The Florida Gators reached into Old Dominion for Powell, securing the four-star’s commitment on June 26, 2019.
Playing his high school football for the Indian River Braves in Chesapeake, Powell was rated as the No. 10 weak-side defensive end in the class and a top-three player in the state, per the 247Sports Composite.
Standing 6-foot-3 and weighing 234 pounds, he displayed excellent burst off the line of scrimmage during his prep days and has room to add size to his current frame.
One thing worth keeping an eye on with Powell, however, is the two surgeries he has had on the same shoulder, the first in the fall of 2018 and the second last November. Playing a position as physical as defensive end, Gator fans should hope these problems do not continue at the collegiate level.
Injury concerns aside, he was one of the most sought-after pass-rushers in the class, choosing Florida over the Duke Blue Devils, Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, North Carolina Tar Heels, Oklahoma Sooners, and Virginia Tech Hokies, who are located roughly five years northwest of Chesapeake in Blacksburg.
Signing his National Letter of Intent (LOI) during December’s Early Signing Period, Powell enrolled early in January, allowing himself to become familiar with his coaches, teammates, and life as a Southeastern Conference (SEC) student-athlete before the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic threw a wrench in things.
He is one of two listed defensive ends in the class for the Gators, joining Princely Umanmielen, a fellow four-star from Manor, Texas. Fort Lauderdale’s Derek Wingo is officially listed as an outside linebacker, but projects to play the hybrid BUCK position for defensive coordinator Todd Grantham in Gainesville.
Powell is the seventh-highest rated of Florida’s 21 enrollees in the 2020 cycle and the fifth-highest on the defensive side of the football.
Due to his frame and quickness, he profiles as a multi-year starter for Grantham and defensive line coach David Turner.
Joining Winter Park three-star safety Dakota Mitchell and IMG Academy four-star Kamar Wilcoxson, Young became the third defensive back to commit to the Florida Gators in a four-day span when he pledged on June 21.
Spending his first three years at Jesuit High School in Tampa, where he was teammates with 2020 Florida tight end enrollee Jonathan Odom, Young will make the roughly nine-mile north move to Gaither High School for his senior season this fall.
Standing 6-foot-1 and weighing 185 pounds, he has the ideal frame cornerbacks coach Torrian Gray and linebackers coach Christian Robinson look for on the recruiting trail. Initially receiving his offer from the Gators’ staff on June 7, 2019, the same day he attended a camp in Gainesville, Young returned to campus on February 1 for the program’s Junior Day.
While his three-star rating does not necessarily jump off the page, Young’s reported offer list is 26 schools deep and features the Alabama Crimson Tide, Arkansas Razorbacks, Florida State Seminoles, and Georgia Bulldogs.
The No. 29 cornerback in the cycle and sixty-third best player in the state, per the 247Sports Composite, he is Florida’s third commit at the position in the class, accompanying Baltimore, Maryland four-star Clinton Burton, Jr., and Wilcoxson.
Overall, Young is the thirteenth-highest rated of the program’s 20 commits in the upcoming group, slotting in behind Jacksonville tight end Nick Elksnis and ahead of Orlando offensive tackle Javonte Gardner.
This is a Player Profile Card for redshirt senior defensive lineman Luke Ancrum of the Florida Gators football team.
Name: Luke Ancrum
Number: 98
Position: Defensive Lineman
Class: Redshirt Senior
Height: 6’5″
Weight: 263 lbs
Hometown: Sebring, Fla.
High School: Sebring High School
2019 statistics:
Tackles
Def Int
Gm
Solo
Ast
Tot
Loss
Sk
Int
Yds
Avg
TD
PD
12
11
11
22
4
1.5
0
0
0
0
1
Overview:
Ancrum was a defensive end coming out of Sebring High School, though he was not highly regarded. A three-star recruit, Ancrum’s only Power Five offers other than Florida were Pittsburgh and Wisconsin. He chose to sign with the Gators in former coach Jim McElwain’s first recruiting class in 2015. He sat out his first season with the team in 2015 and redshirted before moving to defensive tackle as a redshirt freshman.
In 2016, he played in seven games, though he was limited to just three tackles. In 2017, he played in all 11 games but again wasn’t particularly productive, totaling four tackles and a pass breakup.
