Hoops Hello: Austin Davis Comment Count

Brian

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Last night Michigan picked up a commit from in-state 2016 C Austin Davis, a guy I don't think many people knew Michigan was even tracking. That, his currently-thin recruiting profile, and, frankly, his ears, have a certain brand of Michigan fan headed to Ann Arbor Torch and Pitchfork about this development.

I mean…

…stop it. If there is a place where any Michigan coach has earned public opinion leeway, it is John Beilein recruiting three-star basketballists.

GURU RATINGS

Scout Rivals ESPN 247 247 Comp
3*, UR 3*, UR 3*, #27 C, #5 MI NR --

Davis is on the sites' radars as a generic three star center, but only just.

SCOUTING

Davis is consistently listed at 6'10" and depending on when you get the article, at anywhere from 240 to 260—he'll come in looking more like Ricky Doyle than DJ Wilson.

He is consistently among the FG% leaders at AAU tournaments, hitting 62% at "Unrivaled" in Chicago and 65% at the "Gauntlet" in Dallas just last week. There he impressed a number of observers. SpartanMag's Paul Konyndyk after Davis put up 16 and 10 (on ten shots) against Ike Anigbogu, who was just offered by UCLA:

That performance was among the best of the weekend for Davis, who outplayed rising Corona (CA) Centennial center Ike Anigbogu, who scored just seven points against the Mustangs. …

Davis is a skilled big man with good footwork, solid post moves, and the ability to finish with either hand. It is only a matter of time before the small school standout begins pilling up major conference offers.

That performance was just a couple days ago and got a lot of major schools' attention. Vandy's 247 site said to keep an eye on him as a "highly skilled post" who was "highly effective" and that the Commodores were intrigued. A Northwestern writer also highlighted him:

“He just gets [stuff] done,” said one assistant coach who watched Davis’ 16-point, 10-rebound, three-block game against the Compton Magic.

Davis isn’t the most athletic player or elite in any one area, but he’s a productive all-around player. He showed soft hands with the ball, and good touch on his hook shots. A handful of his points against the Magic came in 1-on-1 battles against Ike Anigbogu, one of the best post defenders on the Adidas circuit. Davis flashed good footwork on a hook shot against Anigbogu, and also beat him on the block a couple times.

On multiple occasions during the weekend’s games, Davis got the ball just outside the paint and patiently worked around a defender into the paint to score. He also scored several times in in back-to-the-basket situations, putting the ball on the floor and finishing nicely.

He was just 2 of 9 from the free throw line at the Gauntlet, so that's a thing to work on.

Davis is a pound-it-inside, power-dribble, finish from the block kind of guy. Sam Webb($):

Davis is a 6-10, 245 lb. throwback big.  He is a true back-to-the-basket big man.  On the in-state basketball scene he has earned the nickname “Big Country” after former Oklahoma State and then Vancouver Grizzlies standout Bryant “Big Country” Reeves. Davis lives in the paint, is best scoring over his left shoulder but has occasionally shown the ability to score over his right, can beat opponents with a good drop step as well, and has good hands in the post.

Davis himself on his proficiency down low

What they saw was a guy that was really comfortable down on the blocks, where he showed he could finish well with either hand.

"My low post game has always been my major strength," said Davis. "I'm trying to improve my shooting. To be able step up and shoot threes a little bit. I've gotten better with high post jumpers."

He's working and working and working and putting things on the internet. He's also pretty aware of his deficiencies and what he has to do to remedy them:

“I definitely need to improve speed,” Davis said. “My foot quickness, stuff like that. I need to get into better shape. Those are a lot of the main areas, and just continuing to progress and getting stronger.”

Davis also spoke with Balanis about similarities he shares with Irish forward Zach Auguste and the strengths of his game.

“I’d consider myself very strong with my back to the basket and in the low post,” Davis said. “We’ve worked on expanding my game to be able to face up and my jump shot.”

Davis is also young. He is currently 16 and won't turn 17 until the end of the summer, so he'll arrive on campus days after hitting 18.

OFFERS

Michigan was the first major school to offer Davis; before that he had MAC offers and interest from big chunks of the Big Ten and Notre Dame. He took unofficials to Indiana, Wisconsin and Iowa in addition to the in-state schools. Perusing various 247 content gives the impression that Wisconsin assistant Greg Gard was a major proponent of the guy. Gard is a good guy to have in your corner if you're a gawky high school post.

