Mr. Basketball finalists announced

northwest07

Well-known member
J'Allen Barrino, Malvern, 6-2, sr.
Division III East District and Inter-Valley Conference North Division Player of the Year after leading the Hornets to a 22-0 regular season. He has played 59 career games at Malvern and the team has gone 56-3. His senior year, J'Allen was 174-of-242 from the field, averaging 18.6 ppg while only taking 11 shots per game. He shot 74% from the foul line and also averaged 5.1 rebounds, 6.1 assists, and 5.2 steals. Barrino surpassed 1,000 career points and owns school records for steals in a season and a career. He also currently ranks third in career assists in school history.

Alex Bruskotter, Shelby, 6-8, sr.
The Wright State University commit averaged 23.8 points, 9.1 rebounds and 5.9 assists per game this season. The Northwest District Co-Player of the Year was also the Player of the Year by the District 6 coaches association and the Mid-Ohio Athletic Conference. He scored 53 points in a game with 12 3s in a game this season. He is second in scoring behind the legendary Larry Siegfried. Bruskotter was also invited to represent Ohio in Italy in March. He is a three-time All-Ohioan.

Marcus Johnson, Garfield Heights, 6-1, soph.
NE Lakes District POY coming off an All-Ohio first team season as a freshman and ranked 12th nationally in the Class of 2026. Johnson led the Bulldogs (21-1) to a 19-0 start that included wins against Huntington Prep, Western Reserve Academy, defending Texas state champion Faith Family Christian and OHSAA champion Richmond Heights. Johnson has offers from Ohio State to Alabama, Cincinnati, LSU and Villanova. Averaged 23.1 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1.9 steals.

Kruz McClure, Westerville South, 6-4, sr.
The Central District, District 10 Coaches Association (co-) and OCC Capital player of the year, McClure averaged 23.9 points, 4.0 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 2.6 steals for a 16-8 district semifinalist. The guard shot 45 percent from the field (30 percent from three-point range) and 88 percent at the free throw line despite suffering from Crohn's Disease, which flared up several times during the season and hospitalized him the night before a district tournament game. McClure, who owns 14 Division I offers (Ohio State, Dayton are very interested), has scored 1,098 points in his career.

Jesse McCulloch, Cleveland Heights Lutheran East, 6-10, sr.
NE Lakes District POY. Michigan State recruit led Falcons (16-5) to the No. 1 ranking in Division III as defending state champions, despite losing high profile forward T.J. Crumble to rival Richmond Heights. McCulloch averaged 22.4 points, 14.1 rebounds, 4.3 blocked shots and 2.7 assists. Also had a signature moment in mid-December, outplaying Cincinnati Winton Woods’ Tyler McKinley in a 71-45 win. McCulloch had 27 points, 18 rebounds and six blocks against him. Other signature performances include 21 points, 12 rebounds and eight blocks to beat Richmond Heights. Had a game-high 26 points, 14 rebounds and three blocks WHILE PLAYING SICK in a loss at Cleveland St. Ignatius. Had in a 55-36 win vs. Isidore Newman (La.) at Flyin’ to the Hoop. Also had 40, 15 and five in a win vs. Mentor. Completely transformed his body since his freshman season, when he was out of shape at 6-6 and 245 pounds.

Tyler McKinley, Cincinnati Winton Woods, 6-9, sr.
19.4 ppg, 9.5 rpg, 3.6 apg. Shot 61.7 percent from the field and led his team to the Eastern Cincinnati Conference title for the first time. A UC signee, he is rated the No. 1 player in the state in all publications. Was ECC player of the year. Also played at Walnut Hills and Link Year Prep Academy in Missouri where he won a national title.

Hayden Nigro, Louisville, 6-5, sr
Northeast Inland District Player of the Year. 6-4 wing averaged 20.9 points on 51.3 percent shooting from the field. Averaged 4.3 rebounds, 2.4 assists. ... Huge games against some of Louisville's best competition, including 31 points against Akron Hoban and 31 against Lutheran East. ... Four-year varsity player, three-year starter. Louisville's all-time leading scorer with 1,434 points, which rank 14th in Stark County history. ... Receiving D2 and D3 college interest. ... District 4 Coaches Association D1 Player of the Year. ... Louisville finished 23-3, with only losses to St. Ignatius, St. Edward and Canton GlenOak in district final.

