Connect with us

NC State Basketball

Could the Shakeel Moore transfer open the door to a big time guard? How will it affect NC State?

Published

on

A couple of weeks ago we took a closer look into Shakeel Moore’s sneaky great season. We highlighted the fact that he ranked 16th in the nation in steal % and put together a very productive stat line for a 3-star prospect who many thought wouldn’t log major minutes during his freshman year.

At that end of that piece we noted the rumblings that Moore may be looking to transfer, but hoped that since he hadn’t done it yet, that he had a change of heart.

That wasn’t the case. This past Friday, Moore entered his name into the transfer portal, all but ending his tenure at NC State.

The initial response from most Pack fans was “Fine, if you don’t want to be here, then we don’t need you here.” But the truth is, this is going to hurt. In fact, if NC State doesn’t add another PG this offseason, the Pack will be faced with another year of limited depth at the position.

Let’s take a look at what the transfer really means for next season…

Cam Hayes has to carry the weight

Hayes came out of the game looking as advertised. The 6’3 PG was running the show, knocking down shots, and fitting nicely into Keatts system. Then came the COVID pause.

After the pause Hayes looked a little lost and began to see his minutes drop. However, after a few weeks and the Devon Daniels injury, Hayes was once again thrust into the spotlight. He didn’t disappoint.

Hayes had his ups and downs down the stretch, but for the most part, he was an integral part in State’s late surge. When he was playing well, NC State was winning. But when he was off, NC State sputtered.

Next season Keatts is going to need Hayes to be consistently productive. With Moore gone, the PG duties (at this point) are going to fall to Hayes and freshman PG Breon Pass. With an offseason of prep, we believe Hayes will be just fine and may be one of the Pack’s best scoring options on the perimeter. Pass, however, like any freshman, is a question mark.

Like Moore a year before, Keatts has been on record saying his freshman PG was the steal of the class, and watching the highlights most would agree.

Pass went from an unknown to a 4-star (on ESPN) prospect. His slick ball-handling and his ability to score started to turn heads on the NC high school circuit. And while he’s a physical kid (he was a D1 football recruit), he’s not that big. Coming in at 6’0, 175lbs, Pass will have to prove that his body is ready to go up against ACC-level guards.

That makes it even more important that Hayes shows up ready next season. He needs to put on more weight, and show a little more physicality if State is going to be a factor in the ACC. Had Moore stuck around, the duo would have given Keatts some nice depth and a couple of experienced PGs to steer the ship.

Keatts could add another guard

With Moore gone, NC State now has another scholarship to burn, and with a lot of options still out there in the portal, he’ll have the chance to bring in a PG to fill that slot. But who?

The best PG out there is former Minnesota Golden Gopher, Marcus Carr. Carr is a 6’2, 195lbs junior who would have two years of eligibility left and who is coming off a season where he scored 19 ppg and is probably the best guard on the board (he also COULD go pro).

With Hayes and Pass locked in at PG, Keatts could add a combo guard. Someone who could play the point in a pinch, but slots better in the SG role. Right now, SG is another need. You have Thomas Allen returning for his senior season, and you have a promising scorer in freshman Terquavion Smith, but Allen is a bit undersized and Smith hasn’t seen ACC competition yet.

This could open the door for Keatts to target a guy like 6’5 Bryce Thompson from Kansas. While he’s more of a SG, he can handle the ball, however, he’s more a ‘create for himself’ type guy. But again, if Hayes is hurt and pass can’t cut it yet, then you could do A LOT worse than Thompson. In fact, he would really fill a lot of holes for NC State, seeing as he could immediately start at SG and get PG minutes when needed. As we said, he’s 6’5, and in the ACC you can’t have enough tall, long guards (especially in a system like Keatts’.)

They could also look at 6’2 Jacob Young from Rutgers. He’s in the portal, but also contemplating the NBA draft. However, the 6’2 guard is more of a PG than a shooting guard and would replace the lefty Moore, with another Lefty. Young averaged 14 points and almost 4 assists last season. he’s a senior so you’d be only getting him for one year, but that’s really all NC State is needing at this point.

Another option would be to use Thomas Allen as your PG in a pinch and focus on adding a scoring guard. Keatts could target a guy like CJ Fredrick of Iowa. The 6’3 sophomore is online anyone NC State has on their roster. He’s not the most athletic kid out there, but he’s a physical player and man can he shoot it. Fredrick averaged 7 ppg and shot 47% from long range. The Pack hasn’t had a shooter like this since Scott Wood, and with the roster riddled with long athletes that have so-so shots, adding a pure shooter would be a huge gap filler. (however Kentucky thinks they’re going to get him)

If you go the SG route, your options start to open up as well. There’s Rocket Watts from MSU, another shooter in Jalen Coleman-Lands (Iowa State), or one of our sleeper favorites, the sneaky athletic, sharpshooting 6’5 Pelle Larsson of Utah who can really do it all.

Really at this point, it’s all speculation, but the staff knew Moore could pull the trigger at any moment, so there’s no doubt they have made some contact. It could be some of the guys listed. It could be a guy that hasn’t gone in the portal yet. At this point its still too early to know.

Whichever way Keatts plays it, if he can land one of these top guards to fill Moore’s spot, then NC State comes out ahead. If they can’t fill the slot or take someone to just fill a spot, then losing Moore is going to really hurt NC State next season.

4 Comments
Subscribe
Notify of
4 Comments
newest
oldest most Upvoted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Rev
Rev
2 years ago

I too find it hard to believe that an experienced, proven, top 50 guard would transfer to State to share minutes with 6 other guards. I expect Thomas, Morsell, Pass, and yes maybe even Seabron can back up Cam Hayes at point. I hate losing Moore, but I am more worried about replacing DJ. Given time, maybe our current bigs will grow into the role. Manny was 6’9” 195 lbs when he signed. Let’s hope those other guys improve as much as he has.

Papajohn
Papajohn
2 years ago

I think adding a guard puts us right back in the same situation, and that transfer door is still wide open. KK’s got to keep six guards happy now – playing two deep at three positions – which might happen, but I doubt it. With the exception of Pass, they are all 4 star players expecting starter minutes.
DJ is leaving a big hole, both rebounding and scoring. Keatts can usually figure out the scoring, I’d like to see him sign a big guy that can come off the bench and get boards and defend.

Btroutman81
Btroutman81
2 years ago

I’m not sure where this is coming from? Majority of our roster are guards. We just nabbed a gaurd transfer from UVA; and this Gantt guy (transfer from Providence) plays like a gaurd at 6’7″ Where is the article about having a strong front court? We havent had a big man that can dominate inside, on both sides of the ball, since Richard Howell. And if no one has noticed, we get absolutley dominated inside when we get into conference play. Small Ball may work in tha AAC, but it doesnt seem to work in the ACC. Hell, Luke Mayes… Read more »

Dof87
Dof87
2 years ago

There’s a kid from UVA that may have already filled our PG need. And Seabron could do it in a pinch (KK gave him some brief PG minutes late in the year)

Give me a big board basher.

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