Minnesota basketball talent is as good as it's ever been. You could argue the state of hockey could also be turning into the state of hoops, especially after scholarship offers pile up for the latest crop of roundball blue-chippers from the land of 10,000 lakes.
Good luck keeping up with the booming interest from Power Five schools this spring. There was a buzz last month from college coaches watching Minnesota prospects. Whether it was the Adidas Gauntlet in Dallas, Nike EYBL in Atlanta or Under Armour Association in Kansas City, Minnesotans dominated the chatter during the first live recruiting period (You can also check out many of these players locally at the Battle at the Lakes tournament May 10-12 in the Twin Cities).
Gophers coach Richard Pitino understands the need to keep the best players from leaving the state, but it won't get any easier with the 2020 class and beyond racking up high-major offers by the day.
Minnehaha Academy 7-foot shot-blocking phenom Chet Holmgren leads the pack for hottest prospect probably in the 2021 class.
The five-star center picked up the best in-state spring offer so far with Kansas making him a priority. Holmgren, the son of former Gophers center David Holmgren, is averaging 16.5 points, 6.9 rebounds and 5.6 blocks per game (1st in blocks in UAA circuit) for Grassroots Sizzle. He jumped from unranked to as high as No. 17 in ESPN's new Class of 2021 rankings, which also included East Ridge guard Kendall Brown at No. 14.
The Gophers offered Holmgren in the winter, but just in the last month he now has scholarship list with Baylor, Purdue, Georgia, Gonzaga, Iowa, Marquette, Maryland, Missouri, Texas, Texas A&M and Vanderbilt. Eight of those offers came in the span of just two weeks. Wow.
The Jayhawks are the most high-profile program after Holmgren right now. He's only the second Minnesota non-senior with a blue-blood offer, joining high school teammate and five-star junior Jalen Suggs.
Suggs, a 6-5 combo guard at Minnehaha Academy, joins Holmgren as another local talent quickly on the rise this spring. National recruiting services seem to forget that he once was a top-three player in the 2020 class a couple years ago. After dropping below the top 10 battling injuries last summer, Suggs proved over the weekend that he deserves to be mentioned again in the conversation for No. 1 player at his position (definitely after five-star guard RJ Hampton reclassified to the 2019 class this week).