🏀 Collin Sexton: stock up

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Alabama landed a point guard in Collin Sexton who has the competitive leadership and creative scoring ability to take the Crimson Tide to the next level.


Alabama landed a point guard in Collin Sexton who has the competitive leadership and creative scoring ability to take the Crimson Tide to the next level.

Sexton, a physical 6-2 guard out of Mableton (Ga.) Pebblebrook High School, headlines a 2017 Alabama recruiting class ranked No. 4 in the 247Sports Composite Recruiting Rankings. There are high expectations for Sexton and his classmates, along with Ohio State transfer Daniel Giddens, to catapult Alabama into a top 20 team and NCAA tournament team.

After dominating the Nike EYBL prior to his senior season, Sexton secured a No. 6 Top247 and No. 7 247Sports Composite ranking. He demonstrated an uncanny scoring ability and ferocious competitiveness that has rarely, if ever, been seen on the travel team circuit.

He also led the USA 17U team to a World Championship while earning Most Valuable Player honors.

His play during the past two weeks of all star play as only solidified his position as the top perimeter player in the 2017 class. Known by many as a high volume shooter and scorer, Sexton turned heads with his defensive play and overall competitiveness in the McDonald's All Star Game practices. Then in the game he wowed the crowd with his seven assists. He also finished with eight points.

But back to his play in the Nike EYBL, Sexton led the league with 31.7 ppg and made an astounding 181 free throws in 16 games. Making over 11.5 free throws per game while shooting 85 percent from the line is a tremendous feat that bodes well for the future.

Then in the Nike Hoop Summit Sexton dished out eight assists to go along with four steals as a pivotal player in the USA teams win over the World team. He didn't shoot well and only scored seven points, but his scoring prowess has been well documented with his travel team and high school play. Most importantly, however, is that he had the top plus/minus in the game with 13.

The bottom line is that Sexton has a unique competitiveness and physical prowess that only continue to impress. He is more than just a shot chucker as his detractor has labeled him. Look for Sexton to rise into the top five of the final edition of the Top247.

Jerry Meyer is the Director of Basketball Scouting for 247Sports. You can follow him on Twitter here.

Collin Sexton: stock up
 


You would be hard-pressed to find a player that experienced the same rise in the recruiting rankings or in popularity in the past 12 months as five-star Alabama signee Collin Sexton.

This time last year, Sexton was getting ready to participate in the Nike EYBL circuit as a fringe four-star prospect. But after the Young Bull, as he’s commonly referred to, stormed his way from Brooklyn to Suwanee, Ga., averaging 31.7 points per game, he went from unheralded to finally arriving.

“It really all started with the EYBL,” his older brother Jordan Sexton told BamaOnLine. “Once he started scoring 30 and leading the league in scoring, it just came natural, to now the buzz from everybody’s like, ‘Who’s this Collin Sexton kid?’”

Sexton received an offer from Kansas after his seventh EYBL game and fielded offers from the past two national champions in Villanova and North Carolina in June after 181 made free throws in 16 games. Making nearly 11.5 free throws per game while shooting 85 percent from the line is just one of the strengths Sexton is bringing with him to Tuscaloosa this summer.

And his new head coach welcomes that and the top-rated player with open arms.

“He’s a stud. He has that Kyrie Irving type of a game,” third-year Crimson Tide coach Avery Johnson said. “6-1, 6-2, good body, can do it all, can shoot the three. He has a knack for getting to the free-throw line, which I like. When he gets to the free-throw line, he shoots 88 percent from the free-throw line, doesn’t miss his free throws and very competitive.”

Sexton’s summer of success continued as he earned his fifth star on June 29, 2016, and led the USA 17U team to a World Championship, while also earning Most Valuable Player honors.

After committing and signing to play for Johnson and Alabama during the early signing period in November, Sexton closed out his senior season at Pebblebrook (Ga.) High School by being named a McDonald’s All-American, winning the dunk contest in Chicago and playing on Team USA in the Nike Hoop Summit to nearly ride that wave into his college career in the Druid City.

