- Joined
- Nov 11, 2017
- Messages
- 218
- Reaction Score
- 4,190
Son of Shareef
Plays for Blair Academy and NJ Playaz
Class of 2020
6’6 guard
Ranked 43rd nationally by Rivals
Had a great first session in EYBL and had 2 40+ point games.
Meh. Talented, but a classic "big numbers on a bad team" guy.His dad was a serious baller.
He’s really really good. Chance to be a 5 star when it’s all said and done.Kid has to be good.
Video from when he played MacDuffie this year
Wow is right. That putback was something else. Made it look eeeasy.The bouknight putback at 0:25 was so fluid. Wow.
Great pump fake and pull up at 1:20 ish.
Pump fake and drew a foul at 1:50
Tipped in a bad lob and 1 at 2:10
Made 3 off wing ball screen 2:30
Drive at 2:50
Wide scoop finish at 3:03
Drew a foul on a drive
Made a transition lob 7:40
Made acrobatic drive
Scored something like 20-23 pts deoending on foul shots
I consider anyone who played in the NBA a serious baller. Shareef Abdur-Rahim is Rudy Gay from a decade before, Rudy is also a serious baller.Meh. Talented, but a classic "big numbers on a bad team" guy.
RICKY MOORE – Westside HS/Augusta, Georgia
I only saw this guy play live once, during the Georgia High School State Tournament at Georgia Tech in the early 1990’s. Moore was a junior then, and at slightly over six-feet tall he dominated this game (can’t recall the opponent (again) but I believe it was a team from Albany, GA) like no one I’d ever seen at his size. He did everything: scored from outside, scored from inside, found open teammates for buckets, started breaks, finished breaks, got tough rebounds and long rebounds, defended well and even blocked a few shots. He was all over the place. It was an amazing performance.
I wasn’t sure if this was an aberration or the norm but, of course, the projection thing started in my head and I figured he’d land a scholarship at a top Division 1 school at the very least. Moore ended up attending the University of Connecticut and was a vital part of their championship run in 1999. He ran the Westside High backcourt with one of the highest-rated 9th graders in the country at the time, William Avery, who later attended Duke University, UConn’s opponent in that 1999 title game..
I was a regular at those state tournament games at Tech during the 1990s and was fortunate enough to witness some great individual performances from guys who led their schools to state titles on the way to top Division 1 schools and NBA careers–Shareef Abdur-Rahim (Wheeler HS/Cal-Berkeley), Matt Harpring (Marist HS/Georgia Tech) and Darrin Hancock (Griffin HS/Univ. of Kansas)–but this one performance by Ricky Moore was a keeper.
Is Arizona State owned by Mazarotti?
Mazarotti? I'm sure whoever handles Maserati's branding and marketing would not be happy that people don't even know how to spell their brand. LolIs Arizona State owned by Mazarotti?
Maserati? The car? Nah, that would be silly. No I was talking about Lou Mazarotti. He's a trident manufacturer. Good guy. I wondered if he was branching out.Mazarotti? I'm sure whoever handles Maserati's branding and marketing would not be happy that people don't even know how to spell their brand. Lol
He's from the same region of Italy as Enzo Patoni, right? Maybe that connection will help.Maserati? The car? Nah, that would be silly. No I was talking about Lou Mazarotti. He's a trident manufacturer. Good guy. I wondered if he was branching out.
Meh. Talented, but a classic "big numbers on a bad team" guy.
Yep Enzo was Lou's dad's gombadi.He's from the same region of Italy as Enzo Patoni, right? Maybe that connection will help.