STATS

Davis is Class B Shaq:

The junior scored 45 points in a game on two occasions, and even had a triple-double with 33 points, 27 rebounds and 10 blocks. His averages of 26.2 points, 17.3 rebounds and 4.8 blocks per game earned him AP Class B Player of the Year honors in Michigan, all while maintaining a 4.0 GPA.

Davis also had a 3.95 GPA as of last year.

VIDEO

There's a ton, from workouts when he was a freshman to Davis being high school Shaq at 6'2" guys going pro in something other than sports to full Onsted Wildcats games. In the Class B regional finals against Milan he opens the game with a missed dunk on an alley-oop.

This went up in January and is amongst the most recent:

This is from last summer:

As is this:

This went up in November:

The video shows a mostly below-the-rim big, and while this is highlight tape you can get some hints of things he does well. He makes a number of tough catches in these videos; he finishes with both hands from in a variety of situations; he seems to have good footwork with which to reposition for layups after a power dribble.

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Posts are tough to project and Davis is tougher than most because of the level of competition he generally goes against. He'll probably take a redshirt and hit Camp Sanderson, whereupon the sluggishness that does show up on film (and is something Davis himself points out as his most pressing issue) should be mitigated. How much? I don't know. I do like bigs with good hands and the ability to finish with either.

With Doyle and Donnal in front of him plus Teske, Michigan can let Davis develop until he's a redshirt sophmore, whereupon he should have a productive, Jordan-Morgan-esque career.

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

Michigan's going to have a lot of fouls to give at the five, I guess? They are currently scheduled to have this setup at center in 2016-17:

  • Doyle, Jr.
  • Donnal, Jr.*
  • Teske, Fr.
  • Davis, Fr.

And that's not even counting DJ Wilson, who could well be skrong like bull by then. So this is a weird commitment given the composition of Michigan's roster. I do like the prospect of a parade of upper-class bigs. It's likely that one of Teske or Davis ends up redshirting, which is a good thing for a project big who isn't likely to be on NBA radars. See: Jordan Morgan.

They have two scholarships definitely opening up (Albrecht and LeVert) from guards; they have filled those slots with posts. If they thought someone was transferring—which Beilein has explicitly said isn't happening and Webb re-asserted just today($)—they probably would have taken a swing at 2015 big Mike Edwards. Instead Edwards committed to Georgia after Michigan got Moritz Wagner.

There's almost certainly going to be some additional attrition that opens up a slot or two (Hatch, Irvin to the NBA, maybe guys who get lost in the shuffle this year) with which Michigan pursues a point guard and one of their 6'6" SG/SF archetypes. I would imagine post recruiting is done until 2018.

Comments

DingoBlue

April 17th, 2015 at 1:44 PM ^

is that he is only 16 right now.  Being young for your class is indeed something Beilein has said he values, and may mean that he wanted to lock up a big for the 2017 class right now.  Obviously that's coming at the cost of a scholarship spot, but I'm willing to wait untli next offseason before I pass judgment on taking this committment.  Even if my reaction right now is that of a bit of surprise.

PrincetonBlue

April 17th, 2015 at 1:52 PM ^

If, like others said, he takes a prep year, this is a pretty good pickup. He's crafty in the post, and we all know how valuable that can be in floor spacing (ala Kaminsky and Wisconsin). As he matures he will only get better.

All Day

April 17th, 2015 at 2:03 PM ^

JB has seen him play several times, as Onsted is close to AA. I know he was at the regional final against Milan (defending state champs) and it seems he was at many of these AAU weekends.

champswest

April 17th, 2015 at 2:23 PM ^

worrying about not yet having a PG lined up for 2016, so like others. this commit seemed strange.  But, then you step back from the cliff and remember that our coaching staff knows the situation better than any of us.  There is no way that Beilein backs himself into a corner and ends up without enough guards for 2016 and beyond.

Davis looks pretty good to me for a 16 year old guy who is already 6-10.  And in that one Big Man Camp video he looked like he was eye-to-eye with Tim McCormick, so I think the listed height is legit.  He probably won't see the floor for us until 2017, so he has two more years to develope.  By then we will have Sr. Doyle, Jr. Wilson, Soph Teske and RSF Davis.  Sweet.  At the 4 we will have Wagner, Donnal, Chatman.  Looks like Beilein is serious about playing 2 big men and it will be nice to not have to depend on freshmen to man the center position.