Mason Shrout, Camden Preble Shawnee, 6-5, sr.
24.2 ppg, 7.7 rpg, 3.7 apg, 2.6 spg, 57.2% FG, 42.0 3 PT% 1st Team Western Ohio Athletic Conference, WOAC Player of the Year; District 15 Player of the Year. Led the Arrows to a second straight Division III district title and regional semifinal berth. An unselfish player, had five assists in district title game. The first player from Preble County to surpass 2,000 career points. Signed with Purdue Fort Wayne.

Colin White, Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-6 sr.
Ohio State University commit averaged 24.9 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 2.1 steals per game this season for the Associated Press poll champion Titans, who are 20-3 as of March 4. White is already a two-time All-Ohio first team selection and has been O-G’s top player on three straight state semifinal teams (runners-up in 2022, 2023). White has also helped the Titans to 28 consecutive Western Buckeye League wins, three straight league titles, and has been the WBL and District 8 Player of the Year three times. A four-year starter, White has played in 105 varsity basketball games, with O-G going 90-15 in those games. He is the all-time career leading scorer in the hot-bed basketball history of Putnam County. White enters the district semifinal round with 1,876 career points.
 
 
36 tonight from Colin White as he moves close to 2,000 career points in the 70-49 win.

 
36 tonight from Colin White as he moves close to 2,000 career points in the 70-49 win.

Watched the first half. He was dominate in the first q tr with i think 17 to set the tone.

Seen quote a few OG games on TV the last few yrs and saw many different strategies designed to make someone else beat OG.

I give an F for EC coaching to start the game. They had zero special defensive game plan against CW early. I think that their coaches felt that their athleticism alone was good enough to slow him down and they woefully underestimated him, and overestimated their own defense .
 
J'Allen Barrino, Malvern, 6-2, sr.
Division III East District and Inter-Valley Conference North Division Player of the Year after leading the Hornets to a 22-0 regular season. He has played 59 career games at Malvern and the team has gone 56-3. His senior year, J'Allen was 174-of-242 from the field, averaging 18.6 ppg while only taking 11 shots per game. He shot 74% from the foul line and also averaged 5.1 rebounds, 6.1 assists, and 5.2 steals. Barrino surpassed 1,000 career points and owns school records for steals in a season and a career. He also currently ranks third in career assists in school history.

Alex Bruskotter, Shelby, 6-8, sr.
The Wright State University commit averaged 23.8 points, 9.1 rebounds and 5.9 assists per game this season. The Northwest District Co-Player of the Year was also the Player of the Year by the District 6 coaches association and the Mid-Ohio Athletic Conference. He scored 53 points in a game with 12 3s in a game this season. He is second in scoring behind the legendary Larry Siegfried. Bruskotter was also invited to represent Ohio in Italy in March. He is a three-time All-Ohioan.

Marcus Johnson, Garfield Heights, 6-1, soph.
NE Lakes District POY coming off an All-Ohio first team season as a freshman and ranked 12th nationally in the Class of 2026. Johnson led the Bulldogs (21-1) to a 19-0 start that included wins against Huntington Prep, Western Reserve Academy, defending Texas state champion Faith Family Christian and OHSAA champion Richmond Heights. Johnson has offers from Ohio State to Alabama, Cincinnati, LSU and Villanova. Averaged 23.1 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1.9 steals.

Kruz McClure, Westerville South, 6-4, sr.
The Central District, District 10 Coaches Association (co-) and OCC Capital player of the year, McClure averaged 23.9 points, 4.0 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 2.6 steals for a 16-8 district semifinalist. The guard shot 45 percent from the field (30 percent from three-point range) and 88 percent at the free throw line despite suffering from Crohn's Disease, which flared up several times during the season and hospitalized him the night before a district tournament game. McClure, who owns 14 Division I offers (Ohio State, Dayton are very interested), has scored 1,098 points in his career.

