Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Hey methomps, you must be excited then.
Hubbard, I see no reason to change it at this stage....
Rivals$
7/6/06
I don't doubt he won't be at USC, but according to this arcticle, he has not commited to USC and is not leaning to any one school at this moment.
LinkMayo not committed
Says USC tops list; Florida, K-State in mix
BY TOM GROESCHEN | ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER
North College Hill star O.J. Mayo has not committed to play basketball at Southern California, as some reports indicated this week. But Mayo said Thursday that USC is first on his list of potential colleges.
Mayo, who this week is playing at the Reebok ABCD summer camp in Teaneck, N.J., told a New Jersey reporter Thursday that he also is considering Florida and Kansas State. Mayo said he and NCH teammate Bill Walker - rated by Rivals.com as the Nos. 1-2 players, respectively, in the prep senior class of 2007 - were "not sure" about their college choices. The Web site has reported Walker's top choice is Kansas State.
"Me and Bill are still looking at Florida and K-State," Mayo told the Herald News (West Paterson, N.J.). "But USC is first on my list, and then K-State and Florida."
<script language="JavaScript"> OAS_AD('ArticleFlex_1'); </script>
ESPN.com, citing "multiple sources," reported Wednesday that Mayo told USC coaches and players last week that he would commit to Southern Cal.
Mayo, speaking after Thursday's morning session at the ABCD camp, told the Herald News that he might make an oral commitment to some college this week, then still take recruiting trips after that.
"I'd like to try to get it over with by this week," Mayo told the Herald News. "I'm still talking it over with my mother and my grandfather. I'm going to take a visit (to Florida) and K-State and make a final decision. A verbal is just a verbal. (USC) is what I like right now, but that could change."
Walker and Mayo conducted news conferences Thursday at ABCD, but the events were orchestrated to provide as little news as possible. Tournament official Chris Rivers told reporters the players would answer no questions about their recruitment or anything other than the camp.
The only revelatory statement might have come from Walker, when asked about speculation on whether he and Mayo would attend the same college.
"We both know we can hold on if we're by ourselves," Walker said. "But why divide us up when we can do this well together? It's a better story if we're both together."
Mayo managed to get his sense of humor across. After Rivers shot down one question about how Mayo was handling the media speculation over his school choice, a reporter tried to slip this question past: "O.J., during this game today, were you thinking about USC or Kansas State?"
At that point, Rivers ended the news conference. But Mayo got the last word: "I was thinking about Georgia State," he said.
In May, Mayo told The Enquirer he probably would not commit to a college until after his senior season.
A 6-foot-4 combination point guard/shooting guard, Mayo averaged 28.6 points a game this past season, repeated as Ohio Mr. Basketball and led NCH to its second straight Ohio Division III title. Walker, a 6-6 forward, averaged 21.7 points a game last season.
Dwaine Barnes, Mayo's AAU coach/guardian, has not returned calls seeking comment.
Eric Crawford of The (Louisville) Courier-Journal contributed.
"I'd like to try to get it over with by this week," Mayo told the Herald News. "I'm still talking it over with my mother and my grandfather. I'm going to take a visit (to Florida) and K-State and make a final decision. A verbal is just a verbal. (USC) is what I like right now, but that could change."
So when you bring someone like Mayo here, it just attracts more scumbags. And they don't just go after the star player, they reach out to everyone.
A verbal is just a verbal. (USC) is what I like right now, but that could change.
USC is important because there are widespread reports that superstar O.J. Mayo has decided to play for Tim Floyd and the Trojans in 2007-08, his one year stopover before the NBA. Floyd was on hand to watch every Mayo move and reportedly won't leave ABCD the entire week.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
<o:p> </o:p>
For his part, Mayo played well in the afternoon game alongside high school teammate Bill Walker. At times, O.J. looked like an NBA star, driving through the lane or throwing down a dunk, while at other times, he seemed to be disinterested and uninvolved. In a postgame press conference, Mayo refused to talk about his future. <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:City w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Walker</st1:place></st1:City> was impressive. He can shoot, jump, block, dribble and just about do anything on the basketball court. It is a shame he plays in Mayo's shadow.
<o:p></o:p>
OJ Mayo - #73 – Hawks - #1 Rivals.com
Cincinnati, OH – 6’5” – 2007
Mayo was mediocre in the afternoon session, perhaps preoccupied by his impending college decision. I was disappointed that he was playing off-guard, letting Isaiah Thomas handle the point guard duties. Mayo is trying to show he’s a combo guard in the mold of Dwyane Wade, but all this does is minimize his great on-the-ball skills. He flashed some devastating blow-by moves on offense, but his shot wasn’t really falling. For whatever reason though, I don’t seem to ever catch him on days when his jumper is really “on.” He was obviously still solid, but id you didn’t know who Mayo was, he would basically have just seemed like a good but not special player this afternoon.
Not really. I am leery of the mega-recruits like OJ Mayo and Jimmy Clausen that are names that casual fans and non-fans know before the player steps on campus.
OJ Mayo - #85 – Hawks - #1 Rivals.com
Cincinnati, OH – 6’5” – 2007
(By the way, Mayo is listed officially as 73, but he’s been wearing 85.) Mayo was solid today, being guarded by the talented Evan Turner. Turner is a solid athlete who was doing a nice job on D, but Mayo still is able to create shots whenever he wants to. The problem is that the shots he creates aren’t necessarily good shots, though he’s scoring a decent amount of points and his percentages are still solid, 53.7% so far.