As a redshirt junior in 2018, he saw action in 11 games as a reserve defensive lineman and special teams contributor, totaling eight tackles. He also made his first career interception against Tennessee.
During his final season in 2019, he played in 11 games, notching a career-high 22 tackles. He started three games and had 1.5 sacks.
A four-star recruit and the No. 3-ranked weakside defensive end in the 2019 recruiting class, Bogle was an Under Armour All-American at Cardinal Gibbons in Fort Lauderdale. He signed with UF coach Dan Mullen over offers from Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, LSU and more.
Athletic with a lengthy 6-foot-6, 216-pound frame, Bogle immediately saw action as a pass rusher, seeing time at the BUCK outside linebacker position. He played in all 13 games as a reserve, making 18 total tackles (six solo), 2.5 tackles for loss and two sacks. He also deflected a pass.
Bogle is a major part of Florida’s plans along the defensive line moving forward. Though he still finds himself behind incumbent Jeremiah Moon, Bogle should be a major contributor for the Gators in 2020.
While he was most certainly a flawed human being who found trouble in almost every stop, “Mad Max” was unquestionably a baller on the court.
[jwplayer QyyBFkar]
Vernon Maxwell (1984-88) – Point/Shooting Guard
Vernon Maxwell was a very controversial person in Florida lore. While he left Gainesville as the Gators’ all-time leading scorer, his role in uncovering the program’s cash payoff scheme for athletes which resulted in harsh NCAA sanctions tarnished his legacy at UF.
Maxwell was a hometown boy, born in Gainesville and attending Buchholz High School where he was named Mr. Basketball of the state of Florida his senior year and was also an all-state defensive back in football. With an athletic scholarship in hand, he joined head coach Norm Sloan’s team in 1984.
The star guard excelled in his four years at UF, averaging 20 points a game his junior and senior season — just missing the mark his sophomore year with a 19.6 average — and still holds 15 Gators team records. During his senior season he upped his secondary game, averaging career highs in rebounds (4.2) and assists (4.3) per game while barely missing his best mark with just under two steals per game.
However, due to the aforementioned scandal in which Maxwell testified to a grand jury that he received money from Sloan, an assistant and University of Florida boosters which he used to buy cocaine, all of the points he amassed his junior and senior seasons were erased from the records. His 2,450 career points would still be the best in Gators men’s basketball history had they not been revoked.
Rescinded statistics notwithstanding, Maxwell finished his collegiate career the No. 2 scorer in Southeastern Conference history behind LSU’s Pete Maravich. However, despite his achievements on the court, he fell down into the second round of the 1988 NBA Draft, where he was selected 47th overall by the Denver Nuggets but quickly traded on draft day to the San Antonio Spurs for a second-round pick the following year.
Maxwell only played a season-and-a-half in San Antonio before he was sold to the Houston Rockets, where his game flourished alongside Hakeem Olajuwon and company. After a slow start to his NBA career his first two years, the young guard found his footing and from 1990 to 1992 he reached career highs in points per game with 17.0 and 17.2, respectively. Known for his deadly shooting from outside of the arc, he owned the NBA record for most 3-pointers made in a season from 1991 until 1993; he was also renown for his clutch shooting, sinking numerous game-winning shots throughout his career.
The former Gator earned an NBA championship ring with the Rockets for the first of their repeat titles in 1993-94; he missed out on the second ring when he quit the team after its opening first-round game loss to Utah in the 1995 playoffs in frustration due to recently acquired Clyde Drexler taking his starting spot and playing time. He would produce his third-highest career offensive output the following season with the Philadelphia 76ers before his career began to decline.
Overall, Maxwell played 13 total seasons in the NBA with eight different teams, accumulating almost 11,000 points for a career average of 12.8 per game and averaging double-digit scoring in 11 seasons while sinking 1,256 three-point shots at a 32 percent clip. “Hawk” also averaged 3.4 assists per game for his career, reaching his high-water mark of 5.1 per game in 1993-1994.
