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Young Stars from the NPSI

by Carl Berman

Here is Part 2 of our National Prep School Invitational scouting articles. This article is consisted of brief overviews on some of the most promising class-of-2026 and class-of-2027 recruits who participated at the NPSI this year, as well as a few rising stars from the class of 2028.

Top Class of 2026 Recruits

Hunter Te Ratana (6’4”, Darrow School)           

Among the recruits who had a breakout performance at the 2025 NPSI. Te Ratana showcased his high potential on both ends of the floor. A deceptive athlete, the New Zealander is an explosive leaper with plenty of creativity in his dunks. His quick, repeatable and nearly automatic stroke off movement, catches and dribble suggest he would be a sniper as a two guard at the next level. Tough as nails on the defensive end with an endless motor. Te Ratana will excel in transition/fast paced plays.

Promis N’landu (6’3”, Fort Erie International Academy)                                                   

A high-major point guard with an impressive scoring game and long 6-foot-5 wingspan. N’landu will be a crafty 3-level scoring PG with great court vision and passing abilities. Has nice handles and ability to change speeds and directions creating for himself or his teammates. Going down the lane he will take advantage of his well-developing upper body, tight handles and explosive hops. He holds offers from Arizona State, Seton Hall, George Mason, Colorado State, and St. Bonaventure, he’s recently been getting more and more interest from HM schools.

Quinn Costello (6’10”, Newman School)               

A tall and long promising big man who will stretch the floor nicely thanks to his impressively smooth and fluid shooting mechanics from long range for his size. His game has plenty of upside. Very mobile, expected to put pressure on the glass and roll well to the basket, being a lob target too.

Lucas Morillo (6’7”, Newman School)

A skilled combo guard from the Dominican Republic who displays a very smooth offensive game. Seems to read it exceptionally well, showing advanced decision-making skills. Will be an effective 3-level scorer and crafty handler/facilitator in pick-and-roll actions.

Top Class of 2027 Recruits

Nalajah Christopher (6’3”, Darrow School)    

A very talented lengthy guard with a developing athletic frame which he is expected to fill out nicely with time. Christopher displayed great feel for the game and impressively mature decision making for his age (played two years up). Has high upside to turn into a high IQ lead guard with solid defensive presence. Reportedly has a great work ethic.

DJ Hawkins (6’7”, Saint Thomas More) 

A promising tall wing with athletic and lengthy frame (+3 wingspan). Expected to be a deadly 3-point shooter at the next stage, especially off spot ups.  Has high upside as a two-way player.

Deng Ngor (6’7”, Fort Erie International)                        

Another intriguing prospect in the class of 2027 who seems to be destined to only get better, Ngor is a 6-foot-7 tall wing who has elite physical attributes and great motor. Displayed promising perimeter skills and high potential on the defensive end thanks to his great effort and physical tools. Already holds offers from Stonehill, Colorado State, George Mason and Arizona State.

Jaylin Williams Crawford (6’7”, CATS)

Another tall wing with a good deal of athleticism and physical attributes, Williams Crawford has a smooth offensive game and could be lethal from long range.

Elijah McNair (6’4”, St. Andrew’s)

A big, strong and physical 6-foot-4 wing who plays beyond his age. McNair can do a bit of everything, thriving in scoring the ball – he can drive aggressively to the rim, hit shots from mid to long range, rebound well and execute off pick-and-roll actions for himself or his teammates.

Class of 2028 – Potential Rising Stars

Malachi Odugbela (6’4, St. Andrew’s)

Among the youngest and most promising players at the event, Odugbela proved he belonged to play there despite his age. Having solid basketball genes (father played D1 basketball), Odugbela plays well beyond his age, showing good understanding of the game and great shooting touch from long range, despite his railway thin and developing frame. He is expected to grow several more inches and fill out his frame well with time. Odugbela has high potential as a two-way player thanks to his elite physical tools and advanced instincts. College coaches should keep tabs on his further development.

