The single most visible example yet of the NCAAβs efforts to reform college basketball will be on display this week.
At Grand Canyon University and three other regional sites around the country, the NCAA is paying for a total of about 1,200 college prospects and one parent or guardian to attend one of two three-day sessions involving drills, games and βlife skillsβ conversations.
Itβs a marked contrast from what the last weekend of July used to represent on the recruiting calendar β a monstrous collection of club-ball tournaments in Las Vegas β and itβs meant to be precisely that.
Recommendations from the NCAAβs Condoleezza Rice-led Commission on College Basketball, formed in the wake of the federal investigation, led to the formation of the camps as another way to pull players away somewhat from club-ball coaches and teams.
βPart of the Rice Commission was to deemphasize the influence of the club coaches who would otherwise have a sole voice in this process,β Dan Gavitt, the NCAAβs senior vice president for basketball, told the Star. βWe donβt have the time and resources to eliminate them, nor do we want to, but we want to have other voices involved in this process.β
That means the 300-odd players headed to Phoenix will hear from people such as event commissioner Steve Lavin, the ex-UCLA and St. Johnβs coach, and assistant commissioner Earl Watson, the former UCLA standout and Phoenix Suns coach. West Region instructors will include Westmont College head coach John Moore and Orange Coast College coach Steve Spencer, a former UCLA assistant.
The NCAA is also putting the prospects into βlife skillsβ talks every day, in addition to drills and games.
βLife skills sessions were meant to allow family, parents and guardians to be educated on initial eligibility standards, and about having access to agents for consideration of professional careers,β Gavitt said. βThe NBA Players Association is involved with some of the life skills programs as well. Itβs meant to be a collaborative effort of educating prospects on what the future will be like for them.β
The NCAA also added characteristic touches to the event, first by naming each camp as it names its tournament brackets β with the GCU camp, for example, known as the βWest Region.β
Also, the camp selected prospects via a system where college coaches could vote for up to five βautomatic qualifiersβ they wanted to evaluate, and those five would be selected regardless of any other votes, while coaches could vote for up to 25 others who could get in as βat largeβ candidates if enough other coaches also selected them.
Then, once invited, players were assigned to teams named for an NCAA basketball champion β such as the 1997 Arizona Wildcats, which will include 2021 point guard Jaleon Israel of Gilbert Higley High School, along with players from California, Florida, North Carolina and Oregon.
The problem is, many high-level prospects wonβt be there, including all of Arizonaβs priority recruiting targets. Thatβs in part because it was difficult to distribute information about the first-year program, Gavitt said, while another is the fact that USA Basketball is holding a Junior Team camp with 75 elite prospects this week.
In addition, some of the old Las Vegas club-ball tournaments are still going on anyway, even though the NCAA is not allowing college coaches to watch them.
The Las Vegas Classic is planning to stream games for coaches to watch and the Big Time Las Vegas event (formerly the Fab 48) also is fielding well-known teams such as Dream Vision, Team Breakdown, Vegas Elite, Mater Dei and others.
The NCAA camps are βnew and that always takes some adjustment,β Oregon coach Dana Altman said. βSome players are going to Colorado Springs and some players are staying with their AAU team. I think there will be some good young players (at the camps) but I know a lot of players didnβt register and arenβt sure how it all works.β
That means college coaches have some decisions to make this week.
βItβs gonna be tough,β Oregon State coach Wayne Tinkle said at Peach Jam earlier this month. βWeβve got (the NCAA camps) and Colorado Springs and weβve gotta figure out where our guys are at the four sites, so weβll kind of spread out accordingly.β
Gavitt said the USA Basketball camp will be moved to a different weekend next year so it wonβt be in conflict, while heβs also hoping that players will become increasingly attracted to the NCAA camps instead of playing in the Las Vegas events.
Gavitt said players who attend the first session of the NCAAβs camp can still go join their club teams over the weekend, though some have opted out of the NCAA camps entirely.
βWe definitely thought in this first year some of that would happen,β Gavitt said. βPlayers have choices to make. But we think itβs a great opportunity. Itβs the only place college coaches can evaluate them this week.
βWe have heard some anecdotes that some of the (club) programs are advising kids not to attend, which could be very disappointing. I think that speaks to some of the ills of the culture. But weβll keep working at this and try to make it something prospects want to attend.β