Adia Barnes has noticed the shift. Everybody has, really: Parents, prospects, and other coaches.
After years of climbing, the Arizona Wildcats have broken through β both on the court and in recruiting.
Arizona welcomes the highest-rated freshman class in program history, one that was ranked No. 8 nationally. Maya Nnaji, Paris Clark, Lemyah Hylton and Kailyn Gilbert are all expected to contribute during their first season on campus.
The Wildcatsβ 2023 recruiting class is expected to be even better. If signing day was today, Arizona would have the No. 1 recruiting class in the country, according to ESPNβs Hoop Gurlz. Arizonaβs class consists of Montaya Dew, Breya Cunningham and Jada Williams, all of whom are ranked in the top 25 players for β23. Dew is eighth, Cunningham is 14th and Williams is 21st.
The Wildcats remain in the mix for three more top-rated players: Juju Watkins, the top-rated player in the 2023 class; Cassandre Prosper (No. 16); and Chloe Kitts (No. 17). Prosper and Kitts are both 6-foot-2-inch forwards. Kitts played on USA Basketballβs U17 team alongside Gilbert. Watkins played on Team USA alongside Cunningham and Williams, two of the Wildcatsβ 2023 recruits.
Landing one of the three remaining prospects would further boost the Catsβ promising class.
Shane Laflin, who does ESPNβs rankings, said that UA will most likely have a top-5 recruiting class by signing day β possibly as high as No. 2 or No. 3.
βIt doesnβt surprise me that they landed the players theyβve landed and that theyβre going to be arguably in the consistent top 5 for a while,β Laflin said.
While Barnes doesnβt chase rankings, Arizonaβs coach knows what bringing in two consecutive top classes means.
βEverybody knows who we are, they follow our program, our program is recognized and people want to be a part of Arizona womenβs basketball,β Barnes said. βThey love what we do and want to be a part of it. I think that is special. And just knowing Arizona, being excited about Arizona and they recognize us when we walk in. I think all of that is pretty cool. It makes recruiting a little bit easier.
βPeople want to come to Arizona. They want us on their list. They want all those things. I get calls now like, βOne of the schools she wants to go to is Arizona.β We didnβt have that in the past. Iβve definitely had to fight to get to this point. It took us going to the (2021 national) championship (game), but I think itβs exciting. I think weβve shown that weβre a program that is not going to be there one year and weβre going to be good for a while.β
Where it all started
Fittingly, Barnes first met Bett Shelby on the recruiting trail. Shelby was an assistant at Virginia Tech and then Maryland, while Barnes was at Washington.
Barnes was βa great relationship-builder,β even back then, Shelby said.
βI knew that parents and kids really trusted her at a high level and I knew she was relentless in building relationships. I knew that you really had to put in the work when you were going against her. She had a great reputation, not only in recruiting, but in developing players. I feel like Adia has always had the reputation of being a total coach.β
Barnes helped Washington land Kelsey Plum, who developed into a Huskies superstar before she was taken No. 1 in the 2017 WNBA Draft. She also was one of the first coaches to build a relationship with Aari McDonald, who β after following Barnes from Washington to Arizona β became arguably the best player in Wildcats history.
Barnes and Shelby competed for one high-schooler in particular. The recruit, Destiny Slocum, was named the 2017 WBCA Freshman of the Year at Maryland before transferring to Oregon State and becoming the 14th overall pick in the 2021 WNBA Draft.
Shelby won out on that one.
βIt was a very intense recruiting battle and we joke about it from time to time,β she said.
Shelby and Barnes have time to commiserate now. In June, Barnes hired Shelby β her former recruiting rival β as a special assistant to the head coach.
The story is real
Building relationships is second nature for Barnes, a people-person.
Arkansas coach Mike Neighbors knows this all too well. As a fellow Washington assistant, Neighbors saw Barnes develop into a solid recruiter. Neighbors took over for Kevin McGuff when he left UW for Ohio State, and was Barnesβ boss before she came to Arizona.
To Neighbors, Barnes brings a compelling combination of playing experience β she remains one of the best players in UA history, and was a WNBA mainstay with the Seattle Storm β and coaching acumen.
βThereβs a handful of people out there that can tell that story of, βIβve been there as a player. I know what it feels like.β I think she paints that picture that βIβm going to be there for youβ and she can back that up,β Neighbors said.
βItβs not false. Itβs real. She did play at a really high level. She did play professionally. She played overseas. She did all the things that a lot of these kids want to do. Sheβs charming. Sheβs got a charismatic way about her that people want to be around her. Then the more youβre around her, the more you realize how good of a coach she is, how good of a staff sheβs built and how good of a program sheβs got. Itβs easy for recruits (to pick Arizona). The fact that she (played) as well, that thatβs an advantage that not many people have. Think anybody else off the All-Seattle Storm All-Decade team is coaching? Until then sheβs got a leg up on a lot of people that canβt tell the story, βIβve been there.β Thatβs one piece of the puzzle that is very attractive, to a lot of kids and I think she can tell that story better than anybody.β
In six years as a head coach, Barnes has helped Arizona β once a Pac-12 bottom-feeder β rise to become a national power.