Kyle “Bright” Delves (6’2.5”, Mount Saint Charles)

Arguably one of the best guards in the class of 2028 in the States. The future seems “Bright” for the kid from Providence. He could turn into an elite lead guard with time and reps. Extremely talented, he has   shifty handles and the ability to change pace and directions. Ambidextrous and tough, he doesn’t shy away from any contact going down to the hoop. On top of that he’s very bouncy for a guard. Reportedly Delves firstly played football but once he started playing basketball, he realized that’s his sport. Kyle Delves seems to have all the needed prerequisites to turn into an elite guard at the next level.

Quinn Costello

This article was written by Simeon Marinov, a correspondent and scout for NetScouts Basketball. You can follow us on Facebook, or on twitter. We are looking for those interested in our basketball scout apprenticeship program. For information contact us and forward your resume.

C

From February 6 through February 9 at Rhode Island College we were able to scout live all 28 games at the National Prep School Invitational.

Here is Part 1 of our NPSI scouting articles. The first article is consisted of brief overviews on some of the top class-of-2025 recruits who participated at the NPSI this year. Most, if not all, of them seem capable to play a significant role or contribute from the jump on a Division 1 program.

London Jemison (6’8”, Saint Thomas More)                     – Committed to Alabama

A quick-twitch athlete who stands at 6-foot-8 with a plus two wingspan, Alabama commit Jemison seems more than ready to storm the NCAA world next season thanks to a promising blend of great physical tools and intriguing versatility. Jemison has the potential to be a 3-level scorer with a two-way value who can impact the game off the ball thanks to his good feel of when to cut combined with a nice stroke off the catch and movement.

Jaylen Harrell (6’5”, CATS)                                                    – Signed with Providence

Watching him participate at the NPSI for second year in a row, Harrell seems to be a poised and mature 6-foot-5 wing with a thick frame who knows how to be an effective scorer for his team. He is expected to be a reliable 3-point shooter off the catch and a player who can take an advantage of mismatches, bullying his opponents close to the basket.

Efeosa Oliogu (6’7”, William Academy)                               – Committed to Butler

Another recruit who seems destined to contribute right away in college next season. Oliogu, a 6-foot-7 strong and big guard with very solid base to go along with plenty of athleticism and power, for most of the time at the event he looked like a man among boys. Oliogu demonstrated intriguing decisiveness going down the lane fueled by his advanced leaping and scoring abilities. If he keeps honing his outside shot, Oliogu should have a successful collegiate career.

Mouhamed Camara (6’8”, NBA Academy)

Arguably the best defender at the tournament, the 6-foot-8 Senegalese player is extremely physically gifted with great tools (body frame, long wingspan and big shoulders), Camara could turn into a lockdown defender at the next level and a nightmare for opponents’ passing lanes. He will excel thanks to his athleticism in transition and open court plays. Offensively he seems to be pretty raw in half court sets at this point of his development, if he manages to develop a reliable 3-point shot, he could be an elite 3-and-D guy at the next stage.

Lual Machol (6’10”, Drive Academy)

A talented frontcourt player who displayed flashes of an eye-opening blend of fluidity and versatility in his game. Standing at 6-foot-10, his ball handling skills and understanding of the game to go along with his ability to create his own shot and also knock down threes were pretty impressive.

Ashton Reynolds (6’4, Williston Northampton School)

A Brooklyn native, Ashton Reynolds showcased his elite and eye-popping athleticism terrorizing the rims  to go along with a promising 3-point stroke (despite jumping pretty high) and solid defensive commitment. An intriguing two-way guard with crazy hops, Reynolds’ great showcase earned him offers from Bryant, Delaware State and Fairfield.

Brandon Benjamin (6’8”, Saint Thomas More)

A physically gifted athletic frontcourt player, New Jersey native Brandon Benjamin has a huge +6 wingspan, strong shoulders to go along with nice mobility and hops. Offensively he seems to be pretty versatile, being able to attack off the bounce, hit spot-up threes or finish aggressively above the rim off cuts. Will bring energy and good motor. Thanks to his solid performance at the event, he got an offer from University of Massachusetts.

