We’ve kicked off our countdown of the top 100 players in the country.
You can read through all of the picks below. You can also follow along with it live by following @cbtonnbc on twitter or by scrolling through the #CBTtop100 hashtag.
Here is our top 100 up to date:
[MORE: Top backcourts | Top frontcourts]
No. 1 Kris Dunn, Providence: He's the best player in the country and it's really not all that close. #CBTtop100 https://t.co/ZLkWtgqXPo
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 2 Ben Simmons, LSU: A true point forward, Simmons could set the record for triple-doubles in a year. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/WeF65piEpv
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 3 Skal Labissiere, Kentucky: Question is how quickly he adjusts to college. He's LaMarcus Aldridge. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/kvqvU9KNqG
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 4 Buddy Hield, Oklahoma: Reigning B12 POY, Hield avg'd 17.4 ppg and is an elite wing defender. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/sYzzOJpFDI
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 5 Georges Niang, Iowa State: New Cyclone coach Steve Prohmm will be relying heavily on Niang this yr #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/tqI2u3vKki
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 6 Marcus Paige, UNC: He wasn't healthy last year. He is now. Darkhorse Player of the Year candidate. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/RYOHAYhrpS
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 7 Melo Trimble, Maryland: Avg'd 16 as frosh. Anyone you'd rather have with the ball in crunch time? #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/XljAIuE7mT
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 8 Denzel Valentine, Michigan State: Doesn't get near enough credit nationally for how good he is. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QgpDXUOZGu
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 9 Jamal Murray, Kentucky: No way he can live up to his hype, but he's the favorite to lead UK in ppg #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/JQwoxYLjov
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 10 Kyle Wiltjer, Gonzaga: His scoring/shooting splits will be awesome, but can he defend/board? #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Cb2nMteOgn
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 11 Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia: An ACC coach on Brogdon: "He's an MFer, man. In every way." #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/HoEZff9zJK
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 12 Demetrius Jackson, Notre Dame: Mike Brey force feeds his PGs. It's DJ's turn to reap the benefits https://t.co/xxCxN0cQmE #CBTtop100
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 13 Ron Baker, Wichita State: Baker was the best US college player at Pan-Am Games. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/ayQJlLNK7y
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 14 Damian Jones, Vanderbilt: Arguably the best big in the sport. He'll be a lottery pick come July. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Nis0R0P1oX
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 15 Jaylen Brown, Cal: A power wing, Brown will see minutes at the four in Cal's small-ball lineup. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/0f4JIDtcf2
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 16 Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin: With the stars gone, is this the year Hayes becomes a household name? #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/G415bIMeN3
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 17 Fred Van Vleet, Wichita State: FVV has been to a Final Four, a Sweet 16 and won 35 straight games #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/HlMX6ZLWYl
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 18 Yogi Ferrell, Indiana: Yogi is the sparkplug of what may be the nation's most high-octane offense #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/hTeC599KHP
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 19 Brandon Ingram, Duke: 6-9 SF, he has worlds of potential, gives Duke valuable lineup versatility #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/jK8cHUQEhi
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 20 Jakob Poeltl, Utah: An excellent defender but can his offensive game can improve w/o Delon Wright #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/jsPI3buN2F
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 28, 2015
No. 21 Monte Morris, Iowa State: Morris has led the nation in ast:t/o the last two seasons. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/9Afd0RVBOR
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 22 Tyler Ulis, Kentucky: There's an argument to be made Ulis is the best true PG in the country. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/I9EOU4vnA8
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 23 Caris LeVert, Michigan: If he's 100% healthy, this will be too low. But a twice broken foot … ? #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/XFGDBWs6zp
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 24 Taurean Waller-Prince, Baylor: As a SF, he's why Baylor has one of the nation's best front lines. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/yxzFP4UBOB
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 25 Henry Ellenson, Marquette: For my money, the more underrated player heading into the season. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/UgMyipY3Ha
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 26 Rico Gathers, Baylor: The best rebounder in college basketball. Hands, and biceps, down. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/ja6glBv43z
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 27 Perry Ellis, Kansas: He's still in college? Yup, and he could very well lead KU in scoring #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/hSlyZT7YYr
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 28 DeAndre Bembry, St. Joe's: Earned the title the best player you haven't heard of. You will though #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/wsZF5WWfhK
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 29 Malik Newman, Miss. State: We're expecting massive numbers and unimpressive efficiency this year. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/0klSJdpac0
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 30 Tyrone Wallace, Cal: Our thoughts can be summed up here: https://t.co/4QojG3nrEj #CBTtop100
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 31 Xavier Rathan-Mayes, FSU: Inconsistent but explosive. Three 30 pt games, 28% on 3s and 3.4 t/o's #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/7FhvoZPZLK
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 32 Justin Jackson, UNC: Effortlessly smooth scorer needs to be a more consistent jump-shooter. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/xfughVBisx
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 33 Cheick Diallo, Kansas: His front line toughness, defense and energy is so important for Jayhawks. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/jRYdVLV9ZE
