4-star guard Justin Pippen, son of Scottie, commits to Michigan

Justin Pippen, the son of NBA legend Scottie Pippen, has committed to the Michigan Wolverine’s men’s basketball team.

Justin Pippen, the star guard of prestigious Sierra Canyon High School (Chatsworth, Calif.) and son of NBA legend Scottie Pippen, announced on Friday that he has committed to the University of Michigan.

The four-star guard chose the Wolverines over the other six universities that offered him, including Stanford, Cal, Georgia Tech, and Texas A&M. He was named to the Los Angeles Daily News All-CIF Open Division team this year after helping the Trailblazers go 26-4.

Ranked as the No. 62 player on the 247Sports list and No. 101 on the composite ranking, Pippen had a good assist-to-turnover ratio and a bundle of steals this season, according to On3. The outlet’s reporter Collin Ginnan wrote:

“The eye test will show you a guard with good size, who is comfortable with the ball in his hands and has no trouble touching the paint. He plays aggressively, and without question deserves to be in the 2024 On3 150. Currently, he is a 6-foot-3 combo guard who needs to continue developing his scoring efficiency. That put him as a high three-star, at No. 115 in this update.”

Pippen is a very late commitment for the class of 2024, but it was much-needed for Michigan, which only had received the commitment of three-star point guard Durral Brooks prior to Pippen’s announcement.

(Sierra Canyon guard Justin Pippen (1) against Desert Mountain during the Hoophall West High School Invitational at Chaparral High School. Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

Since appearing in the Elite Eight in 2021 and the Sweet Sixteen in 2022, the Wolverines have been unable to return to the NCAA tournament over the last two seasons. This past year, they posted a record of 8-24.

The program is hoping Pippen can help prop them up in the coming years.

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Will Bronny James declare for the 2024 NBA draft with USC’s season over? It’s complicated.

Bronny James has a huge decision to make about his future.

Bronny James and the USC Trojans were eliminated from the Pac-12 men’s basketball tournament, effectively ending his season.

That means Bronny could potentially soon declare for the 2024 NBA Draft. Otherwise, he could wait another year and opt to turn pro after another year (or longer) in the NCAA either at USC (or elsewhere) via the transfer portal. After finishing his freshman campaign, the choice is in his hands.

IT’S BRACKET MADNESS: Enter USA TODAY’s NCAA tournament bracket contest for a chance at $1 million prize.

It is hardly a secret that LeBron James hopes to eventually play alongside his son in the NBA. LeBron has a fascinating player option in his contract that would allow him to either stay with the Lakers or become a free agent and join whatever NBA team potentially drafts his son if Los Angeles did not.

Bronny, who was able to return to play after suffering a terrifying cardiac arrest before the season began, is at a crossroads. For context: Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul recently told ESPN that Bronny will make his decision based on team interest, not draft position.

If he decides to turn pro, due to his heart condition, he will need to get cleared by NBA’s fitness-to-play panel. Yet it is worth noting that one Eastern Conference executive reportedly told draft analyst Jeremy Woo that it would be surprising if Bronny wasn’t in the draft.

His choice is especially complicated by the fact that even before the health scare, talent evaluators had concerns that Bronny may not be ready for the NBA for several years. While he had shown “NBA potential” during his time in high school, he was never considered one of the best players in his class.

During his time in high school, the McDonald’s All-American honoree had some impressive on-court accomplishments as well. When we scouted Bronny, for example, we immediately noticed that his defense was his most compelling trait.

His offense, however, is nowhere near ready to contribute at a pro level.

Take a look at how he fared in the catch-all metric offensive box plus-minus, for example. Bronny, who is listed at 6-foot-4 and is perhaps a bit shorter, finished the season with a -1.8 in OBPM. That was by far the lowest of any player in USC’s rotation.

No prospect under 6-foot-6 who finished their collegiate careers with a negative OBPM in the NCAA has ever heard his name called in the NBA Draft, based on all data pulled from Bart Torvik available since 2008.

Among all collegiate players drafted during that span, also per Bart Torvik, only two had a lower career OBPM in the NCAA: Kostas Antetokounmpo and Daniel Orton.