Teshaun Steele (6’7”, Darrow School)

A 6-foot-7 lefty athletic wing with nice length and a high two-way upside. He displayed promising defensive versatility, solid rebounding and very good verticality within the paint. His stroke from long range looks good too.

Tomas Valentiny (6’7”, Get Better Academy)

A 6-foot-7 Slovakian forward, Valentiny has gotten stronger since the last time we scouted him at the 2024 NPSI. Playing a main role on their pro team in the Czech top division this season helped Valentiny become more confident. He is expected to be a reliable and consistent 3-point shooter, mainly off spot-ups and a good scorer/driver off the catch. Shows solid verticality. Should be a nice pick up for a MM school.

Abdullah Amzil (6’7”, Drive Academy)

A big wing from Finland, Amzil displayed his versatility. He could be a threat from long range. Has good hands on defense, will be a plus help defender thanks to his nice awareness, quick reactions and good verticality. His older brother, Mustapha has been playing college basketball (started at Dayton, now at New Mexico).

Kieran Mullen (7’0”, Saint Thomas More)

A long and mobile Canadian 7-footer who displayed pretty good skill set for his position and size. Should be a reliable lob catcher and rim protector, a solid roller and big man who will understand the game well. On top of that, his mid-range stroke looks good and capable of being a decent 3-point shooter with time and reps. Holds offers from Montana State, James Madison and Seattle, while still getting other interest.

Josue Kangudi (6’5”, Bridgeport Prep)

An explosive leaper, Kangudi embraces every single contact he plays through going down the lane. His physicality and level of sheer strength is hard to be matched whether in transition or in traffic, with his great verticality you get a hard-to-be-stopped slasher. Kangudi displayed decent shooting ability from mid to long range as well.

London Jemison

This article was written by Simeon Marinov, a correspondent and scout for NetScouts Basketball. You can follow us on Facebook, or on twitter. We are looking for those interested in our basketball scout apprenticeship program. For information contact us and forward your resume.

February 9th (Sunday)

Game 24 – Mt. St. Charles Academy (RI) 64 vs. Drive Academy (Finland) 102

Mt. St. Charles (64) – Christian Dalton (7), Landon Laplante (3), Soren Lolonga (9), John Oladipo (17), Kyle Deives (21), Issac Olaniba (7)

Drive Academy (102) – Jayme Kontuniemi (6), Abdullah Amzil (11), Tom Guma (5),  Brunel Madzou (13), Eemil Martinez (20), Nanti Ruuhilahti (7), Aaron Ekwere (12), Tom Oskar Arro (15), Luok Machol (8), Garang Machol (2), Santeri Liukko (3)

Game 25 – The Newman School (MA) 90 vs. GB Academy (Czech Republic) 66

Newman School (90) – Jalen Harper (10),Reggie Grodin (11),Timmy Bollin (8), Lucas Morillo (13), Collins Onyejiaka (4), Carson McDonald (12), Chase Geremia (14), Louis O’Keefe (9), Quinn Costello (2), Donovan Lee (2), Bennett White (5)

GB Academy (66) – Tomas Valentiny (16), Eduards Abele (7), Kristijonas Strackaitis (14), Jonas Koulisianis (8), Martin Javansky (9), Paval Czudek (4), Jakub Pohanka (4), Jakub Baxa (2), Lukas Caban (2)

Game 26 – Darrow School (NY) 99 vs. St. Andrews (RI) 63

Darrow School (99) – Denny Delgado (6), Hunter Te Ratana (15), Teshaun Steele (19), Jordon Brown (14), Ibrahim Gati (18), Khalil Carlson (2), LJ Falconi (6), Tesneem Ajeigbe (6), Nalajah Christopher (9), Marao Airilo (4)