Jesse McCulloch, Cleveland Heights Lutheran East, 6-10, sr.
NE Lakes District POY. Michigan State recruit led Falcons (16-5) to the No. 1 ranking in Division III as defending state champions, despite losing high profile forward T.J. Crumble to rival Richmond Heights. McCulloch averaged 22.4 points, 14.1 rebounds, 4.3 blocked shots and 2.7 assists. Also had a signature moment in mid-December, outplaying Cincinnati Winton Woods’ Tyler McKinley in a 71-45 win. McCulloch had 27 points, 18 rebounds and six blocks against him. Other signature performances include 21 points, 12 rebounds and eight blocks to beat Richmond Heights. Had a game-high 26 points, 14 rebounds and three blocks WHILE PLAYING SICK in a loss at Cleveland St. Ignatius. Had in a 55-36 win vs. Isidore Newman (La.) at Flyin’ to the Hoop. Also had 40, 15 and five in a win vs. Mentor. Completely transformed his body since his freshman season, when he was out of shape at 6-6 and 245 pounds.

Tyler McKinley, Cincinnati Winton Woods, 6-9, sr.
19.4 ppg, 9.5 rpg, 3.6 apg. Shot 61.7 percent from the field and led his team to the Eastern Cincinnati Conference title for the first time. A UC signee, he is rated the No. 1 player in the state in all publications. Was ECC player of the year. Also played at Walnut Hills and Link Year Prep Academy in Missouri where he won a national title.

Hayden Nigro, Louisville, 6-5, sr
Northeast Inland District Player of the Year. 6-4 wing averaged 20.9 points on 51.3 percent shooting from the field. Averaged 4.3 rebounds, 2.4 assists. ... Huge games against some of Louisville's best competition, including 31 points against Akron Hoban and 31 against Lutheran East. ... Four-year varsity player, three-year starter. Louisville's all-time leading scorer with 1,434 points, which rank 14th in Stark County history. ... Receiving D2 and D3 college interest. ... District 4 Coaches Association D1 Player of the Year. ... Louisville finished 23-3, with only losses to St. Ignatius, St. Edward and Canton GlenOak in district final.

Mason Shrout, Camden Preble Shawnee, 6-5, sr.
24.2 ppg, 7.7 rpg, 3.7 apg, 2.6 spg, 57.2% FG, 42.0 3 PT% 1st Team Western Ohio Athletic Conference, WOAC Player of the Year; District 15 Player of the Year. Led the Arrows to a second straight Division III district title and regional semifinal berth. An unselfish player, had five assists in district title game. The first player from Preble County to surpass 2,000 career points. Signed with Purdue Fort Wayne.

Colin White, Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-6 sr.
Ohio State University commit averaged 24.9 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 2.1 steals per game this season for the Associated Press poll champion Titans, who are 20-3 as of March 4. White is already a two-time All-Ohio first team selection and has been O-G’s top player on three straight state semifinal teams (runners-up in 2022, 2023). White has also helped the Titans to 28 consecutive Western Buckeye League wins, three straight league titles, and has been the WBL and District 8 Player of the Year three times. A four-year starter, White has played in 105 varsity basketball games, with O-G going 90-15 in those games. He is the all-time career leading scorer in the hot-bed basketball history of Putnam County. White enters the district semifinal round with 1,876 career points.
Colin White will win it
 
Watched the first half. He was dominate in the first q tr with i think 17 to set the tone.

Seen quote a few OG games on TV the last few yrs and saw many different strategies designed to make someone else beat OG.

I give an F for EC coaching to start the game. They had zero special defensive game plan against CW early. I think that their coaches felt that their athleticism alone was good enough to slow him down and they woefully underestimated him, and overestimated their own defense .

EC was over matched and got bullied all game. They couldn't start their offense beyond about 8 feet of 1/2 court - the OG players were longer, stronger and more physical at every position. I'm not sure any coaching strategy would have decreased the margin. Miles is a very good player and only a soph. Brown is a nice player as well. Good season after all the transfers out.

