Jabari Parker is a rare recruit
The No. 1 overall player in the ESPN 100 is humble but still driven to be the best ever
Originally Published: May 23, 2012
By Mitch Sherman | ESPN RecruitingNation
Basketball always ranked as the backup plan for Jabari Parker.
Education and his faith came first. They still do.
"Basketball is going to end," Parker said.
Matt Marcinkowski/ESPNHS
Jabari Parker already has numerous accolades. Now you can add No. 1 on the ESPN 100 to the list.
Strange talk from a kid who turned 17 in March and graced the cover of Sports Illustrated last week, labeled as the best high school player since LeBron James, who took his game straight from the Ohio prep courts to NBA stardom in 2003.
But that's Parker, a three-time 4A state champion at Chicago's Simeon Career Academy and the No. 1-ranked prospect in the newly released ESPN 100 for the Class of 2013.
As uncommon as his talent and promise rate in basketball, Parker's attitude toward the sport and perspective on life are perhaps just as rare.
Parker cried when John Wooden died in 2010.
His basketball idol? Oscar Robertson, same as his father, Sonny Parker, a former first-round draft pick of Golden State who played six seasons in the NBA.
When the hype around Jabari began to mount early in his high school career and outsiders compared his impact to Derrick Rose, who led Simeon to state titles in 2006 and 2007, Sonny and his wife, Lola, grew concerned. Jabari, though, told his parents not to get caught up in the attention.
"Even when he was 14, it was just amazing," Sonny said. "He's a throwback in how he holds it all in."
cont...