St. Andrews (63) – John O’Leary (2), Chris Bianco (15), Kyle Benjamin (3), Elijah McNair (11), Griffin Taber (5), DJ Dixon (6), George Zanardze (2), Uriah Williams (3), Malachi Odugbela (13), Naz Hilario (3)

Game 27 – NBA Academy Select 80 vs. St. Thomas More “B” (CT) 50

NBA Academy (80)Modou Thiem (8), Oscar Siquier (4), Mouhamed Camara (11), Santiago Tricot (6), Gabriel Ferreira (6), Ali Assran (6), Choayboa Keita (8), Yoshi Nimmo (2), Iwo Baganc (15), Ahmed Bedoui (12), Mahamet Tahir (2)

St. Thomas More “B” (50) – Scottie Holloway (4), Joe Schanzer (10), Amare Parham (15), Mike Rumpza (2), Kur Anyang (4), Steyvon Jones (8), Zach Bingham (3), Anas Elshakery (2), Emmanuel Malek (2)

Game 28 – St. Thomas More (CT) 100 vs. RIG Mark (Sweden) 46

St. Thomas More (100) – Christian Humphrey (9), Shuto Sakihama (10), DJ Hawkins (9), Brandon Benjamin (11), London Jemison (16), Hiro Inoue (2), Tahian Pettway (9), Kieran Mullen (4), Jaeden Robley (14), Mustapha Eskici (7), Bentley Shelton (8)

RIG Mark (46) – Hugo Okehie (6), Benjamin Musoke (4), Sten Gennemark (2), Sebastian Hallberg (1), Emel Music (11), Samuel Kloutschek (12), Melvin Fredenlund (8)

February 8th (Saturday)

Game 16 – RIG Mark (Sweden) 66 vs. William Academy (Ontario) 85

RIG Mark (66) – Hugo Okehie (10), Benjamin Musoke (13), Elliott Brostram (9), Sten Gennemark (9), Emil Music (15), Samuel Kloutschek (6), Sebastian Hallberg (4)

William Academy (85) – Deng Makeer (14), Tristan Darko (14), Keoni Sacco (10), Jenovie Kabeya (9), Cameron Ewers (2), Stephon Fearon (18), Miguel Hunte (2), Trust Odia (14), David Williams (2)

Game 17 – Drive Academy (Finland) 79 vs. Great Futures Prep (WA) 62

Drive Academy (79) –  Jayme Kontuniemi (3), Abdullah Amzil (3), Tom Guma (2),  Brunel Madzou (21), Eemil Martinez (11), AJ Towa (5), Nanti Ruuhilahti (8), Aaron Ekwere (9), Tom Oskar Arro (6), Luok Machol (11)

Great Futures (62) – Myles Moore (5), Kaydn Ward (16), Bilal Osman (12), Warris Isaiah (6), Xavier Santana (9), Tre Arogie (4), Kayshaun Davis (10)

Game 18 – NBA Academy Select 46 vs. Darrow School (NY) 85

NBA Academy (46)Modou Thiem (5), Oscar Siquier (4), Mouhamed Camara (4), Santiago Tricot (2), Gabriel Ferreira (5), Choayboa Keita (5), Yoshi Nimmo (2), Iwo Baganc (8), Aymen Kraria (5), Ahmed Bedoui (5), Mahamet Tahir (1)

Darrow School (85) – Denny Delgado (24), Hunter Te Ratana (22), Teshaun Steele (8), Jordon Brown (8), Ibrahim Gati (9), Khalil Carlson (2), LJ Falconi (3), Igor Gonzalez (2), Tesneem Ajeigbe (4), Nalajah Christopher (3)

Game 19 – Hodan Prep (Ontario) vs. CATs Academy (MA) 82

CATs Academy (82) –  Jaylen Harrell (31), Jaxson Terry (7), Desmond Bellot (7), Jaylin Williams-Crawford (9), Nelson Mboudjika (6), Josiah Adamson (2), Julian Kabri (7), Yeshua Kesse-Beda (7), Leo Curtis (6)

