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Originally Posted by dland24
at Will Bynum
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Originally Posted by dland24
at Will Bynum
Originally Posted by rck2sactown
How in the hell did I know it was DC that grave dug this up
Carlos Hurt - Left Louisville early and was never seen again
he's was in houston a couple years ago, givin TJ Ford THE BUSINESS at the Fonde...
lmao.... son was screamin out "just like in high school!! aint !!@$ changed!"...
hahahahahah...
same here but maybe because I'm a homer since he went to my HS and our basketball coach would always talk about him.Originally Posted by Proshares
I always thought Wayne would be a servicable player went MIA drafted him.
Who are you?Originally Posted by imsofly4110
Smh, I was a top 100 player in the class of 2001, now im the manager of a car lot.... SERIOUSLY. Funny how things work out, your forgeting a few players though, Ben Gordon, Hakim Warrick.... 2001 was stacked with talent, however your right in stating the class definetely didnt pan out.
Originally Posted by OGbobbyjohnson773
Najeeb Echols
Dude was talking reckless on the Fox Sports Prep show about how Ron Artest was trash and shouldnt be in the league when he was with the Bulls. Where is Najeeb these days?
Once New Jersey's brightest basketball star, Dajuan Wagner now prefers obscurity
The dark gym inside Camden’s Henry L. Bonsall Elementary School is a long way from Madison Square Garden and Staples Center, but this is where the best high school basketball player New Jersey has ever produced can be found.
He blends into the crowd in the wooden bleachers, an unassuming figure in jeans and a long-sleeve T-shirt. He thumbs text messages into his cell phone and glances at the action on the court, then turns and drifts into his own thoughts.
Ten years ago, Dajuan Wagner was the biggest name in high school basketball as he finished up a career at Camden High. The scoring machine once netted 100 points in a game and averaged an unthinkable 42 for an entire season. Around town, people christened him the basketball Messiah.
But today, the No. 6 pick of the 2002 NBA Draft is back where it all started, watching youth league games at an elementary school in relative anonymity.
The spotlight that followed Wagner has faded, but it’s hard to tell whether he cares.
“Juanny doesn’t express his feelings like that,