I would have liked EC's chances with Easter and the two guys who transferred to Whitmer, but much like Stritch last year - you are not going to beat OG after your top players transfer.

Colin White is a stud - best all around player I have seen in NWO in the last 10-15 years (maybe more)....that includes Simpson, Hayes, Loving, Williams etc. His combination of skill, size, strength and athleticism is impressive.

OG's coach and style of play is so fun to watch.
 
EC was over matched and got bullied all game. They couldn't start their offense beyond about 8 feet of 1/2 court - the OG players were longer, stronger and more physical at every position. I'm not sure any coaching strategy would have decreased the margin. Miles is a very good player and only a soph. Brown is a nice player as well. Good season after all the transfers out.

I would have liked EC's chances with Easter and the two guys who transferred to Whitmer, but much like Stritch last year - you are not going to beat OG after your top players transfer.

Colin White is a stud - best all around player I have seen in NWO in the last 10-15 years (maybe more)....that includes Simpson, Hayes, Loving, Williams etc. His combination of skill, size, strength and athleticism is impressive.

OG's coach and style of play is so fun to watch.
Yeah, they were, but i stand by my comment that they did a pisspoor job in their lack of plan against him. They tried to defend him like every JAG on any team.

Why did those kids transfer out? did they get better offers elsewhere or lose their financial support to attend EC?
 
Yeah, they were, but i stand by my comment that they did a pisspoor job in their lack of plan against him. They tried to defend him like every JAG on any team.

Why did those kids transfer out? did they get better offers elsewhere or lose their financial support to attend EC?

NIL maybe :)

Easter is a top 50 player in his class and transferred to a prep school......not sure about the others.
 
Not sure how you leave the guy who set the Ohio 3pt record for a season while averaging 30+ a game off the list. I guarantee none of the players on that list get guarded the way Quinn Kwasniak does. The kid deserves to be on that list.
 
IMO, Bruskotter outplayed White during the Whippets game against OG in Lima - even in a loss.
I do not disagree, Colin could not get anything to fall when penetrating & that hurt him to get him going. Not to take anything away from Bruskotter- certainly offensively - he was hitting shots like the basket was 10' around! They are very accustomed to each other as they were on the same Italian team I believe this past summer. Can you imagine them playing together- we did and asked his grandfather that question (Grandfather Dale coached at O-G and his son graduated from O-G Unfortunately Mom went to Shelby so there you have it ! ) !
 
I do not disagree, Colin could not get anything to fall when penetrating & that hurt him to get him going. Not to take anything away from Bruskotter- certainly offensively - he was hitting shots like the basket was 10' around! They are very accustomed to each other as they were on the same Italian team I believe this past summer. Can you imagine them playing together- we did and asked his grandfather that question (Grandfather Dale coached at O-G and his son graduated from O-G Unfortunately Mom went to Shelby so there you have it ! ) !
Agreed. And it's an awesome anecdotal story around the ties between these two. Likely a large part of the reason OG and Shelby even played in the first place. All that said, I meant no disrespect toward Colin. He's phenomenal. It's been fun following both of these young men the past few years.
 
Agreed. And it's an awesome anecdotal story around the ties between these two. Likely a large part of the reason OG and Shelby even played in the first place. All that said, I meant no disrespect toward Colin. He's phenomenal. It's been fun following both of these young men the past few years.
It probably was.....and also OG had Shelby come and play in their Winter Classic. Probably was kind of cool for Alex to get to play in the gym his dad played in......and have a lot of his Putnam County family there to see it.
 
I disagree. A big man in this list who had 27 points and 18 rebounds while playing against another fellow big man on this list is pretty remarkable.

Did not play very well against D4 competition .
I agree. I think Colin White has a strong case but I think Jesse McCulloch has an even stronger one being a champion and having such a dominant performance against the top ranked player in the state. His averages are better and Lutheran East has a high chance of winning back to back titles. I Despite committing to Michigan State lol, I think McCulloch deserves it this year.
 