Fans (and recruits) witnessed Arizonaβs run to the 2021 national championship game. They saw a passionate coach who allowed her players β particularly McDonald β the freedom to play. The images of Barnes during the 2021 run, from flipping the bird after beating UConn to hugging McDonald after the UA starβs last-second shot fell short in a title-game loss to Stanford, remain etched in peoplesβ memories.
Shelby has seen up close the lengths Barnes goes to making sure each Wildcat is having the best experience possible in Tucson. Recruits hear the stories on their visits and on calls with current players.
βI knew she was good; I probably didnβt know she was this good,β Shelby said. βShe goes far and beyond for each kid. She just really, really, really cares. They are sick in the middle of the night. They call our trainer, but they call Adia, too. Sheβs their mom away from home. β¦ What you see is what you get here. Itβs all about family and she really loves it. She does a great job of making sure what she said to these kids and their families during the recruiting processes is lived out here.β
Barnes can also share stories about how she and assistant Salvo Coppa developed players like McDonald, who ended up as the No. 3 draftee in the 2021 WNBA Draft; or Sam Thomas, who went undrafted and stuck with the Phoenix Mercury.
βWhen you have the ability to show there are different paths to get there through your program, to me, thatβs what (player) development is,β Laflin said. βPlayer development isnβt, βI tried to turn you into this cookie-cutter player.β Itβs developing that person, that player to their role, to their value. β¦ Thatβs going to matter more. β¦ (Barnes can say) βThereβs different ways to get there. Our stars make it, our role players make it. This is how we did that.ββ
The climb
Barnes described her first offseason as Arizonaβs coach as a sprint. She spent her first few months on the recruiting trail, trying to catch up after her predecessor, Niya Butts, left without signing a single player.
That fall, Barnes signed her first top-100 player. Thomas ended up being the glue of Barnesβ program during her time in Tucson.
The following year, Barnes signed Semaj Smith and Cate Reese, a pair of five-star post players. At the time, Reese rated the nationβs No. 14 recruit and No. 4 post player by ESPN. She was also UAβs first McDonaldβs All-American. Last year, Reese was named an AP honorable mention All-American.
Two years later, Arizona landed another five-star post player, Lauren Ware.
Now comes the 2022 freshman class. Nnaji arrives as the highest-rated player β ESPN ranked her No. 9 in the country β to ever sign with Arizona. Nnaji and Clark are both five-star prospects and McDonaldβs All-Americans. Gilbert was a member of USA Basketballβs U18 team, while Hylton is a member of Team Canadaβs U18 squad and ranked No. 2 among international recruits.
The four fit together well, on and off the court.
βTheyβre complementary. Thatβs what makes the class dangerous, and they can fill roles,β Laflin said. βIn this class, you have a combo scorer in Gilbert. She can put the ball in the basket, that is undeniable. A little bit to learn in terms of effort, consistency to defend. β¦ She does things that you canβt teach because she can put the round thing in the round thing.
βParis Clark is tough as hell β (she) played for a demanding high school and club coach. (She) is going to guard; she finds ways to get to the rim. Sheβs physical, despite not (having an) overbearing stature, and then is good enough in all other areas in terms of shooting and things. Sheβs going to get in the passing lane; sheβs going to harass the ball-handler.
βLemyah Hylton is long. Sheβs going to play in the wing and is another one who is going to get in the passing lanes. I would say she has the most to get better at in terms of getting to her ceiling. She played for great, great thinking coach in Canada, where they play systematically, so (she) fits (Arizona).
βAnd then Maya Nnaji played on a successful club team, a successful high school team. ... Obviously, (with) her brother (Zeke, a former Wildcat now in the NBA) and the experience that theyβve got β just a really mature foundation. (Nnaji is) the forward-post that can stretch you, face you up and play in space. Youβve got players around you that can space the floor and all get to the rim and do their thing. And youβve got to forward who can put it on the deck.β
Arizonaβs 2023 recruiting class should just add to the collection of talent.
While Nnaji and Cunningham are both posts, they bring different strengths. Cunningham plays a more traditional post game. Williams is a point guard who can score with a personality to match. (She has already appeared in a Spaulding TV commercial with NBA star Damian Lillard).
Laflin said that Dew is βlike a unicorn.β
βAs a point guard/forward who makes really good decisions, is good in the ball screen, very bouncy (and) can be a defensive stopper,β Laflin said. βSheβs one that will set the table for other people. The day she decides to just eliminate the opponent in front of her, sheβs the one to me of all of these (players) that could be the best one. The other ones are good. She does things that you canβt teach. And thereβs just something about being that 6-2 forward that could be a three, a four, point-forward that allows Kailyn Gilbert to be aggressive on the catch versus having to set the table or allows Paris Clark to get out in the passing lane because youβve got some length and size inside. It all works together.β
Shelby likens the recruiting cycle to planting a tree. βYou donβt get the fruit of that harvest right away. Itβs got to grow,β she said. βI think (Barnes) is seeing the fruits of our labor.β
βI think it does take time to build those types of classes. And it doesnβt happen overnight,β Shelby said. βI think the skyβs the limit for Adia and what sheβll be able to accomplish here. I think sheβs going to have a long coaching career. I think sheβll eventually be a legend in womenβs basketball.β