By R.L. Bynum
Carolina’s women’s basketball program could make history Saturday.
That’s when 6–2 point forward Sarah Strong (left in photo, next South Carolina recruit Joyce Edwards, with whom she shared co-MVP honors for the McDonald’s All-American Game), the No. 1-ranked girls player in the Class of 2024, will announce where she will play college basketball.
If the five-star former star at Sanford’s Grace Christian High School picks UNC over Duke and UConn, she would become the first top-ranked recruit to pick the Tar Heels. She’ll make the announcement around 11 a.m. Saturday on ESPN during halftime of the Chipotle Nationals championship game, which starts at 10 a.m.
Strong, the Naismith Player of the Year, scored 11 points and 12 rebounds to help her East team beat the West 98–74 in Tuesday’s McDonald’s All-American Game. In the first few minutes of the game, she scored a pair of 3-pointers.
She would join an incoming class that already includes two other five-star recruits (6–5 Charlotte center Blanca Thomas, No. 30 in the class, and 5–10 Midlothian, Va., point guard Lanie Grant, No. 22 in the Class of 2025 before reclassifying) and a four-star recruit (5–11 Mountain Iron, Minn., guard Jordan Zubich, No. 80 in the class).
Strong would give UNC five McDonald’s All-Americans on next season’s team if Deja Kelly (2020), Lexi Donarski (2020), Kayla McPherson (2021) and Indya Nivar (2022) all return.
After averaging 25 points and 19 rebounds as a freshman at Fuquay-Varina High School, Strong led Grace Christian to a 91–4 record and three consecutive North Carolina Independent Schools Athletic Association state titles. Last season, Strong averaged 21 points, 16.6 rebounds, 4.6 assists and 2.8 steals.
Strong, who has a 3.68 GPA, has earned North Carolina Miss Basketball honors and Gatorade North Carolina Girls Player of the Year the last two seasons.
Projected UNC roster next season
(Next season’s class listed)
Year | No. | Players | Pos. | Height | |
Freshman | — | Nyla Brooks | W | 6–2 | |
Freshman | — | Taliyah Henderson | W | 6–1 | |
Freshman | — | Taissa Queiroz | F | 6–1 | |
Sophomore | 7 | Elina Aarnisalo | G | 5–10 | |
Sophomore | 0 | Lanie Grant | PG | 5–10 | |
Sophomore | 34 | Blanca Thomas | C | 6–5 | |
Sophomore | 3 | Jordan Zubich | G | 5–11 | |
RS sophomore | 21 | Ciera Toomey | F | 6–4 | |
RS sophomore | 4 | Laila Hull | W | 6–1 | |
Junior | 10 | Reniya Kelly | PG | 5–7 | |
Junior | 15 | Sydney Barker | PG | 5–6 | |
RS senior | 11 | Kayla McPherson | PG | 5–8 | |
Senior | 2 | Nyla Harris | F | 6–2 | |
Senior | 24 | Indya Nivar | G | 5–10 |
Class of 2025
Player | Rating | ESPN rank | Position | Height | Hometown |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nyla Brooks | Five star | No. 20 | Wing | 6–2 | Alexandria, Va. |
Taliyah Henderson | Five star | No. 21 | Wing | 6–1 | Tucson, Ariz. |
Taissa Queiroz | Four star | No. 76 | Forward | 6–1 | Santa Rosa, Calif. |
Photo via @McDAAG
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