While Maxwell was most certainly a flawed human being who found trouble in almost every stop of his adult life, “Mad Max” was unquestionably a baller on the court. When considering how much he achieved when his sneakers were laced up — both with the Gators and in the pros — it is easy to place him among the greatest basketball players in UF’s program history.
Freeman, a kicker from Lakewood Ranch, walked on to the Gators heading into the 2019 season. At Lakewood Ranch High School, Freeman was a kicker and punter for the football team while also playing soccer. He was also homecoming king his senior year.
According to Chris Sailer Kicking, he was a 4.5-star recruit and one of the top kickers in the 2019 cycle with a range of 55-plus yards. He was also praised for his kickoffs, specifically his hang time.
As the low man on kicking depth chart, Freeman didn’t see any action his freshman year and redshirted the season. Though still behind kickers Evan McPherson and Chris Howard, Freeman could compete for a starting role later in his career if things fall into place for him.
This is a Player Profile Card for redshirt senior athlete Moses Gordon III of the Florida Gators football team.
Name: Moses Gordon III
Number: 94
Position: Athlete
Class: Redshirt Senior
Height: 6’0″
Weight: 275 lbs
Hometown: Orlando, Fla.
High School: Cypress Creek High School
2019 statistics:
Did not play.
Overview:
A 6-foot, 275-pound athlete from Cypress Creek High School in Orlando, Gordon III was a strong side defensive end coming out of high school in the 2013 recruiting class. Though he received recruiting interest from Florida State, UCF and South Alabama, he didn’t receive a scholarship offer from any FBS programs.
An unranked recruiting prospect, he didn’t sign out of high school, instead choosing to attend the University of Florida. He didn’t resurface as a football player until the spring of 2018, when he walked on to the Gators football team in the first spring practice under new coach Dan Mullen. He didn’t see any action that season, nor did he in his final season of eligibility as a redshirt senior in 2019, thus ending his collegiate football career.
Beal is still only 26 years old and is just now entering his prime, giving him a bit more headroom to maximize his potential.
Bradley Beal (2011-2012) – Shooting Guard
Bradley Beal came to Gainesville out of St. Louis, Mo. as a highly-heralded five-star high school player, having accumulated numerous accolades — including 2011 Gatorade National Player of the Year — averaging 32.5 points per game, 5.7 rebounds per game and 2.8 assists per game during his senior campaign.
The talented shooting guard only played one season with Florida, but it was quite a year as he averaged 14.8 points along with 6.7 rebounds, 2.2 assists, 1.4 steals and nearly a block a game. Beal won six SEC Freshman of the Week awards, was named to the SEC All-Freshman Team and was a First Team All-SEC selection.
He declared for the 2012 NBA Draft after the 2011-12 season in which he was selected third overall — second-highest of all-time, tied with Al Horford — by the Washington Wizards, foregoing his final three years of college eligibility.
Beal has had a superb professional career over eight years in D.C. and has continually improved his scoring production in each of the past five seasons. The 2019-2020 season was his best so far before being canceled due to COVID-19, putting together a pair of consecutive 50-point performances en route to a stratospherical 30.5 points average in 57 games, along with 4.2 rebounds, 6.1 assists and 1.2 steals per match.
Beal is still only 26 years old and is just now entering his prime, giving him a bit more headroom to maximize his potential. If his trajectory continues on its current path, he may have a legitimate argument for best Gators men’s basketball player ever.
Emmanuel Nzekwesi’s journey from the Netherlands, to Texas, to Oral Roberts and to the next level came on the back of family at every step.
[jwplayer YjzFCyCT]
Durant Springmann had one birthday wish: To play basketball with Emmanuel Nzekwesi.
The Oral Roberts star happily obliged. He’d be on the court with assistant coach Russell Springmann’s son.
By the day of the party, Nzekwesi limped around in a boot after injuring his ankle. Russell didn’t expect Nzekwesi to show, so he didn’t remind him about the party. His star player had a foot to nurse.
Stunned, Russell assured Nzekwesi he didn’t need to come. But Nzekwesi made a promise, one he intended to keep.
“Coach, I’m on my way,” Nzekwesi responded. “I just need to know where to go.”
Attending Durant’s party and bringing a present wasn’t a decision for Nzekwesi. Russell is family. That’s what family does.