Kostas, a younger brother of Giannis Antetokounmpo, was the last pick in the 2018 NBA Draft. He played just 22 games in his NBA career, totaling just 21 points. Orton played 51 games, recording 143 points in the NBA.

Simply put, especially at his size and where he is at in his development right now, it would be quite difficult to project a role for Bronny in the NBA with his minimal offensive impact.

As one Western Conference executive told Woo, Bronny could always return to school and try to improve his draft stock:

“If he goes back, he gets an entire offseason. That’s the biggest thing to me. You can see a big jump with kids from Year 1 to Year 2, and I’d expect him to come back knowing a role and where he is in the pecking order. I don’t think he knew and I don’t think USC ever knew this year. In some games I felt he’s very important to them and in other games they’ve kind of force-fed him minutes. And if he came back another year, I think he’d pretty firmly know where he stands.”

Despite how well Bronny has handled his fame and how remarkable it was for him to come from his health scare, if this is the end, his time at USC was underwhelming.

Other similarly-sized players (e.g. Davion Mitchell and Malachi Flynn) were able to successfully use the transfer portal to bounce back from similarly slow starts in the NCAA and eventually play their way into becoming first-round picks.

The transfer portal could absolutely change his trajectory. But it clearly means a lot to LeBron and his family to have Bronny play nearby in Los Angeles.

Perhaps he doesn’t use the transfer portal and he doesn’t feel that USC is the right fit either. Maybe, as Ricky O’Donnell mused late last month, Bronny decides to just take the leap now (via SB Nation):

“If Bronny enters the 2024 draft, he has a few excuses that work in his favor. The preseason heart incident is very much a legitimate one, and derailed his chance of having a successful freshman year. Teams will be able to see that USC was just a bad situation even before he got back on the court. Teams will say, well, he was only a freshman. They could chalk up his poor outside shooting to a small sample.

If Bronny comes back for his sophomore year, the excuses will be gone. He’s going to have to average double-figures in scoring. He’ll have to shoot better from three. In more of a leadership position as an upperclassman, he’ll also have more responsibility for his team’s record.”

With all likelihood, Bronny will at least test the waters of the 2024 NBA Draft. The Lakers are indeed reportedly “willing to explore the notion” of adding Bronny, per The Athletic. He is still on “multiple” draft boards, via ESPN.

So if the Lakers or another team already feels comfortable with selecting Bronny now, even with his limitations, is there much of a difference if it is in the second round?

It’s not like the James family desperately needs the money. Maybe, just as many had predicted before the season began, this long and winding road just leads to Bronny in Los Angeles on the Lakers after the 2024 NBA Draft.

No matter what, though, now is a perfect time to let him be his own person and follow his gut to do what is best for him.

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Watch: 5-star prospect Tounde Yessoufou hits buzzer-beater to beat Sierra Canyon

St. Joseph advanced past Sierra Canyon in the CIF Open Division playoffs behind five-star forward Tounde Yessoufou’s buzzer-beater.

A year after St. Joseph (Santa Maria, Calif.) fell in the California Interscholastic Federation State Open Division championship, the Knights returned with their eyes on reaching the top. In their way stood a brutal first-round matchup against Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, Calif.), a nationally ranked opponent with a bevy of star talent.

But St. Joseph has stars of its own, and in the most critical moment, their five-star junior showed up. Tounde Yessoufou hit a buzzer-beater to lift St. Joseph over Sierra Canyon, icing the game at 69-68 and being mobbed by teammates on the court.

See his high catch point, control of the ball, release, and celebration in this video taken from the sidelines:

Yessoufou, a wing listed as 6-foot-5 on 247Sports and 6-foot-6 on MaxPreps, drilled the shot to allow the Knights to advance to the second round, where they will face Super 25-ranked Roosevelt (Eastvale, Calif.).

The two teams have faced off one time already this season, a Jan. 6 game in which Roosevelt eked out a 62-61 victory. That was one of just three losses the 31-win Knights have had this season.