But with the Jordan Brand Classic still left on his plate and the final recruiting rankings for this 2017 class left to be released, there’s still room for Sexton to continue his rapid ascension.

“I think he’s trending upwards,” said Jerry Meyer, Director of Basketball Scouting for 247Sports. “I’ve always liked him better than Trevon Duval as the top point guard in the class. I think some others might change that, But I’m expecting to move Collin up even more in the Top247 in the final update.”


Sexton went from a relative unknown to one of the top-five players in the country, per Meyer, in a short period of time. And the family that supports him on and off the court are just as surprised by how quickly Sexton has become a fixture in the national all-star scene.

“Last year around this time, if you would have told me Collin would have had a summer like he had and McDonald’s and all that, I probably would’ve laughed,” Jordan Sexton said. “I would’ve been like, ‘Well, he’s got to work a lot, work out a lot and do a lot.’”

And that is exactly what Sexton did.

FROM SECOND FIDDLE TO YOUNG BULL

The work Sexton put in prior to his senior year at Pebblebrook was not only to get noticed on the EYBL circuit. He had to step up his game for his high school team and “move with a purpose” -- a motto for the Sexton family this past year, according to Jordan Sexton.

“He spent the whole offseason just trying to get better,” Pebblebrook head men’s basketball coach George Washington told BamaOnLine. “He knew he was going to have to be the leader for us, and there were high expectations of him coming into his senior year.”

After averaging 28.3 points as a junior in 2015-16 and playing in the shadow of Auburn guard Jared Harper, it was time for Sexton to elevate his game as well as the players around him.

“He took a huge step in between his junior year and senior year,” Washington said. “With him and his maturity growing, he’s always been a really good basketball player, but he just worked on adding different things to his game. He worked on shooting the three-ball more consistently, he worked on rebounding better as a guard, so just little things he worked on.

“Junior year, he was second fiddle to Jared, and he’ll say that. Jared was the man, and Collin was second fiddle. So now he’s going from ‘Jared did this, Jared did that,’ to now ‘It’s all about Collin.’ He had to embrace that leadership role and lead this team.”

To say Sexton accomplished that would be an understatement.

In some of the Falcons’ biggest games and moments, Sexton rose to the occasion. He scored 39 points against IMG Academy and fellow five-star point guard Trevon Duval, registered 53 points on Senior Night and hit a game-tying 3-pointer as time ran out in Pebblebrook’s region championship.

“Extremely talented,” Meyer said. “What separates him is he has a great physical presence on the court as a point guard and he has a great leadership, mental-type presence. A great competitor and he brings sort of an infectious enthusiasm to the court. And then as far as his game goes, he’s a guy who can create plays out of nothing either as a scorer or a passer.”

That infectious enthusiasm on the hardwood Meyer is referring to is not hard to spot.

On the court, Sexton is a completely different animal, and that’s why he’s accurately named the Young Bull. He’s been seen catching an opponent staring at him at the free-throw line to only shift his body away from the hoop to stare back at him, face-to-face.

The Young Bull nickname, Jordan Sexton says, was created during his brother’s younger playing days because of his passion for the game. He molds his own game after Oklahoma City Thunder star Russell Westbrook, and people say, “He doesn’t care what he has to do, he’s going to win. He’s going to bully you to win.” And the moniker has stuck with him since.

“Off the court, he’s quiet, silly, a really good student in the classroom, the teachers love him,” Washington said. “But then once you walk into a game or in any kind of competitive activities with him, he’s going to go to the Young Bull or a different persona.


“... If you play marbles with him, you might as well get ready to have a competitive marble game, because he wants to win. And then once the competition is over with, then you and him will go sit down and eat lunch together or something. But during that competition, if you beat him, you’re going to have to play him again and again. He doesn’t like to lose.

“I tell people when we first got him, Jared Harper used to beat him every day, and man, we would not leave the gym until 9-10 o’clock until he beat Jared. And that’s the thing I like most about him, his competitive juices. His desire to win is unreal.”

