UrsaMajor said:
Thanks for the correction. Of course, Georgetown. Dementia setting in...
Not likely. Not compared to me anyway. I can set the BI record any time for errors of memory in a single post and probably have.
Regarding Domingo's recruit ranking, he did not play against top level competition in high school. San Francisco high school basketball has been in steady decline since 1968 at least, when a San Francisco team won the Tournament of Champions, and that was the year Wilson High won the TOC with Ansley Truitt.
San Francisco teams won a lot of the early TOC titles. Lowell won the first TOC title in 1947, followed by Lincoln in 1948. St Ignatius coached by Rene Herrerias and starring Fred LaCour won it in 1954 and 1955, and would have won it in 1956 if LaCour hadn't broken his thumb in an early TOC game. Poly High won it in 1957. A total of 5 championships for San Francisco teams in 11 years, plus Wilson's win in 1968. When the TOC was replaced by the CIF state championship, no San Francisco team has won the state title in either the open division or division 1. St Ignatius reached the state final in 1984, and Riordan reached it in 1990. Only Mission High school has been able to win a state championship, and that was for division 3.
In the same period, "Mr. Basketball", the California player of the year, was almost dominated by San Francisco players. Don Bragg won it in 1950, Fred LaCour twice in 1955 and 1956, Tom Meschery won it in 1957, Steve Gray won it in 1959, and Bob Portman won it in 1965. No San Francisco player has been named California player of the year since Portman in 1968.
In that same period, Cal recruited and landed some very good players from San Francisco: Cal All-American Bob Matheny, Ansley Truitt, Dick Tamberg, Frank Hess, Bill and Joe Hagler, Denny Lewis, and others. In 1954, a Cal team which went 17-7 and finished 3rd in the PCC Southern Division, three players on Cal's starting 5 were from San Francisco, Matheny, Tamberg, and Hess. Akili Jones was probably the last decent San Francisco player to play for Cal in 1991-94. And Brendan Glapion was San Francisco AAA Player of the Year a few years ago, and he was a walk-on at Cal.
So I think the recruiting gurus may have been mislead by watching Domingo in high school or looking at his statistics, and maybe didn't consider the level of competition he faced in high school. San Francisco high school ball is now where near what it once was, and that is tragic.