Hundreds of miles from his real family in Trophy Club, Texas, and thousands from his home in The Hague, Netherlands, Nzekwesi builds family wherever he goes. His fiancée, Tatum; Springmann; his head coach, Paul Mills; and teammates form Nzekwesi’s home away from home.
As much as Nzekwesi benefits from his relationships, his new family benefits from his presence.
“I’ve coached more than 600 players in my life and he is 100% a guy who I would trust leaving my children with,” Mills said.
*****
Emmanuel Nzekwesi towered over surrounding customers in line, confused.
His first American menu – stopped at Jason’s Deli on the way to a regional tournament – presented Nzekwesi a mystery and a challenge. What’s a Reuben the Great?
A native of the Netherlands, cryptic menus marked one of many challenges Nzekwesi faced in moving to Trophy Club, Texas, for his sophomore year of high school.
An unstable living situation and an often crowded house magnified the challenges of adapting to a foreign culture.
“[His] mom had to move around a little bit, her finding a job was a struggle at times,” his high school coach, Scott Curran, said. “I could really tell that weighed on Emmanuel.”
Nzekwesi remained focused. He knew he was in the United States to play basketball.
From crying when highlights ended on TV to tossing toys and clothes, basketball was everything to two-year-old Nzekwesi.
That childhood passion culminated in his move to Texas to prepare for college basketball.
In Texas, Nzekwesi always stuck out, whether it was his height, nationality or his attire: He wore an out-of-place collared shirt during his first trip to the Byron Nelson High School weight room.
“I do push-ups,” Nzekwesi told Curran. “That’s all.”
Once Nzekwesi ditched the collared shirt for workout gear, his body “exploded,” as Curran said, into the creation of the physical monster Nzekwesi is today.
Curran remembers a fledgling Nzekwesi dominating opponents early. A sophomore Nzekwesi bludgeoned regional powerhouse, Fort Worth Dunbar, in the regional finals, piling on 22 points without missing a shot.
Driving Nzekwesi to school every morning and workouts after school brought Curran and the Dutch star close. Curran followed Nzekwesi’s Oral Roberts career closely, watching all of the games he could.
More than four years later, Curran and his wife witnessed Nzekwesi dunk at the buzzer for his final points on senior night at Oral Roberts. It was the apex of Nzekwesi’s hard work, the fulfillment of a promise Curran made many years ago when Nzekwesi questioned everything.
“I promised him, I said, ‘Keep working, man, keep doing what you’re doing and good things are gonna happen for you and your family,’ and obviously that’s happening now,” Curran said.
But at the end of Nzekwesi’s high school career, Curran’s promise remained unrealized.
Nzekwesi drew the attention of Damian Lillard’s trainer, Phil Beckner, and, in turn, Weber State head coach Randy Rahe, who traveled down to Texas often to watch his top recruit. Nzekwesi signed his national letter of intent. Soon, he’d be a Wildcat.
But issues with Nzekwesi’s visa meant he could never enroll at Weber State, despite enlisting legal help. He wouldn’t be a Wildcat. He wouldn’t follow in the footsteps of Lillard. He wouldn’t play Division I basketball.
For now, Nzekwesi detoured to Moravian Prep in North Carolina in hopes of attracting Division I interest again.
Nzekwesi arrived before his teammates to work on his game. A continent and a sea separating Nzekwesi from his loved ones, diverting from his intended plan weighed on him.
But his first night at Moravian marked a turning point, the genesis of a deeply personal relationship with God that Nzekwesi would carry from that point forward.
“I can really tell you that my life really changed from that point,” Nzekwesi said.
After months of work at Moravian, an offer finally came his way. It was Oral Roberts, a school that had previously recruited Nzekwesi. Out of high school, Nzekwesi dismissed Oral Roberts. He wanted a bigger stage. The lights of Tulsa, Oklahoma, weren’t bright enough.
But faith led Nzekwesi away from his planned path time and time again. He wasn’t going to resist any longer.
“Sometimes we have a plan for ourselves, but the plan God has is way different,” Nzekwesi said. “At the end of the day his plan will come, so we just have to trust.”
*****
Silence pierced the film room at Oral Roberts University.
