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jared Swopshire info


ibruce1

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2008 three-star prospect Jared Swopshire, formerly of Ft. Zumwalt High School in O'Fallon, Mo., is growing into his game down at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. And schools are beginning to take notice of the 6-foot-7, 190-pound wing player.

Bob Huggins of Kansas State and Matt Daugherty of SMU have already made the trip down to IMG during this evaluation period, and other coaches are expected in soon according to IMG Player Development Specialists Jared Redell and Justin Sherlock.

"Coach Huggins and Coach Daugherty were very impressed with Jared," said Coach Sherlock. "Marquette is very interested and will be down soon. Also West Virginia, Purdue and Michigan are expected down here.

"Jared really put on a show for the two coaches. He is stroking threes, distributing in traffic. He's an inside/outside threat and can handle under pressure. There really isn't a lot he can't do."

Swopshire played primarily with the St. Louis Eagles 16-under squad this summer. Already known to schools in the Midwest, he will soon be a national name.

Cincinnati, St. Louis, Dayton, Northern Illinois, Western Illinois, Southern Illinois and Southeast Missouri State have all offered Swopshire, but his top school list reads more like a who's who of high-major programs.

"I like Duke, North Carolina, Kentucky, Wake Forest, Syracuse, Connecticut, Florida and Florida State," said Swopshire. "Right now, though, I'm just hearing from Connecticut and Florida State."

Now that Swopshire is in South Florida, he will suit up with the Florida Rams travel team next summer.

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"Bob Huggins of Kansas State and Matt Daugherty of SMU have already made the trip down to IMG during this evaluation period, and other coaches are expected in soon according to IMG Player Development Specialists Jared Redell and Justin Sherlock.

Is it a little sickening that a "school" has player developement specialists? Sometimes I hate all these games......

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... seems a little off here if you ask me. You've got the reality of four directional schools, two mid-majors and a former high major team looking to recover from the Huggins mess.

The perception of this kid is that he's good enough for six of the souped-up cadillac programs of the history of the free world of college basketball .... Duke, UNC, Kentucky, Syracus, UConn and Florida.

This should be a really good case study to follow when its all said and done. Good enough and well off enough to move from the ghetto (high school ball in St. Louis) to Beverly Hills with the belief that this is the next step to the promised land. The pormised lnad is not any ol' college basketball program, but the Cadillac programs. Will he end up there? Who knows. Then, its of course on to the riches of the NBA. I intend to follow it. Out to be some good fiction, maybe enough for Hoop Dreams II or The Return of Bassy Telfair.

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I'm not in St. Louis, so I don't feel a need to be supportive OR criticize. I will say that I don't know if your point is valid ... namely that his "education" had anything to do with this decision ... I am convinced (for now) that the college richs and then the NBA riches had everything to do with this decision. I said in a past thread that any high school education is nothing more than fodder for the future. When I came out of high school, the diploma wasn't worth the paper it was printed on. As opposed to when my father came out and could actually get a job with it.

I just had a discussion with my kid at the dinner table tonight. She's a high school junior and is getting closer to a college major selection. I told her that in all reality, the bachelor's degree won't be enough. She can likely expect to plan on some sort of graduate or professional school work to get ahead. That seems to be the reality nowadays for those not entertaining dreams in the pro sports wrold, hitting the lottery, filing that one big law suit, or getting on Survivor or the latest reality show rage. If you think for a minute that The Pendleton School's education and degree will work out in some sort of finality, ferget 'bout dit! Unfortuantely a high school diploma, no matter where its from, is only a prerequisite ... and one that a future NBA-er ain't really thinking about as anything more than "been there, done that, got the T-shirt."

The Pendleton School, Oak Hlll Academy, Fork Union .... sure, some are necessary because big Johnnie athlete didn't perform and get the prerequisites that are needed, unfortunately, for the pro prep schools known as colleges. These places, and they can be great educational sites for 99% of their school population for the most part, are nothing more than means by which to accomplish an end which is meet the prerequisites and get noticed by the cadillac elite. Sure, a few Scottie Pippins and Dennis Rodmans and Ben Wallaces are out there, but I believe most will tell you that the pedigree will get you more looks than not and that pedigree is the cadillac college.

This education thing is not to be discounted. As a matter of fact, I look forward to seeing how that plays out as well. Its all a part of the story I want to follow with this kid. Hey, I hold no ill will or malice to him. I don't even know him. Which serves well in this observational societal experiment.

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>finest.....didn't Alex Tyus attend Country Day before

>transferring to one of the Hazelwood schools. Amazing

>someone interested in education would leave Country Day for

>Hazelwood ????.

I'm not sure what point you are trying to make. People forget that these kids are in high school and usually don't make the decision of which schools they attend. You're talking about a situation where Tyus would've been anywhere from 13-15 years old. Surely you don't believe a kid at that age is making any major decisions in his household. I certainly can't answer that question for Alex and his family. There could be many factors that result in kids changing high schools. The tuition at MICDS is quite expensive. (about $17,000...w/ financial aid, the tuition is still usually over 6,000)

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