Hodan Prep (59) – Jaden Lee (2), Dante Censori-Hercules (5), Josiah Roberts (8), Saad Chadhurt (9), Ian McBride (12), Noah Khaja (12), Duante Jones (4), Zachary Downer (7)

Game 20 – Bridgeport Prep (CT) 81 vs. Hoosac Prep (NY) 63

Bridgeport (81) – Andrew Mabry (16), David Johnson (15), Travis Upchruch (9), Gideon Ekukwai (10), Josue Kangudi (11), Khalil Thompson (4), Eric Swain (1), Harvin Guerva (13), Emanuel Lawrence (2)

Hoosac Prep (63) – Nicolas Mitrovic (4), Leo Ryott (12), Sarp Gokberk (12), Maruan Cicic (12), Aleksa Viajic (8), Luka Pesic (7), Zavier Adam (4), Deryn Morno Dongmo (4)

Game 21 – Cushing Academy (MA) 68 vs. St. George’s (RI) 56

Cushing (68) – Ryan Ward (13), Ryan Moesch (21), Jay Jones (14), Jacob Davis (4), Elliott Erickson (5), Theo Edema (11)

St. George’s (56) – Dylan Valentine (15), Casey Bazzano (6), Ethan Njenga (6), YanCarlos Cueto (8), Barrett Loer (4), Allyn Wright (3), Kenny Benedict (8), Dywane Chess (6)

Game 22 – MacDuffie School (MA) 56 vs. Brimmer and May (MA) 44

MacDuffie (56) – Patrick Sagna (10), Keyshon Joyner (5), Julian Dent (8), Dayn Campbell (21), Elijan Avery-Turner (12)

Brimmer and May (44) – Osa Idada (2), Brady Palladino (3), Lnicoln Fudge (4), Windston Legentus (17), Owen Haglund (2), Ladanion Payne (9), Cam Thornton (5), George Demeter (2)

Game 23 – GB Academy (Czech Republic) 80 vs. Hodan Prep (Ontario) 94

GB Academy (80) – Colin Okparaigwe (5), Tomas Valentiny (20), Jonas Koulisianis (2), Martin Javansky (16), Jakub Pohanka (8), Gabriel Tazik (1), Pavel Kastil (10),Tadeus Manak (7), Lukas Caban (3), Pavel Czudek (8)

Hodan Prep (94) –  Josiah Roberts (12), Saad Chadhurt (17), Ian McBride (4), Noah Khaja (14), Daunte Jones (13), Zachary Downer (17), Osagie Okayunie (6), George Gymnopoulos (11)

February 7th (Friday)

Game 8 – Covenant College Prep (NJ) 70 vs. RIG Mark (Sweden) 55

Covenant (70) –  Shane Brantley (3), Keenan Gray (19), Teron Murry Jr. (18), Mate Mamrickishvilli (21), Lamine Sanoh (6), Mario Pinto Jr. (3)

RIG Mark (55) – Hugo Okehie (8), Benjamin Musoke (9), Bryan Amadasun (1), Sten Gennemark (8), Emil Music (5), Samuel Kloutschek (14), Melvin Fredenlund (10)

​Game 9 – Bridgeport Prep (CT) 88 vs. Great Futures Prep (WA) 74

Bridgeport (88) – Andrew Mabry (25), David Johnson (13), Travis Upchruch (14), Gideon Ekukwai (8), Josue Kangudi (20), Khalil Thompson (3), Eric Swain (3), Harun Guerva (2)

Great Futures (74) – Myles Moore (13), Kaydn Ward (18), Bilal Osman (9), Warris Isaiah (2), Marco Varani (11), Xavier Santana (13), Tre Arogie (2), Kayshaun Davis (6)

Game 10 – Fort Erie International (Ontario) 69 vs. NBA Academy Select 76

Fort Erie (69) – Adam Elaheebucus (2), Giannos Xanthoppulos (4), Deng Ngor (13), Promis N’landu (32), Nahliq Guiseppi-Kitson (3), Eli John (5), Daven Larosiliere (4),  Pierre Charles (6)

