When Eli King was in eighth grade, his Caledonia basketball team reached the Class 2A championship game against Minnehaha Academy, leaving him with a daunting challenge: guarding two-sport sensation Jalen Suggs.
That was 2018, when Suggs was a five-star basketball recruit drawing a pile of Division I scholarship offers for football, too. But King didn't blink. Growing up, he was used to being challenged.
"His mentality was there already having to compete against his two older brothers," said Brad King, his father and basketball coach. "Getting knocked around."
Eli's brothers, Owen and Noah, set the bar high. They were stars in basketball and football in Caledonia, a few hours south of the Twin Cities.
Now a 6-3, 185-pound highly recruited two-sport athlete, King has the potential to surpass his brothers. His eye-popping athleticism is even reminiscent of a certain gridiron and hardcourt star he faced early in his career.
Like Suggs once before, King now has Gophers basketball and football offers from Richard Pitino and P.J. Fleck. King's other offers include Stanford and Iowa in hoops, and Notre Dame and Iowa in football.
"I'm still weighing my options," King said. "I definitely say my brothers pushed me to be the best basketball player I can be. Not necessarily that I'm going to play that in college for sure. But it definitely made me want to have the ability to play [both sports] in college if I wanted to."
As the state's No. 1-ranked Class of 2022 football recruit, King caught 21 touchdown passes as a sophomore receiver during the Warriors' fifth straight state title run last season. His 18 points per game as a playmaking point guard paced a 28-1 Caledonia basketball team favored to win the Class 2A state crown before the pandemic hit.