Connect with us

NC State Basketball

Who is the State Basketball G.O.A.T.?

Published

on

Last week, ACC Network posed the question, “Who is the NC State Basketball G.O.A.T.”? We know, we know, ridiculous right? While number one seems unanimous, we wanted to give our definitive Top Five of All-Time.

See above for video and below to vote for your Top Wolfpack Basketball Player.

ACC Network’s nominees were David Thompson, Rodney Monroe, Chris Corchiani, and TJ Warren. With that, here’s our Top-Five.

 

#5 Ronnie Shavlik

We updated this after talking to Grandpa George. Ronnie owned the ACC in the 50’s. The guy averaged over a THREE YEAR CAREER 19 points and 17 rebounds a game. Yes, it was a two-point game back then, so numbers were inflated (ignore Ronnie’s FG% and FT%), but still solid numbers. 3x All-ACC Tournament, 2x Consensus All-American, 2x All-ACC and Player of the Year in 1955. The following year he went number four overall to the Knicks.

 

 

 

#4 Tommy Burleson

At number four Tommy Burleson. First off, just imagine having to deal with him inside and across the paint is David Thompson…Good Lawwwwwd. Don’t know if there is a steadier player out there for State basketball. In his three years, Burleson averaged 19 points and 13 rebounds. Just look at this postseason run to the 1974 title:

Against Providence  – 16 Points / 24 Rebounds
Against Pitt – 26 Points / 12 Rebounds
Against UCLA (Going head-to-head with Bill Walton)  – 20 Points / 14 Rebounds
Against Marquette in National Championship – 14 Points / 11 Rebounds / 7 Freaking Blocks

Thompson overshadowed Burleson’s greatness, but we’re showing our respects to the man here.

 

#3 Rodney Monroe

At number three, Mr. Rodney Monroe. Monroe is State’s all-time points getter at 2,551, thanks to three straight years averaging at least 21 points per game (and his freshman year, while he played every game, he didn’t have a single start). Three-time All-ACC and 1990-91 ACC Player of the Year. Just imagine if he had a big man to dish and rebound (hint, watch for an article soon about that)?

 

#2 TJ Warren

Uh oh…here comes some recency bias. TJ Warren comes in as number two because if you expand out what he did in two years over four, the numbers are astounding. 1300 points and would have been close to passing State point leader Monroe (2551) by end of junior year, if not beginning of senior year. Grabbed nearly 400 boards to go with over a hundred steals. The man single-handedly carried that 2013-14 State team deep into ACC Tournament and into the Big Dance, while picking up ACC POY win.

 

#1 David Thompson

Let’s face it, the answer is David Thompson. During his three-year stretch he filled the trophy case – 3x ACC Player of the Year, multiple Consensus All-American, All-ACC/NCAA Tournament Teams, NCAA Tournament Outstanding Player and Naismith Award, among another dozen-plus honors. In ACC history, only he and Ralph Sampson have won ACC POY awards three times. Scoring 2309 points with 694 boards, Thompson was the man.

Here’s Michael Jordan talking about Thompson,
“As I grew up in North Carolina, I was an anti-Carolina guy. I hated UNC,” Jordan said. “I was in love with David Thompson, not just for the game of basketball, but in terms of what he represented. We all go through our trials and tribulations, and he did, and I was inspired by him.”

Which, sidenote…WHY THE HELL DIDN’T MJ COME TO STATE?!?

 

Honorable Mention

-Chris Corchiani
Bettered only by Bobby f*cking Hurley in NCAA history for assists in a career. Thanks to Monroe, Corchiani was a transition wizard putting up a State record of 1038 assists in his career. All-ACC team nominations his final three seasons, he lead the ACC in steals all four years and assists in his final two seasons.

-Dereck Whittenburg
Whittenburg gets a shoutout just for his 1983 postseason run averaging 20 a game for the Pack. While we love him, his regular-season play was fine and overall the image heightened by that magical championship run.

-Thurl Bailey
Similar to Burleson, Bailey was steady during his Pack career. He got you points, he got you rebounds, he got you blocks.

-Tom Gugliotta
Googs senior season was awesome, averaging 23 points and 10 boards a game. Most definitely matured over his four years, but not enough to crack top-five.

-Julius Hodge
Every night he filled the score sheet in some way.

-CJ Leslie
All we’re going to say…imagine if he had the work ethic that some of these guys above had?

Who do you have as State’s G.O.A.T.?

Who is State’s Basketball GOAT?