NBA Academy (76) – Modou Thiem (4), Oscar Siquier (7), Mouhamed Camara (2), Santiago Tricot (6), Gabriel Ferreira (11), Ali Assran (9), Choayboa Keita (5), Yoshi Nimmo (4), Iwo Baganc (6), Aymen Kraria (7), Ahmed Bedoui (13), Mahamet Tahir (2)

Game 11 – Drive Academy (Finland) 83 vs. Lee Academy (Maine) 55

Drive Academy (83) – Jayme Kontuniemi (7), Abdullah Amzil (10), Tom Guma (9), Garang Machol (2), Eemil Martinez (6), AJ Towa (10), Nanti Ruuhilahti (9), Aaron Ekwere (16), Luok Machol (6), Tom Oskar Arro (6), Kalle Koskinen (2)

Lee Academy (55) – Terrance Clark (21), Jair Matheis (12), Austin Omandi (6), Grgo Katic (5),  Anthony Troncelito (9), Landon Voros (2),

Game 12 – GB Academy (Czech Republic) 74 vs. William Academy (Ontario) 68

GB Academy (74) – Colin Okparaigwe (7), Tomas Valentiny (28), Eduards Abele (10), Kristijonas Strackaitis (7), Jonas Koulisianis (6), Martin Javansky (2), Jakub Pohanka (11), Gabriel Tazik (1), Pavel Kastil (5)

William Academy (68) – Efeosa Oliogu (30), Deng Makeer (16), Tristan Darko (2), Keoni Sacco (3), Jenovie Kabeya (6), Cameron Ewers (1), Stephon Fearon (3), Miguel Hunte (2), Trust Odia (5)

Game 13 – Darrow School (NY) 80 vs. Drive Academy (Finland) 76 OT

Darrow School (80) – Denny Delgado (6), Hunter Te Ratana (15), Teshaun Steele (6), Jordon Brown (11), Ibrahim Gati (7), Haisi Mayben (11), Marde Pirilo (12), Payton Davenport (2), Igor Gonzalez (4), Tesneem Ajeigbe (2), Nalajah Christopher (6)

Drive Academy (76) –  Abdullah Amzil (18), Tom Guma (8), Garang Machol (3), Brunel Madzou (9), Eemil Martinez (6), AJ Towa (14), Nanti Ruuhilahti (5), Aaron Ekwere (9), Luok Machol (4)

Game 14 – Worcester Academy (MA) 98 vs. The Williston Northampton school (MA) 93

Worcester (98) – Cam Hailey (15), Jojo Reyes (4), Payton Kamin (21), Jake Blackburn (17), Ryan Sullivan (15), Chris Leman (2), Anthony DeJohn (14), Connor Swider (10)

Williston (93) – Preston Edmead (25), Ashton Reynolds (20), Ricardo Nunes (16), Ore Odutayo (10), Kyle Seltzer (17), Maximus Kellogg (3), William Vachet (2), KhyRen Jones (1)

Game 15 – Hoosac Prep (NY) 50 vs. Hoden Prep (Ontario) 74

Hoden Prep (74) – Dante Censori-Hercules (4), Josiah Roberts (8), Saad Chadhurt (11), Ian McBride (9), Noah Khaja (9), Duante Jones (18), Ethan Brown (3), Zachary Downer (12)

Hoosac Prep (50) – Unai Fernandez (2), Nicolas Mitrovic (8), Adam Barton (6), Marko Pandiloski (20), Namisse Musonga (3), Daniel Haire (11)

February 6th (Thursday)

Game 1 – RIG Mark (Sweden) 66 vs. Lee Academy (Maine) 96

RIG Mark (66) – Hugo Okehie (2), Benjamin Musoke (30, 8 3’s), Elliot Brostom (5), Bryan Amadasun (2), Sten Gennemark (2), Emil Music (6), Samuel Kloutschek (5), Melvin Fredenlund (14)