Rabbit21

April 17th, 2015 at 2:23 PM ^

Hey if he can turn into a fifth year J-Mo in his fifth year, who can have any kind of problem with that?  A local kid who can grow into something is always an offer I can get behind.  Welcome aboard! and on to the point guards :).

 

 

BlueIsland

April 17th, 2015 at 3:10 PM ^

The last thing that I wanted to hear was a BB commit from someone other than Jaylen Brown, Josh Langford or Tyus Battle. However, Austin Davis is a very quality addition that will add great value years to come. Zach Auguste is great comparison of what I see Austin Davis becoming. His footwork and the effort at which he runs the floor is very fair comparison as well as his post game.

I don't believe point guard is a concern for 2016 due to the future NBA veteran on our roster, MAAR. Rahkman is going to absolutely blow up over the next few years and will press D Walton for the starting spot by the 2016-2017 season. He reminds me greatly of Jarrett Jack (G Tech) and Alvin Williams (Villanova) who were both long term vets of the same build, athleticism and skillset. I quite honestly do not see any PG coming in 2016 and outplaying either, therefore he will have to sit which will elimate the elite PGs from 2016.

I believe JB and LJ are now targeting an elite PG for 2017 instead of 2016 due to the emergence of MAAR and what the see him becoming.

AZBlue

April 17th, 2015 at 4:03 PM ^

Well I hope you are right (or even close to right) on MAAR. The coaches see what they have all year in practice, so maybe they are comfortable at PG in 2016 unless they can land a top kid. I assume MAAR and Dawkins would cover our needs at the 2 in that case.

Franz Schubert

April 17th, 2015 at 4:19 PM ^

He is weird and the epitome of uncool and it makes recruiting difficult. It is what it is, no sugar coating it. He has been able to get some fairly high ranked players in the past but it seems the recruiting the last 2 years has flatlined. It's interesting that every NBA player under Beilein at Michigan was a top 100 player on ESPN.

riverrat

April 18th, 2015 at 11:24 AM ^

This is an interesting to me. Despite the weirdness and the 'epitome of uncool' factor, Beilein gets sons and brothers of NBA folks to play for him. My guess is that those in the know realize what Beilein can do for someone's game. This pickup might also start to change the narrative that John Horford started, about being unable to work on his post game while playing in this offense.

I'm curious as well about the outpouring of confusion about Davis. I don't necessarily think that every move this staff makes is golden, but that's the point, right?  Roster attrition, injuries, unexpected development (MAAR, Dawkins are only the most recent examples) - these make roster management an art, not a science. 

Finally, I too would like to see less of the inability to rebound that we saw against UK last year (and Wisconsin this year). Beilein has identified a weakness and is trying to solve it. Will he get the Cauley-Steins of the world? No, because I don't think that Cauley-Stein (as an example) has enough of an offensive skill set to help Beilein's teams. However, the Jordan Morgans and Mitch McGarys of the world - big men who understand spacing and offensive roles - will be of enormous help, and getting one or two (even in the same class) might just take this team to the next level.

Beilein's taking a huge risk, which I'm assuming he knows much better than the rest of us. 

In reply to by Franz Schubert

AlwaysBlue

April 19th, 2015 at 10:06 AM ^

Donnal (89), Walton (36), Irvin (22) and Chatman (38) were all top100 guys. Most think Wagner would be if he had prepped here and that Teske will be after his senior season. Burke (83), Hardaway (93) and Stauskas (73) were not can't miss blue chippers. Robinson (18) has been Beilein's highest overall ranked recruit and arguably had the least impact of the top 100 to come to AA.

WMU81

April 17th, 2015 at 4:38 PM ^

Look at McGarys younger years and look where he is at now. The kid is 16yrs old. Put his tail in weight room and watch what can happen.. I watched McGary (#2 player in nation) when he was on espnu with Brewster and he looked terrible.. Was slow and could barely put in down. Noel tore him apart.. Now look forward to the present McGary is a Machine.... Just saying don't count kid out!

TyTrain32

April 18th, 2015 at 10:26 AM ^

Im sorry Brian but what is all this Irvin to the NBA talk? I dont see too many NBA players air balling threes all the time. The kid has a shot but no way he leaves early. I know he came on late this year and has a well rounded game but nothing jumps out and says this is an NBA guy to me. Something does, however, say first team all BigTen as a senior though.



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