David Thompson
TJ Warren
Rodney Monroe
Tommy Burleson
Chris Corchiani
Thurl Bailey
Dereck Whittenburg
Tom Gugliotta
Other

Passionate State fan that just wants to win...something...like anything...

1 Comment
Subscribe
Notify of
1 Comment
newest
oldest most Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dof87
Dof87
3 years ago

Don’t forget about Jules. Dude at least deserves mention.

Thurl may have been our most prolific player in terms of NBA career AND championships.

Last edited 3 years ago by Dof87

NC State Basketball

The Roster for the NC State Men’s Basketball Team is all but Set Heading into 2024-25

Published

on

NC State does have 1 scholarship available, and could still add a player out of the Transfer Portal. With that being said, the roster for the Men’s Basketball team is pretty much set for the 2024-25 season.

Non-graduates had to enter the Transfer Portal by April 30th, and Graduates had to enter by May 1st. Jayden Taylor and Michael O’Connell both made public announcements that they were returning, but the closure of entrance to the Portal means that Breon Pass, Ben Middlebrooks, Dennis Parker Jr. and MJ Rice are all set to return next season.

In a world where the Transfer Portal has all but become free agency in College Basketball, with some players switching schools on an annual basis, it’s encouraging that Kevin Keatts not only recruited a Top-10 Transfer Class, but also recruited a majority of the eligible players to stay. Three players that could transfer entered the Portal (I’m not counting Mohamed Diarra in these numbers, who opted to go pro), while 6 opted to continue running with the Wolfpack.

As a result, below is a breakdown of the roster for the NC State Men’s Basketball team heading into 2024-25, realizing the Wolfpack could still add one player (this team is deep).

1 year of Eligibility 

Guard Michael O’Connell
Guard Marcus Hill
Guard Breon Pass
Guard/Forward Jayden Taylor
Forward/Guard Dontrez Styles
Forward Ben Middlebrooks
Center Brandon Huntley-Hatfield

2 Years of Eligibility

Guard/Forward MJ Rice
Guard Mike James
Guard Jordan Snell (Walk-On)
Guard KJ Keatts (Walk-On)

3 Years of Eligibility 

Guard/Forward Dennis Parker Jr.

4 Years of Eligibility 

Guard Paul McNeil
Guard Trey Parker

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

NC State’s Men’s Basketball 2024 Transfer Class Ranks in the Top-10 Nationally

Published

on

NC State’s Men’s Basketball team has picked up 4 players from the Transfer Portal this offseason, and the class ranks 10th nationally according to ON3, and 15th nationally according to 247Sports.

ON3

247Sports

NC State’s 2024 4-Man Transfer Class

Center Brandon Huntley-Hatfield (Louisville)

Guard/Forward Dontez Styles (Georgetown)

Guard Mike James (Louisville)

Guard Marcus Hill (Bowling Green)

NC State still has a chance to move up in the rankings. East Carolina Power Forward Ezra Ausar just wrapped up an Official Visit to NC State, and things are looking good for the Wolfpack. ON3 ranks Ausar as the #67 overall player in the Portal, and the #15 Power Forward.

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

WATCH: Andy Katz’s Offseason Convo with NC State’s Kevin Keatts

Published

on

Andy Katz is beginning to make his rounds for his Offseason Convo series, and he took the time to meet with NC State Head Coach Kevin Keatts.

In their conversation, Keatts talked about what this run has meant to Raleigh and the Wolfpack fans, how it has helped sell the program the way it deserves to be in recruiting, and even how it helped and hurt in the world of the Transfer Portal.

Check out the conversation below:

Continue Reading

NC State Basketball

Guard Mike O’Connell Announces He Will Play His Final Year of Eligibility at NC State

Published

on

Guard Michael O’Connell announced today that he will be playing his final year of eligibility at NC State next season.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Michael O’Connell (@michaeloc_12)

Today was the final day graduate players could enter the Portal.

This past season, O’Connell averaged 5.7 points, 3.4 rebounds and 3.2 assists for the Wolfpack, starting 22 of the 41 games he played in.

O’Connell took over as NC State’s starting Point Guard on January 30th in a win against Miami.

He only scored in double figures in 9 of his 41 games this season, but 6 of those came in postseason play (5 in the ACC Tournament). O’Connell took things to another level in the ACC Tournament, playing aggressive on the offensive end, looking for his shot, and attacking the rim.

NC State played it’s best basketball of the season when O’Connell was running the show. He ranked 3rd in the ACC in Assist/Turnover Ratio (2.5).

Heading into next season, with a lineup filled with new faces, having the calming presence of a veteran leader like O’Connell is reassuring.

Continue Reading