FOCUS ON FAMILY, THE FUTURE

Speaking to Jordan Sexton and Washington, one thing is abundantly clear: family is extremely important to Collin. It’s why he prepares and plays as hard as he does, and it’s one of the main reasons he chose Alabama, even after his climb up the recruiting rankings.

Sexton wasn’t always a five-star recruit. He wasn’t always the best player on his own team. But Johnson, Antoine Pettway and the rest of the Crimson Tide staff made him a priority early on before the rest of college basketball knew what Mableton, Ga., possessed.

“We saw them often. They were at games where nobody else was,” Washington said.

“I’ll say this, the important thing for the family was seeing Alabama at games when he was playing 16U and wasn’t starting and they still came. They were front row, front and center. It wasn’t just Pettway, it was Coach Johnson also. It was Coach Scott (Pospichal) before he left this year.”

His older brother jokingly referred to Sexton as a “momma’s boy” as another way to show how much his brother values his family. The Sextons are a trusting and loyal family, Washington said, and are big on relationships. Jordan Sexton played against big man Daniel Giddens, who will be eligible to play this season, in high school, and their fathers talk regularly, which helps.

Tuscaloosa is also only three hours west of Mableton, and that’s comforting to Sexton. His loved ones can attend all the games of his first college season, as Jordan Sexton said they will.

“He didn’t work this hard for us not to come to the games,” he said. “He knows that I’m going to be two hours away, my dad’s going to be two hours away and we can all make sure we come check him out. Just in case he needs something, we’re one call away to be right there on campus.”

The number of years Sexton spends in college is a topic of interest. A projected lottery pick in the 2018 NBA Draft, the 6-foot-2 point guard’s discussions with his high school coach typically involve Alabama making the NCAA Tournament instead of his NBA future.

“His mom and dad constantly tell me, ‘I have a son graduating in May from college, I had a daughter graduate last May, so Collin is graduating from college.’ That’s the mom and dad’s thought process behind the whole thing,” Washington said. “My thought process is when you get the opportunity to go pro, take it. If it comes next year, great. If it doesn’t come next year, great.”

Making it to the NBA is a goal of Sexton’s, and he could accomplish that as soon as this time next year. But as of right now, his focus is on continuing to improve and help the Crimson Tide reach the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2012. According to Meyer, that’s a realistic expectation, with having a top-10 team nationally on “the upper end of expectations.”

A potential one-and-done player, nonetheless, is something Johnson wanted to attract to the Crimson Tide program when he took the job two years ago. He’s managed to do just that with Sexton signing to play during the 2017-18 season. But he’s not alone.

To begin the regular signing period for men’s basketball, Alabama currently has the nation’s No. 4 recruiting class, which is headlined by Sexton. But guards John Petty and Herb Jones, forward Alex Reese and center Galin Smith collectively give the Tide its highest-rated signing class in program history.

And that’s something Sexton -- and every Alabama fan -- can’t wait to see this winter.

Whether it was EYBL, USA U17, the McDonald’s All-America Game, Nike Hoop Summit or the upcoming Jordan Brand Classic, Sexton has shared the floor with some of the best players in the world, but his family knows his upcoming challenge is one the Young Bull is looking forward to the most.

“He more excited than anything to play with this group of boys,” Jordan Sexton said of Alabama. “I’ve witnessed Collin play on a bunch of teams, but I’ve never seen him have this much excitement playing for a coach and playing for a team like this. They’re coming together, and for Collin, it’s just like, ‘I’m ready.’”
 
Just gets better and better for a struggling basketball program in need of a boost. When you watch Colin, he takes your eyes right there. In that sense, he's "Pistol Pete" with the basketball. I know I'm kinda giddy over this kid but we may literally have stolen the best high school player in the country this year.
 
I know I'm kinda giddy over this kid but we may literally have stolen the best high school player in the country

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I don't so much mind the showboating if it makes sense in ball distribution and it works. As pretty and creative as Pistols passes were it was an effective way to get the players involved. Our program really needs to get runnin' and gunnin' and a little "french pastry" might be what the doctor ordered.
 
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