I'm going to try this one more time.
Who has KO prioritized? Well Diamond Stone has visited UConn, Kevin Ollie has had an in home visit with him, and has seen the majority of his games over the live period. Derrick Jones has visited UConn, Kevin Ollie has seen the majority of his games, and his father was quoted that UConn was working the hardest. Both have had offers longer than Clark and Baptiste.
Neither Clarke or Baptiste have seen UConn's campus, or had an in home with Kevin Ollie. Assistants have been the ones going to their games except for Peach Jam, Kevin Ollie was there. Both recently were offered. Neither have planned visits.
Who do you think is the priority and higher rank for UConn?
The thing is when you discount UConn's recruiting philosophy, in a way that's a direct attack on the success of the program, and UConn's been the best program in the country over the last 20 years. So clearly something is working.
Saying you want highly ranked, highly recruited guys isn't much of a statement. Yes, I'm sure that Ollie and everyone associated with the program would love to have the guys you mentioned, but a lot of times it just isn't feasible. Very rarely has UConn won these types of recruiting battles with highly ranked kids going into their senior year. For whatever reason, UConn just has trouble getting those guys, especially more than one in a class.The good thing is that the staff, whether under JC or KO, has proven to be very good at locating and developing second tier, backup plan guys.
I think what UConn has done is realized that considering where they are in the college basketball landscape, and what their recruiting limitations are, the best way for them to fill out a team is to get a very good, dynamic recruit that is likely to stay until he's a Junior, and then get a couple of other fairly highly recruited players to surround him. From there, fill out the roster with hard working guys who know their roles and can make at least somewhat of an impact, and maybe develop into being "the guy" later if they're only a freshman or sophomore. That's always been the composition of the best UConn teams. One tremendous upperclassmen player, two to three other very good collegiate players, and then a bevy of role players.
I'm sure that the staff would like to get a lot of 5 star recruits like any other school, but this other plan has worked out pretty well for them.