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 34 Gary Payton II, Oregon State: You'd be hard-pressed to find a better perimeter defender than GP2. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/t84Fje6h6Q
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 35 D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera, GTown: Decided against going pro, making GT top 20 team #CBTtop100 You agree DSR? pic.twitter.com/s68UC7SMp8
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 36 Nic Moore, SMU: His career's been snakebit by snubs, goaltends, postseason bans. But he can play. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/wfdOdhayhX
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 37 Frank Mason, Kansas: Mason went from being a mid-major recruit to being KU's best player last yr. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/R4yjDzSu2C
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 38 Troy Williams, Indiana: Key piece for the Hoosiers, providing energy and athleticism at the four. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/njMF39PYyN
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 39 Wayne Selden, Kansas: Polarizing player. Disappointed last two years, but starred in Korea at WUG #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/IPnhOlLpzB
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 40 James Blackmon Jr., Indiana: Could put up huge numbers in IU's uptempo system this season. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/sGkbutwikV
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 41 Jalen Brunson, Villanova: As a frosh he may start over a PG that is top 100 and won two BE titles #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/YhIUL2te7H
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 42 Isaiah Briscoe, Kentucky: Talented kid, shed some weight, but at best No. 3 option for loaded UK. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QO9Ck6LTXO
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 43 Kyle Collinsworth, BYU: Set the NCAA record for triple-doubles in one season coming off torn ACL #CBTonNBC pic.twitter.com/javtcXHEcw
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 44 Brice Johnson, North Carolina: May have the best NBA upside of anyone on UNC's loaded frontline. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Ql9kNBsZSL
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 45 Danuel House, Texas A&M: House lived up to his 5* hype in his first season in College Station. #CBTtop100 https://t.co/Kif2obRE18
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 46 Domas Sabonis, Gonzaga: There's an argument to be made that he's the best big man on Zag roster. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QtSU0l1fnf
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 47 Diamond Stone, Maryland: Great name, better game. Should thrive running high-low with Rob Carter. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/LjSiGIzK94
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 48 Stephen Zimmerman, UNLV: A versatile, 7-ft center whose biggest strength is his ability to pass. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/awE85FcNYz
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 49 Daniel Hamilton, UConn: Quietly averaged 10.9 ppg, 7.4 rpg and 3.7 apg last season. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/qfhLJ6S4DQ
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 50 AJ Hammons, Purdue: Hammons is the best defender on Purdue's massive front line. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/VfZKEWHbOh
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 51 Isaiah Taylor, Texas: A wrist injury ruined last season. Taylor should thrive in Shaka's system. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/8KVYd64oac
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 52 Cat Barber, NC State: Former 5* recruit came into his own last year. He'll lead the Pack this yr. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Aj3XoN12At
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 53 Anthony Gill, Virginia: Numbers aren't overly impressive, but he's UVA's best low-post threat. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/PYqrGpv6ut
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 54 Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin: Thrived in starting PG role last season when Trae Jackson went down. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/KmSyhQ9L02
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 55 E.C. Matthews, Rhode Island: The most dangerous scorer in the A-10, Matthews may have NBA future. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/OdSx2TAOwh
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 56 Josh Hart, Villanova: I'd argue Hart, not Brunson or Arch, is Nova's most important player. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QjvJgjvM5b
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 57 Eron Harris, Michigan State: If he puts up the numbers he did at WVU, this will be absurdly low #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/CoqVNLdd3F
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 58 Jake Layman, Maryland: Assertiveness, not ability, is the only think holding Layman back. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/aNednzQhkx
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 59 Sterling Gibbs, UConn: Seton Hall transfer is the latest star lead guard to play for the Huskies. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/FVIK9SJusu
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 60 Kennedy Meeks, North Carolina: Meeks is the best rebounder/passer on UNC's vaunted front line. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/2L2QfcsBDR
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 27, 2015
No. 61 Dillon Brooks, Oregon: Brooks could be a star this year after a surprisingly good frosh season #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/1JEXawjkp0
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 62 Michael Gbinije, Syracuse: Gbinije will need a big year if the Orange are to return to the Dance. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/BbEzvLRTbf
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 63 Grayson Allen, Duke: Allen was the breakout star of the 2015 Final Four for doing things like this https://t.co/Tr1UMvTKkI #CBTtop100
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 64 Tim Quarterman, LSU: Underrated nationally, Q will aid Ben Simmons in playmaking for the Tigers. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/CuyuD1DKUy
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 65 Amida Brimah, UConn: A shot-blocking menace, we expect Brimah to have a bigger impact offensively #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/FSd1bRdjLH
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 66 Damion Lee, Louisville: Cards will need Lee to match the huge numbers he posted at Drexel last yr #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/YrzyvCMJff
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 67 Malcolm Hill, Illinois: The breakout star in B1G, be'll be more important will all Illini lost. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/REJLeZo1XZ