St. Joseph has been largely dominant this year, posting more than 2,700 points over 34 games and outscoring opponents by an average margin of about 27 points per game.

They have one player ranked in the 247Sports Composite, Yessoufou. Listed on the composite as a five-star player, he is ranked as the third-best player in California and 20th-best in the class of 2025.

Austin Rivers gave a thoughtful answer on why LeBron James and Bronny should not be teammates

It is worth considering his perspective when we talk about Bronny and LeBron.

It is no secret that LeBron James hopes to eventually play alongside his son, Bronny James, in the NBA.

Bronny is currently a freshman at USC and could potentially declare for the 2024 NBA Draft at the end of this season. LeBron, meanwhile, has a player option in his contract that would allow him to become a free agent and join whatever NBA team drafted the Trojans guard if the Lakers did not.

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But it is worth mentioning that ESPN analyst Austin Rivers, the son of Milwaukee Bucks coach Doc Rivers, does not think this is a good idea for any party involved. Austin played for Doc on the Clippers from 2015 until 2018.

During a recent segment, the former NBA guard spoke about his evaluation of Bronny both on and off the court and drew from his own experience as a professional basketball player with a famous father.

Austin first spoke about how well Bronny has handled his fame so far:

“I hope it doesn’t happen … I don’t want to see Bronny play with his dad. I really don’t … I went through something similar. It was a very similar situation but also different. I was already in the NBA when I went to go play for him. What happens is a lot of people start to discredit everything that you’ve done. This kid has been in the limelight since he was born. His first day on Instagram, he had a million followers. He’s handled it so well.”

He then spoke about some of the on-court accomplishments the McDonald’s All-American honoree has already experienced with basketball.

When we scouted Bronny, we immediately noticed that his defense was his most compelling trait. Austin also noted that Bronny has a good feel for the game:

“He’s played well at Sierra Canyon amongst talent and was able to get himself to a school like USC. Right now, his numbers don’t scream pro. So if he is to go in the draft or if he gets picked, it’d be great to get picked up by a contending team that could help him put him in a situation [to develop] because he does have talent and he does have basketball IQ and he does have potential.”

Bronny was able to return to play after suffering a terrifying cardiac arrest before the season began.

But even before the health scare, talent evaluators had concerns that Bronny may not be ready for the NBA for several years. While he had shown “NBA potential” during his time in high school, he was never considered one of the best players in his class.

Recruiting services, however, had Austin as a top player in his class. That wasn’t how Bronny was evaluated:

“At this point in his career, just because Bronny’s success isn’t at a top-tier level, him getting drafted and playing with his dad, I don’t want that negativity to come his way because he doesn’t deserve it. He’s not a top-10 pick. He’s not a lottery pick. He’s none of those things. I was all of those things. And then still, when I went to go play for the Clippers, people were like: You’re only in the league because your dad after me being the No. 1 player in the United States two years prior.”

Perhaps most important, though, is the fame levels of their respective fathers.

Austin said that he was put under a microscope playing for Doc Rivers, who is a one-time NBA champion and one-time Coach of the Year recipient. Yet he still received a lot of criticism (like from Glen Davis) even though the two weren’t very close outside of basketball.

That would only magnify tenfold as the son of LeBron, a four-time NBA Finals MVP and 20-time NBA All-Star:

“On a different level, Doc is great. LeBron James is the most popular basketball to ever play other than who, maybe Michael Jordan? It would just be a lot, man. I hope for the kid that he is able to not only play in the NBA but play somewhere where he can kind of niche out his own identity. His name is already Bronny. Everything we talk about with him always folds back to his dad and rightfully so. He plays for USC and his dad plays down the street for the Lakers. It’s an insane situation and the way he has handled it, I’m a fan of Bronny. I really. And I hope he goes somewhere else. I really do.”

Austin, who also gave thoughtful criticism of the Rockets before they eventually parted ways with Kevin Porter Jr., has given this a lot of thought and came away with a strong opinion.

It is worth considering his perspective when we talk about Bronny and LeBron.

