only focused on this game today. This game requires extreme focus. I feel I've got to do that every night to be in my zone and get wins.' After missing his first six 3s, he drilled a deep 3 with 6.5 seconds left in regulation and his team down by one. The New York team was able to hit two late free throws and force overtime. Prolific Prep won the OT 13-7. 'My coaches joked to me that that was the only 3 I made all game,' said Peterson, who scored 10 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter. He has averaged 32.0 points, 6.8 rebounds and 7.4 assists per game this season. Advertisement 'I wouldn't even know that because I shot it like I've been making them all night. That's the thing for me. This game requires extreme focus. It's been a crazy week and crazy couple of days. But I don't want to lose so I'm putting everything into winning Chipotle Nationals,' he added. Of Peterson's performance, Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report and NBA TV/Turner wrote: 'The creativity, pacing, counters, shotmaking, athletic finishes, demeanor — just off the charts sharp and advanced. Best prospect in high school basketball.' Prolific Prep (35-5) advanced to meet Dynamic Prep (Texas) in Friday's semifinals (1:30 p.m. Central, ESPN2). Dynamic Prep defeated Link Academy (Missouri) 74-55 in the quarterfinals. Advertisement Prolific Prep (California) (34-5) is making its fifth appearance at Chipotle Nationals and is seeking its first national title in school history. According to the Chipotle Nationals website: 'The National High School Invitational (NHSI) was created in 2009 by Paragon Marketing Group to provide a platform for the top, nationally ranked high school basketball teams in the country to compete against one another in a season-ending tournament. 'Over the course of 15 years, this event (previously titled DICK'S Nationals and GEICO Nationals, taking place in Washington D.C., New York, Florida) has crowned the best high school basketball teams in the country. In 2024, the event moved to Indiana and became the Chipotle High School Basketball Nationals.'

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