After the Golden Eagles’ loss to Division II Southern Nazarene, something had to change.
As the session ended, Nzekwesi hurried to catch his new head coach, Paul Mills.
“It would never happen again,” Nzekwesi told Mills.
Two nights later, the Golden Eagles matched up with 9-2 Missouri State, led by future Indiana Pacer Alize Johnson. With an all-conference player suspended and two seniors injured, Oral Roberts seemed destined to fall to 2-10, cementing a second straight disappointing season.
But 17 points scored by Nzekwesi pushed Oral Roberts past Missouri State, and 24 more the next game helped them defeat NCAA Tournament cinderella Florida Gulf Coast.
“You began to see the tide swing for him after that particular loss,” Mills said.
Life didn’t become easier for Nzekwesi even as he found his place at Oral Roberts. An eight-win season diluted Nzekwesi’s Summit League Freshman of the Year season, the program’s lowest win total since 1994 and the third single-digit win season in program history.
The program fired head coach Scott Sutton, the coach who recruited Nzekwesi, the same coach who offered him a new life.
The new regime and constant losing brought Nzekwesi down, angry, confused and reluctant to go all-in with the new coaching staff.
But even as Nzekwesi struggled, he never complained and worked hard.
“He’s very grateful for opportunities that he’s given and he’s going to use those opportunities to add value to whatever it is he’s been presented with,” Mills said.
Still learning how to operate within his body, Nzekwesi came to Oral Roberts trying to build on the jump shot he improved so much in high school.
“My freshman year, to be honest, I just came on the court and was like ‘Okay, how do I impact and how do I basically score?’” Nzekwesi said. “I didn’t pay attention to percentages much.”
As Nzekwesi matured, he leaned into his strength, literally and figuratively, playing on the inside.
“That was him understanding where he could score and where he was most efficient,” Mills said.
In the summer of 2017, Nzekwesi continued his development with the Dutch national team, most notably, rebounding. Mack Bruining, Nzekwesi’s teammate, snared boards with his relentlessness and timing. Nzekwesi always had the physical profile to bang on the glass. Now, he internalized it and made rebounding a priority.
At Oral Roberts, Mills and his staff track how often a rebounder does their job, whether it is crashing or getting back. Failure to execute means extra conditioning. Nzekwesi dominated this metric, rarely dipping below a 95% success rate, according to Mills.
“He understood where to be and what would give him the best opportunity in order to retrieve the basketball,” Mills said about his rebounding.
As Nzekwesi grew as a player, morphing into a dominant interior scorer, rebounder and defender, he dragged the program up with him. The Golden Eagles won 17 games this season, their best mark in five seasons. It wasn’t just Nzekwesi’s skills improving, but his focus, leadership and commitment to the team.
He could have transferred to a bigger school. He could have spent summers and even in season time away from his teammates playing with the national team. He could have faded into the background when he missed time with injury, but Nzekwesi never fazed.
Any time zapped by injuries is detrimental for a college basketball player, especially one in their final season.
“I think he got to a point where he felt like, ‘Am I going to be able to play consistently without something happening?’ It took a toll on him mentally,” Springmann said.
Yet, Nzekwesi didn’t spend practices sulking on the sidelines or zoning out.
“What E-Man was able to do was stay engaged the whole time,” Mills said. “I mean he basically became an extra coach for us. … I think that speaks to his care factor.”
Nzekwesi’s ability to not only survive and overcome his battles but to thrive amidst them comes from the same source that has powered him throughout his life: Faith.
“The Bible definitely is his compass,” Springmann said. “That’s how he determines how he’s going to live his life.”
Even for a wildly popular athlete and the “poster child” for Oral Roberts University, as Springmann said, the absence of Nzekwesi’s family to guide him through college was significant, especially his father. His father dealt with family affairs in The Hague, Netherlands, during much of the college process, 4,687 miles from Tulsa.
“You want to know that faith is important to you at all times, through the ups and downs of life,” Mills said. “I think you’ve seen that with E-Man. … It’s something that permeates every aspect of life.”
Nzekwesi lacked answers and faith couldn’t grant him omniscience. Still, he trusted the process. In the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., faith comprises of taking the next step even if the whole staircase is still concealed.
