this was also discussed 5 hours earlier in the day in the
"basketball coaches on the hot seat in the B1G" thread.
that discussion:
Just lost their prized recruit. Asked for release from commitment.
Musselman was the No brainer hire. Somehow they blew that.
Massive loss for goofs.
Will likely lose another recruit too from Illinois.
Couple of their young players may bail and hit the transfer portal.
I thought Johnson had at least another year.
Now not so sure.
St Thomas wants to get into the Big East eventually (they have the money to do it and a new arena coming) and if they do gophers will be #2 in the twin cities.
I doubt the Goofs lose Cam Christie out of Illinois.
Here is the story regarding their 5 star loss:
Gophers' Prized 5 Star Recruit Dennis Evans changes his mind, asks for Release from his National Letter of Intent
Evans, a five-star, 7-foot senior from California, formally requested on Friday to be released from his signed national letter of intent.
By Marcus Fuller
Minneapolis Star Tribune
FEBRUARY 24, 2023 — 3:56PM
Dennis Evans III posed for a portrait in November at Hillcrest High School in Riverside, Calif.
The Gophers men's basketball program's highest-ranked recruit in 20 years likely isn't coming to Minnesota after all.
Dennis Evans III, the five-star, 7-foot senior from California, informed the Gophers earlier this week he wanted to be released from his signed letter of intent, sources told the Star Tribune.
The official request was submitted Friday, and the Gophers are likely to grant it, according to sources. Gophers coach Ben Johnson declined to comment on Evans' request Friday.
"I'm going to always make decisions to put our program in a position to be successful," Johnson told the Star Tribune, speaking generally. "I'm going to consume myself with the players who are here in this locker room and give them everything I have."
When Evans, a senior at Riverside Hillcrest, signed with Johnson in November, he became the first top-15 nationally ranked recruit landed by the U since former NBA forward Kris Humphries in 2003.
The Gophers (7-19, 1-14 Big Ten), who play Saturday at Nebraska, are on an 11-game losing streak after Wednesday's 88-70 loss at Maryland.
It's common in recruiting for players to commit to a school and then "decommit," landing somewhere else. It is rare for a player to sign a national letter of intent — as Evans did on Nov. 9 — and then seek his release.
That happens most often when there's a coaching change. Notre Dame, for example, granted a release for four-star guard Parker Friedrichsen after longtime Irish coach Mike Brey announced this is his last season. Friedrichsen committed Monday to Wake Forest.
Minnesota's current 11-game losing streak didn't appear to be the determining factor for Evans, who picked the Gophers last fall over Texas Christian. People close to Evans told the Star Tribune that he and his family had been thinking for a while that the Gophers might not be the right fit after watching this season.
Evans had a good relationship with Johnson, from all accounts, but the star center contacted the Gophers on Tuesday night to tell them he wanted to be released from his letter of intent.
Johnson and Gophers assistant Marcus Jenkins traveled to California to watch Evans play on Feb. 10. Johnson spoke to Evans and his family about the state of the Gophers program. Evans' senior season ended in Hillcrest's 77-75 playoff loss on Feb. 14.
The 7-1 Evans averaged nearly 15 points, 11 rebounds and six blocks this season. He was ranked as nation's No 2 center and 11th player overall in the Class of 2023 by
Rivals.com, and also No. 18 by 247Sports.com.
He's also been called arguably the top shot blocker in high school.
Evans first got on the Gophers' radar because of assistant Jenkins' strong ties to California. U freshman guard Jaden Henley, who had 14 points Wednesday at Maryland, also played with Evans on the same California Inland AAU program coached by Elvert "Kool-Aid" Perry.
The Gophers' 2023 class was highly touted once Evans committed in mid-October, joining four-star Rolling Meadows guard Cameron Christie, a candidate for Illinois Mr. Basketball.
Johnson saw Christie play last month and they shared excitement about him joining the U program next season. Evans had a different feeling.
To get released, a player starts by submitting an online request located on the National Letter of Intent (NLI) web site. Athletes under 21 must need a parent or legal guardian to acknowledge the request, which is then sent to the institution. There's no set timetable for granting a release.
But there's an appeal process through the NLI committee if the institution doesn't release the athlete from the letter of intent. Athletes who aren't released and decide to play for another NCAA school will lose a year of eligibility.
Without Evans, Johnson's program still should return talent in the frontcourt. The U's top two scorers, Dawson Garcia and Jamison Battle, have eligibility remaining. Junior forwards Parker Fox and Isaiah Ihnen are recovering from season-ending knee injuries.
Freshmen forwards Pharrel Payne, Joshua Ola-Joseph, and Kadyn Betts have high upside for the Gophers as well. Payne led the Gophers with 17 points in Wednesday's loss at Maryland. The 6-9 Cottage Grove native also had a season-high 18 points, 10 rebounds, and six assists last weekend vs. Penn State.
But the loss of Evans in the Gophers' 2023 class is potentially the biggest recruiting blow since former Hopkins star Royce White left the program due to off-court issues in 2009. He never played for Tubby Smith before transferring to Iowa State.
...........................................
Marcus Fuller covers Gophers men's basketball and college basketball for the Star Tribune. He has 13 years of experience covering Twin Cities college and professional sports.
Email:
marcus.fuller@startribune.com
Twitter:
Marcus_R_Fuller
Evans, a five-star, 7-foot senior from California, formally requested on Friday to be released from his signed national letter of intent.
www.startribune.com