J'Allen Barrino, Malvern, 6-2, sr.
Division III East District and Inter-Valley Conference North Division Player of the Year after leading the Hornets to a 22-0 regular season. He has played 59 career games at Malvern and the team has gone 56-3. His senior year, J'Allen was 174-of-242 from the field, averaging 18.6 ppg while only taking 11 shots per game. He shot 74% from the foul line and also averaged 5.1 rebounds, 6.1 assists, and 5.2 steals. Barrino surpassed 1,000 career points and owns school records for steals in a season and a career. He also currently ranks third in career assists in school history.

Alex Bruskotter, Shelby, 6-8, sr.
The Wright State University commit averaged 23.8 points, 9.1 rebounds and 5.9 assists per game this season. The Northwest District Co-Player of the Year was also the Player of the Year by the District 6 coaches association and the Mid-Ohio Athletic Conference. He scored 53 points in a game with 12 3s in a game this season. He is second in scoring behind the legendary Larry Siegfried. Bruskotter was also invited to represent Ohio in Italy in March. He is a three-time All-Ohioan.

Marcus Johnson, Garfield Heights, 6-1, soph.
NE Lakes District POY coming off an All-Ohio first team season as a freshman and ranked 12th nationally in the Class of 2026. Johnson led the Bulldogs (21-1) to a 19-0 start that included wins against Huntington Prep, Western Reserve Academy, defending Texas state champion Faith Family Christian and OHSAA champion Richmond Heights. Johnson has offers from Ohio State to Alabama, Cincinnati, LSU and Villanova. Averaged 23.1 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1.9 steals.

Kruz McClure, Westerville South, 6-4, sr.
The Central District, District 10 Coaches Association (co-) and OCC Capital player of the year, McClure averaged 23.9 points, 4.0 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 2.6 steals for a 16-8 district semifinalist. The guard shot 45 percent from the field (30 percent from three-point range) and 88 percent at the free throw line despite suffering from Crohn's Disease, which flared up several times during the season and hospitalized him the night before a district tournament game. McClure, who owns 14 Division I offers (Ohio State, Dayton are very interested), has scored 1,098 points in his career.

Jesse McCulloch, Cleveland Heights Lutheran East, 6-10, sr.
NE Lakes District POY. Michigan State recruit led Falcons (16-5) to the No. 1 ranking in Division III as defending state champions, despite losing high profile forward T.J. Crumble to rival Richmond Heights. McCulloch averaged 22.4 points, 14.1 rebounds, 4.3 blocked shots and 2.7 assists. Also had a signature moment in mid-December, outplaying Cincinnati Winton Woods’ Tyler McKinley in a 71-45 win. McCulloch had 27 points, 18 rebounds and six blocks against him. Other signature performances include 21 points, 12 rebounds and eight blocks to beat Richmond Heights. Had a game-high 26 points, 14 rebounds and three blocks WHILE PLAYING SICK in a loss at Cleveland St. Ignatius. Had in a 55-36 win vs. Isidore Newman (La.) at Flyin’ to the Hoop. Also had 40, 15 and five in a win vs. Mentor. Completely transformed his body since his freshman season, when he was out of shape at 6-6 and 245 pounds.

Tyler McKinley, Cincinnati Winton Woods, 6-9, sr.
19.4 ppg, 9.5 rpg, 3.6 apg. Shot 61.7 percent from the field and led his team to the Eastern Cincinnati Conference title for the first time. A UC signee, he is rated the No. 1 player in the state in all publications. Was ECC player of the year. Also played at Walnut Hills and Link Year Prep Academy in Missouri where he won a national title.

Hayden Nigro, Louisville, 6-5, sr
Northeast Inland District Player of the Year. 6-4 wing averaged 20.9 points on 51.3 percent shooting from the field. Averaged 4.3 rebounds, 2.4 assists. ... Huge games against some of Louisville's best competition, including 31 points against Akron Hoban and 31 against Lutheran East. ... Four-year varsity player, three-year starter. Louisville's all-time leading scorer with 1,434 points, which rank 14th in Stark County history. ... Receiving D2 and D3 college interest. ... District 4 Coaches Association D1 Player of the Year. ... Louisville finished 23-3, with only losses to St. Ignatius, St. Edward and Canton GlenOak in district final.