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Sierra Canyon comes back from 17-point deficit to beat Notre Dame

Sierra Canyon’s full-court press and fourth-quarter offense from Bryce Cofield and Isaiah Elohim sparked a massive comeback over Notre Dame.

A battle of a pair of 2023-24 California high school basketball titans in front of an audience with celebrities lived up to its billing with a 17-point comeback by No. 20 Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, Calif.) to hand No. 19 Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks, Calif.) its first loss of the season 81-75.

The Notre Dame Knights, who entered the game with a 24-0 record, took a commanding 66-49 lead into the fourth quarter. Sierra Canyon launched a full-court press that turned defensive into offense, primarily from three-star forwards Bryce Cofield and Isaiah Elohim.

The Trailblazers forced 10 turnovers over the final six minutes of the game, according to the Los Angeles Daily News, as they chipped away at the lead. Cofield and Elohim combined for 21 points in the quarter, and Cofield gave Sierra Canyon the lead with a little over a minute left in the game.

Cofield finished with 14 points and Elohim with 18, per the Los Angeles Times. Justin Pippen, a three-star guard on the 247Sports Composite, led the team with 19 points.

For Notre Dame, four-star guard Mercy Miller led with 28 points. Lino Mark, ranked four-stars on the 247Sports Composite, scored 21.

Notre Dame and Sierra Canyon were battling for supremacy of the Mission League after both took down Harvard-Westlake, previously a top-5 team in the nation, a week earlier. In the stands included former Sierra Canyon player Bronny James, Justin’s dad Scottie Pippen, and Los Angeles Dodgers star Mookie Betts.

With the win, Sierra Canyon improved its record to 24-1 and pushed Notre Dame to an identical record. With 19 wins in a row, the Trailblazers enter the Mission League Tournament as the top seed, one spot ahead of Notre Dame. Both play their next respective games on Wednesday.

The sons of Scottie Pippen and Master P took down the No. 3 team in back-to-back games

Justin Pippen, the son of Scottie, and Mercy Miller, son of Master P, lead their respective teams to wins over No. 3 Harvard-Westlake.

Harvard-Westlake (Studio City, Calif.) was rolling as the best team in California. Coming off a 34-2 championship season, the Wolverines leapt to a 20-1 record and No. 3 spot in the USA TODAY Super 25 national rankings.

All it took to take them down were the sons of two well-known people, one of whom with deep basketball roots and one with music (and a touch in basketball)

Harvard-Westlake lost its second game of the season on Wednesday to Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks, Calif.), a close battle that ended at 59-54. Houston commit Mercy Miller, the son of rapper and producer Master P, scored a game-high 29 points — essentially half of his team’s output — to upset the juggernaut. Miller has been crushing it this year, proving his four-star rating on 247Sports with his school-record 68-point performance on Dec. 11, according to Marca.

Miller may be able to one-up his dad. Master P rose to fame in the 90s through his rapping and producing, and is the founder of the record label No Limit Records, but he also ventured into hoops and came very close to breaking into the NBA — according to Marca, he was on the preseason team of the Toronto Raptors and Charlotte Hornets.

Mercy Miller is working to accomplish what his dad couldn’t.

Harvard-Westlake couldn’t bounce back on Friday, falling to Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, Calif.) and guard Justin Pippen, the youngest son of Scottie and Larsa Pippen. A three-star guard, he’s taking the mantle from Scotty Jr., the eldest son of the pair who graduated from Sierra Canyon in 2019 and is now on a non-guaranteed contract with the Memphis Grizzlies.

(Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

Justin led the Trailblazers over Harvard-Westlake by scoring 21 points in the second half to finish with 24 overall, helping elevate the team to a 74-68 win. He and Bryce Cofield, who had 15 points, helped the Trailblazers go on an 18-0 run in the fourth quarter to get the lead and the win.

With those victories, there’s a new question about the king of California basketball. Do Notre Dame (22-0) or Sierra Canyon (21-1) take hold of that title for the time being? Is it Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Calif.), with a record of 20-1? If we’re including prep schools, perhaps it’s Prolific Prep (Napa, Calif.), whose record is 19-3.