“He was able to take steps without seeing the whole staircase,” Mills said.
Nzekwesi joined Transformation Church during his sophomore year, then a small community. He has seen it blossom into a church over 5,000 strong. Often leading athletic chapel, Nzekewsi would help others for guidance after worship.
Springmann recalls Nzekwesi talking with a teammate about biblical history. He joined the conversation, stunned at the breadth of Nzekwesi’s knowledge.
“I felt like I was listening to a professor,” Springmann said.
Spreading his faith to others, not only as a refuge for himself, speaks to, as Mills says, Nzekwesi’s “care factor.” Nzekwesi consistently prioritized others at Oral Roberts despite being a campus celebrity.
Nzekwesi has a habit of leaving legacies, imprinting a lasting impression on everyone he comes across. Leaving something bigger than himself. Not only on the basketball court, where Nzekwesi hopes to land an NBA contract, but, more importantly, as a person.
*****
Rain pelted Emmanuel Nzekwesi.
Precipitation is ubiquitous in the Netherlands, a country in a constant tug-of-war with the ever-encroaching sea.
No deluge would deter eight-year-old Nzekwesi from making it to basketball practice, though. Travel was often an ordeal for the Nzekwesis, forced to take public transportation long distances to practice.
Yet, Nzekwesi’s parents, Chioma and Emmanuel, never let any distance or obstacle stop Nzekwesi from playing basketball, the sport he loved from such an early age.
Chioma and Emmanuel pushed for their son to play basketball as a child, signing him up for basketball lessons at age seven; despite being too young to play, he stood over other kids his age. He was tall, so he could play.
They paid for Nzekwesi to participate in a showcase for American colleges, which was eventually canceled. Basketball wasn’t popular back then in the Netherlands, making every opportunity crucial.
And even in the heaviest rain, they withstood the downpour to take him to practice.
Even as a child, Nzekwesi understood the sacrifices his parents made. And on this rainy day, he made a promise to his mother. A promise Nzekwesi is on the precipice of fulfilling.
“Mom, I’ll pay you back for this,” Nzekwesi said. “I’ll become a pro and I’ll pay you back for this.”
Fourteen years and many thousands of miles later, Nzekwesi is a contract away from finally realizing the promise he made to his mother so long ago.
But Nzekwesi knows basketball is not forever.
One day, he hopes to further his passion for business. With an undergraduate degree in Computer Information Technology, he’s pursuing his master’s degree.
He’s building his own business now, a recruiting database to streamline the process for coaches to recruit international players. Nzekwesi knows how arduous the process of applying to American colleges is. He wants future athletes to have opportunities he didn’t.
If his track record says anything, from Byron Nelson to Oral Roberts, one thing is clear: No matter where Nzekwesi lands in life, he brightens the lives of people around him.
“He’s a light that always shines,” Springmann said.
CBS released their top 100 big board for the 2021 NFL Draft and on it you find two Notre Dame offensive linemen but nobody else from ND.
The NFL Draft came and went almost two weeks ago now and for those make their livings off the draft, evaluations for the 2021 version have already begun. We’ll have a bit on that in the coming days no doubt I wanted to share with you the big board that CBS has put together.
Two Notre Dame players make the top 100 and it’s not a surprise to see either as offensive tackle Liam Eichenberg checks in at 38 and right guard Tommy Kraemer is rated 55.
Both are near elite in pass protection but not near the road-graders that we’ve seen in the run game compared to a few NFL stars that have played for Notre Dame in recent years.
For anyone who watched last year you saw an offensive line that struggled against the better opponents in run blocking, specifically Georgia and Michigan.
I’m again surprised that outside linebacker Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah isn’t on this list. If you’re doing a mock of the first round or two, fine, I get it. To not be included in the top 100 overall, though?
I know a players draft forecast isn’t solely based on production but in one year he was responsible for 13.5 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks. Sure, the pass rush game won’t offer as much help to him this year but it will also provide what should be a better chance to shine, too.
Can Eichenberg and Kraemer grow where their ability in the run game nears their ability in the pass game? And can I buy draft stock in JOK right now? I really want to invest in it because this is yet another draft production that is undervaluing a star level talent.