Mason Shrout, Camden Preble Shawnee, 6-5, sr.
24.2 ppg, 7.7 rpg, 3.7 apg, 2.6 spg, 57.2% FG, 42.0 3 PT% 1st Team Western Ohio Athletic Conference, WOAC Player of the Year; District 15 Player of the Year. Led the Arrows to a second straight Division III district title and regional semifinal berth. An unselfish player, had five assists in district title game. The first player from Preble County to surpass 2,000 career points. Signed with Purdue Fort Wayne.

Colin White, Ottawa-Glandorf, 6-6 sr.
Ohio State University commit averaged 24.9 points, 8.2 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 2.1 steals per game this season for the Associated Press poll champion Titans, who are 20-3 as of March 4. White is already a two-time All-Ohio first team selection and has been O-G’s top player on three straight state semifinal teams (runners-up in 2022, 2023). White has also helped the Titans to 28 consecutive Western Buckeye League wins, three straight league titles, and has been the WBL and District 8 Player of the Year three times. A four-year starter, White has played in 105 varsity basketball games, with O-G going 90-15 in those games. He is the all-time career leading scorer in the hot-bed basketball history of Putnam County. White enters the district semifinal round with 1,876 career points.
Kruz is a junior.
 
Not sure how you leave the guy who set the Ohio 3pt record for a season while averaging 30+ a game off the list. I guarantee none of the players on that list get guarded the way Quinn Kwasniak does. The kid deserves to be on that list.
There are a lot of guys on this list who would score a lot more if they played D4, took 40 shots a game, and played on a bad team with no other real scoring threats lol
 
Not sure how you leave the guy who set the Ohio 3pt record for a season while averaging 30+ a game off the list. I guarantee none of the players on that list get guarded the way Quinn Kwasniak does. The kid deserves to be on that list.

You, in fact, cannot guarantee that.
 
There are a lot of guys on this list who would score a lot more if they played D4, took 40 shots a game, and played on a bad team with no other real scoring threats lol
Best shooter in Ohio - and he did it against Mentor and Richmond Heights so the he can't do it against top teams does not hold water. Richmond Heights threw the kitchen sink at him and he scored 38. He had 2 and sometimes 3 guys on him the whole game.
 
You need to see him play or watch film before you comment.
I have seen him play and he is a phenomenal player. I agree he should probably on the list although no stats against Mentor should count. However think this award is between Colin and Jesse. It's going to Colin because he deserves it and he is going to Ohio State. That will move the needle to Ohio voters
 
Best shooter in Ohio - and he did it against Mentor and Richmond Heights so the he can't do it against top teams does not hold water. Richmond Heights threw the kitchen sink at him and he scored 38. He had 2 and sometimes 3 guys on him the whole game.
They lost to RH by 40. How may of his 38 were scored in the 4th quarter when the game was over? How many shots did he take to get to 38? I watched Cam Elwer of Delphos St Johns put on the best shooting show I have EVER seen against Dunbar at the OG Winter Classic. He had 38 with 2 minutes left in the 3rd with 2 guys in his face the entire game. He had scored 15 in just over 2 minutes before he got suckerpunched in the stomach and didn't return to the game. I promise you anyone in the gym that day will tell you it was the best shooting performance they have ever seen.
 
He scored in every quarter while having two D1 players guarding him the length of the floor. You show me one kid in Ohio that gets defended like Kwasniak does - you won't find any. Who knows how many points he would score if he was just covered man to man like most kids. True his squad does not have many scoring options - which makes what he has done even more amazing. Ask the Richmond Heights coach about Quinn - he spent half the game rotating guys to guard him while shaking his head. He was dropping shots face guarded from just inside half court. I'm not saying he should win the award - but for him to be off the list is a travesty.
 