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 68 Ivan Rabb, Cal: Rabb's presence in the post is the reason Cal's considered Pac-12 title contender #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/aTlHSElZx8
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 69 Kellen Dunham, Butler: Avg'd 16.5 points and shot 41% from 3 for a top 25 team. Is this too low? #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/X6HoBogCZM
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 70 Dwayne Bacon, Florida State: Really talented scorer, but his effectiveness as a frosh is TBD. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/h5i5Va8If9
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 71 Ryan Arcidiacono, Villanova: He's flying under the radar this year due to freshman Jalen Brunson. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/wPxxFBO3fL
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 72 Zach Auguste, Notre Dame: Auguste finished a breakout junior year with a strong NCAA tournament. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/VnCMxAh0Cd
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 73 Isaiah Cousins, Oklahoma: Criminally underrated thanks to sharing a back court with Buddy Hield. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/GlSP8sxAWz
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 74 Roosevelt Jones, Butler: Jones' return from a broken wrist helped spark a surprise tournament run #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/pwc3k30bxT
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 75 Malik Pope, San Diego State: His potential's off the charts. His consistency and health … isn't #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/NO8hPACnoc
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 76 Shawn Long, Louisiana: Long's career numbers through three seasons: 16.8 ppg, 10.3 rpg, 2.1 bpg. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/XTfnPY1ftn
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 77 Zak Irvin, Michigan: Efficiency numbers should be much improved with LeVert and Walton healthy. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/IPwGTlb65X
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 78 AJ English, Iona: English was the only player in the country to avg 20 pts, 5 asts and 5 rebs. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/2G1obFPaRl
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 79 Markus Kennedy, SMU: He missed the first half of last season so folks forgot just how good he is. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/T4TSrJfT7D
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 80 Elgin Cook, Oregon: You don't hear much about him but Cook averaged 13 last season for the Ducks. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/IIoSNqksPQ
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 81 Daniel Ochefu, Villanova: The underrated anchor in Jay Wright's perimeter-oriented attack. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/yzsVBQuRR0
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 82 London Perrantes, Virginia: His numbers will never, EVER accurately tell him impact on a game. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/wWUce5wlDQ
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 83 Antonio Blakeney, LSU: A super-talented scorer, he'll have opportunities with Ds keyed on Simmons #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/xedGi89Oyf
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 84 Sheldon McClellan, Miami: Raw numbers were similar, but his efficiency made a huge leap in Miami. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/TL7WgwPEZg
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 85 Devin Williams, West Virginia: The 6-9 bruiser is Bob Huggins anchor on the interior. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/GiPtPXr631
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 86 Josh Scott, Colorado: Quietly, Scott has averaged 14 and 8 the past two seasons. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/nvS4Eq9T0L
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 87 Stefan Moody, Ole Miss: The SEC's leading returning scorer. He's also 5-9 with a 45 in vert. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/ud94HpFHR6
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 88 Hassan Martin, Rhode Island: Not flashy, but there may not be a better defender in the country. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QJXNHCjpSN
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 89 Trevon Bluiett, Xavier: the opportunity will be there this year for spoh that avg'd 11 last year. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Ywoqu7bXaU
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 90 Isaac Copeland, Georgetown: Major breakout potential. Inconsistent, six 14+ pt gms v. league foes #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/NWOARZzmYj
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 91 Maodo Lo, Columbia: Lo starred for Germany this summer, biggest reason Lions are Ivy contenders. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/UsSczMTPyk
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 92 Bryce Alford, UCLA: He'll climb higher on this list as he gets more efficient, better defensively #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/H7bg2epoqJ
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 93 Jalan West, Northwestern St: 20.0 ppg, 7.7 apg, 4.4 rpg, 2.1 spg, 42.2% 3PT. Speaks for itself. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Fs9T1aE5Yv
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 94 Robert Carter Jr, Maryland: GT transfer is an overlooked but difference-making piece for Terps. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/QSBa8EtAtL
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 95 James Webb III, Boise State: An athletic, 6-8 PF that shot 40.9% from 3. NBA scouts know him well #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/4UujC8b3Gr
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 96 Abdul-Malik Abu, N.C. State: We're expecting a breakout season from Abu headlining the Wolfpack #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/Rd53cy24QE
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 97 Jameel McKay, Iowa State: An elite defensive center provides better-than-you-realize production #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/iyFj6JK625
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 98 John Brown, High Point: College basketball's best dunker has averaged 18 and 7 in three seasons. #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/zqVR39pDNA
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 99 Justin Sears, Yale: Even w/ recent success of Harvard, Sears was Ivy's best player last two years #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/hKbgYpAZvG
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015
No. 100 Jameel Warney, Stony Brook: Rival coach on JW: "As dominant at his level as anyone I’ve seen" #CBTtop100 pic.twitter.com/YUM1IPPwML
— CollegeBasketbllTalk (@CBTonNBC) October 26, 2015