Luckily for us, we’ll have a stronger answer next week: Notre Dame and Sierra Canyon face off on Jan. 26.

He’s coming home: Bryce James, the son of Lebron James, is heading back to Sierra Canyon

Bryce James is heading back to Sierra Canyon from Notre Dame Prep.

Bryce James is heading back to the high school where he spent the last two seasons. The three-star guard, who is the son of NBA superstar LeBron James, is heading back home.

On Tuesday, Bryce James officially unenrolled from Notre Dame (Sherman Oaks, California) and intends to re-enroll at Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, California). The junior spent the first two years of high school at Sierra Canyon.

The Trailblazers have already started their season and are 2-0.

His father, Lebron James, notoriously left his hometown team, the Cleveland Cavaliers to take his talents to Miami. He spent four seasons in south Florida before returning to Cleveland, where he won an NBA championship in 2016.

The decision by Bryce James isn’t quite as momentous, but it is still noteworthy in the world of prep basketball. The story was first broken by Sports Illustrated.

In the 247 Sports Composite, Bryce James is the No. 135 recruit in the nation in the class of 2025. He holds offers from Duquesne and Ohio State.

Sierra Canyon’s undefeated season comes to an end vs. Mater Dei — but the Trailblazers’ future looks bright

Sierra Canyon, in its first year playing in the CIF-SS Div. I playoffs, fell in the semifinals to Mater Dei.

The Sierra Canyon Trailblazers (Chatsworth, Calif.), in their first year playing in the highest division of the California Interscholastic Federation South Section, found out what other teams have been dealing with for years:

One doesn’t just beat Mater Dei (Santa Ana, Calif.).

Sierra Canyon’s season came to an end on Friday, as the Trailblazers lost to the Monarchs 41-14 in the CIF-SS Div. I semifinals.

Nevertheless, it was an excellent season for the reigning Div. II champions. Sierra Canyon went undefeated in the regular season, allowing more than 14 points only once as it faced programs like Oaks Christian (Westlake Village, Calif.), Saguaro (Scottsdale, Ariz.) and Serra (Gardena, Calif.). The No. 25 team in the Super 25, the Trailblazers entered the playoffs with something to prove.

“It’s been a great ride for us and there’s been a lot of great kids come through this place that have just slowly helped us climb the ladder,” head coach Jon Ellinghouse said to the Los Angeles Daily News prior to the start of the playoffs.

“We’re really proud of what our program has done until this point and this is where we’ve been trying to get. Now we’ve gotta try to prove that we belong.”

They did so with the 37-20 win over Santa Margarita to kick off the playoffs. The team was then outmatched by Mater Dei in the semifinals, a game in which junior quarterback commit Wyatt Becker threw 20-for-41 for 251 yards and a touchdown while running back Dane Dunn rushed for 74 yards and a score, according to the OC Register.

Becker, who committed to Utah on Wednesday, finished his junior year with 2,423 passing yards and 29 touchdowns to seven interceptions while completing 65.8% of his passes.

The defense was key in the Trailblazers’ success, and many important parts — namely, the pass rush — will return. While Carnell Ferguson, who had 20.5 sacks, will graduate, the line is in good hands behind sophomores Mikhal Johnson and Jonah Nadley and freshman Richard Wesley, who combined for 35.0 sacks.

Sierra Canyon didn’t get through Mater Dei, but it can—and should be—delighted with the success of this season. Undefeated entering the semifinals is nothing to scoff at, and they can prepare for next year to take on the behemoths of the division who are set to face off once again for the championship.

2 California and Arizona teams faced off and the result skewed heavily to Cali

Sierra Canyon and Centennial high schools took down Saguaro and Liberty, respectively, the night before USC traveled to Tempe to play ASU.

Ahead of this weekend’s college football game between the University of Southern California and Arizona State University, two of the top California high school teams faced off against two of the top Arizona teams. In what may be a precursor to the result of USC vs. ASU this weekend, Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, Calif.) and Centennial (Corona, Calif.) took down Saguaro (Scottsdale, Ariz.) and Liberty (Peoria, Ariz.), respectively.