They lost to RH by 40. How may of his 38 were scored in the 4th quarter when the game was over? How many shots did he take to get to 38? I watched Cam Elwer of Delphos St Johns put on the best shooting show I have EVER seen against Dunbar at the OG Winter Classic. He had 38 with 2 minutes left in the 3rd with 2 guys in his face the entire game. He had scored 15 in just over 2 minutes before he got suckerpunched in the stomach and didn't return to the game. I promise you anyone in the gym that day will tell you it was the best shooting performance they have ever seen.
I watched Bruskotter score 53 on Ashland this year. 17-25 shooting (12-19 from 3-point range). 7-9 from deep and 25 points alone in the third quarter. That was the most impressive shooting performance I've witnessed this year, FWIW.
 
I was at the Cornerstone-Richmond Heights game. Kwasniak is really good. Tough kid. He reminds me a lot of Zach Rasile, who held the previous 3-point record playing for McDonald (now at West Liberty State). I can't argue he doesn't belong on the list, but the way it was originally set up there was supposed to be one nominee from each of the 7 AP (now OPSWA) all-district teams. That theory kind of flew out the window during the LeBron era. This list already has 2 players from the NEO Lakes nominated. Is he deserving? Yes, but I'm not sure he's more deserving than the Lutheran East or Garfield Heights kids.
I mean, back in 2003, David Dees of Dayton Christian averaged 29 points per game and played at Liberty University. He wasn't on the list of finalists either; the SW nominee that year was Josh Duncan of Moeller (Xavier), a junior. The point is, sometimes being deserving doesn't equal inclusion.
 
I disagree. A big man in this list who had 27 points and 18 rebounds while playing against another fellow big man on this list is pretty remarkable.

Did not play very well against D4 competition .
Colin avg 25 and he going to OSU on top of being in the Final 4 4 years straight he's getting that award
 
He scored in every quarter while having two D1 players guarding him the length of the floor. You show me one kid in Ohio that gets defended like Kwasniak does - you won't find any. Who knows how many points he would score if he was just covered man to man like most kids. True his squad does not have many scoring options - which makes what he has done even more amazing. Ask the Richmond Heights coach about Quinn - he spent half the game rotating guys to guard him while shaking his head. He was dropping shots face guarded from just inside half court. I'm not saying he should win the award - but for him to be off the list is a travesty.
Every main scorer on their team that can score off the dribble get guarded full court and a lot of times face guarded that is nothing new or spectacular lol
 
Colin avg 25 and he going to OSU on top of being in the Final 4 4 years straight he's getting that award
I will give you a few reasons why it will not be Colin.
1- small school
2- not from a large metro region with a high percentage of the voters around to see him play.
3- did not play well in loss to Troy Christian, a team they beat if he plays well

I recall back in 2002 Bethel high school had a player, Matt Witt who averaged something like 36 points per game and had led his team to multiple deep runs including a state championship. That was not enough to overcome the media bias of the Northeast region as they selected some kid named Jim Lebron who was from one of the Catholic schools in the Canton or Akron area. He didn't even go D1 or play in college, so goes to show sometimes area and school location mean more than stats. Witt came in second.

I watched the big man (Jesse McColluch) from Luthern East the other night and will say, he would be my pick no matter where he is from.
 
I will give you a few reasons why it will not be Colin.
1- small school
2- not from a large metro region with a high percentage of the voters around to see him play.
3- did not play well in loss to Troy Christian, a team they beat if he plays well

I recall back in 2002 Bethel high school had a player, Matt Witt who averaged something like 36 points per game and had led his team to multiple deep runs including a state championship. That was not enough to overcome the media bias of the Northeast region as they selected some kid named Jim Lebron who was from one of the Catholic schools in the Canton or Akron area. He didn't even go D1 or play in college, so goes to show sometimes area and school location mean more than stats. Witt came in second.

I watched the big man (Jesse McColluch) from Luthern East the other night and will say, he would be my pick no matter where he is from.
Both Jesse and Collin are from Smaller D3 schools and are the two favorites to win it but history shows when OSU is in the picture in terms of college commits that's usually the deciding factor. also I am sure that Matt Witt did not have ESPN games nor was he ranked top of the country
 
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