We’ll start with Sierra Canyon vs. Saguaro because this game was brutal. Saguaro is a historically dominant team that once again reached the Open Division championship last year, but with the departure of head coach Jason Mohns at the end of last season, there has been some transition. Nevertheless, between the classes of 2024 and 2025, there are seven three-star players on the Sabercats, who entered the evening 3-1.

No matter. It was a 63-6 beat-down in which the Trailblazers took a 28-0 lead in the first quarter and continued racking up points through the third quarter. Wyatt Becker, ranked a three-star QB by 247Sports and four-star on the 247 Composite Ranking, had twice as many total touchdowns (8) as he did incompletions (4) as he finished the game 18-22 with 364 yards, seven passing touchdowns and a rushing touchdown, according to Dan Lovi of the Los Angeles Daily News.

According to ArizonaVarsity, Saguaro’s worst loss previously had been 65-0 in 2011. Friday’s game comes close.

Across Los Angeles County, past Anaheim, and into Corona, No. 17 Liberty was putting up a much better fight against Centennial. The Lions took a 35-21 lead over Centennial at the beginning of the fourth quarter, and it looked like they may hold on to beat what is widely regarded as a top-3 team in California.

Arizona’s optimism quickly turned as Centennial drove down the field in less than two minutes, with four-star QB Husan Longstreet connecting on a deep pass to three-star receiver Cory Butler, and then Cornell Hatcher ran in a 17-yard touchdown.

Hatcher has been playing absolutely out of his mind this month. Against No. 2 Bishop Gorman two weeks ago, he rushed for 233 yards and four touchdowns. This week, he one-upped himself and practically dragged Centennial to a win, rushing for 300 yards and four touchdowns, according to MaxPreps.

He scored that 17-yard TD to cut the deficit to a single touchdown. He punched in a one-yard touchdown that cut Liberty’s lead to one point after a missed PAT. And then he punched home the game-winning 13-yard run that preceded a two-point conversion, leading the way for 21 Centennial points in the fourth quarter alone.

With his rushing and tough fourth-quarter defense that caught an interception midway through the fourth and then iced it at the end, the Huskies eked out the victory and improved to 3-2, with their two losses coming against top-2 teams in the Super 25. Liberty’s loss is its first of the season.

As for USC and ASU, who will meet in Tempe on Saturday night? There’s definitely a chance it’ll look more like the Saguaro-Sierra Canyon game than that of Liberty-Centennial. Southern California will look to go 3-for-3 this weekend.

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Updated 2023 basketball recruiting rankings after Bronny James commitment

Here is what the full top 50 national rankings look like after Bronny James’ commitment to USC.

This past weekend Bronny James finally made his decision, announcing his commitment to USC in an Instagram post. It’s a massive recruiting victory for the Trojans, who will find themselves thrust into the national spotlight as long as James is on their team.

However impactful James may be, USC is still on the lower end of the recruiting rankings. Bronny is just their second commitment in this class, which ranks No. 48 in the nation going by the 247Sports composite rankings.

Here is what the full top 50 national rankings look like after James’ commitment.

1. Kentucky
2. Duke
3. Oregon
4. UConn
5. Michigan State
6. Louisville
7. Kansas
8. Baylor
9. Ohio State
10. Arkansas
11. Iowa State
12. Oklahoma State
13. UCLA
14. Tennessee
15. North Carolina
16. Memphis
17. Maryland
18. Georgia
19. Houston
20. Gonzaga
21. Xavier
22. Alabama
23. Virginia
24. Oklahoma
25. Kansas State
26. Indiana
27. Stanford
28. Colorado
29. Cincinnati
30. NC State
31. TCU
32. Missouri
33. West Virginia
34. Illinois
35. Ole Miss
36. Notre Dame
37. Iowa
38. New Mexico
39. Texas
40. Pittsburgh
41. LSU
42. South Carolina
43. Michigan
44. Marquette
45. Wisconsin
46. Wake Forest
47. Arizona State
48. USC
49. Georgetown
50. Butler

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