Lee Academy (96) – Terrance Clark (26), Jair Matheis (9), Landon Voros (4), Austin Omandi (7), Grgo Katic (20), Souleymane Sylla (11),  Anthony Troncelito (12), Milos Suput (7)

Game 2 – St. Thomas More (CT) 96 vs. Great Futures Prep (WA) 66

St. Thomas More (96) – Chistian Humphrey (2), Shuto Sakihama (9), DJ Hawkins (8), Brandon Benjamin (19), London Jemison (24), Kieran Mullen (14), Jaeden Robley (5), Harry Scully (5), Mustapha Eskici (2), Bentley Shelton (8)

Great Futures Prep (66) – Myles Moore (7), Bilal Osman (18), Warris Isaiah (5), Marco Varani (16), Xavier Santana (9), Josh Adebola (2), Tre Arogie (6), Kayshaun Davis (3)

Game 3 – Putnam Science (CT) 78 vs. Fort Erie International (Ontario) 67

Putnam Science (78) – Benjamin Ahmed (11), Tony Williams (10), Jamell Hatchett (6), Parrish Edmond (16), Brayson Green (6), Adama Tambedou (10), Warren Keel (2), Abdou Yadd (9), Luka Lokhmanchuk (4),Jaeden Roberts (4)

Fort Erie (67) – Adam Elaheebucus (3), Giannos Xanthoppulos (6), Deng Ngor (9), Promis N’landu (25), Nahliq Guiseppi-Kitson (5), Eli John (8), Daven Larosiliere (1), Crue Gard (4), Pierre Charles (8)

Game 4 – Drive Academy (Finland) 76 vs. NBA Academy Select 55

Drive Academy (76) – Jayme Kontuniemi (3), Abdullah Amzil (20), Tom Guma (10), Garang Machol (4), Brunel Madzou (4), Eemil Martinez (2), AJ Towa (8), Nanti Ruuhilahti (4), Aaron Ekwere (9), Luok Machol (10)

NBA Academy Select (55) – Modou Thiem (8), Oscar Siquier (2), Mouhamed Camara (7), Santiago Tricot (5), Gabriel Ferreira (8), Ali Assran (5), Choayboa Keita (8), Yoshi Nimmo (3), Iwo Baganc (6), Aymen Kraria (1)

Game 5 – Lee Academy (ME) 71 vs. William Academy (Ontario) 79

Lee Academy (71) – Terrance Clark (16), Jair Matheis (8), Austin Omandi (20), Grgo Katic (7), Souleymane Sylla (11),  Anthony Troncelito (2), Milos Suput (7)m

William Academy (79) – Efeosa Oliogu (14), Deng Makeer (9), Tristan Darko (20), Keoni Sacko (11), Jenovie Kabeya (18), Cameron Ewers (7)

Game 6 – The Newman School (MA) 105 vs. Covenant College Prep (NJ) 62

Newman School (105) – Jalen Harper (11),Reggie Grodin (2),Timmy Bollin (11), Lucas Morillo (6), Collins Onyejiaka (12), Carson McDonald (6), Chase Geremia (11), Louis O’Keefe (16), Aidan Losiewicz (12), Quinn Costello (12), Donovan Lee (3), Ryan Meltzer (3)

Covenant (62) – Shane Brantley (3), Keenan Gray (22), Teron Murry Jr. (11), Mate Mamrickishvilli (10), Lamine Sanoh (14) Ayomide Ogunsola (2)Game 6 – The Newman School (MA) vs. Covenant College Prep (NJ)

Game 7 – Cats Academy (MA) 85 vs. GB Academy (Czech Republic) 59

Cats (85) – Jaylen Harrell (19), Jaxson Terry (17), Desmond Bellot (14), Jaylin Williams-Crawford (8), Nelson Mboudjika (1), Elias Lilja-Hadir (2), Josiah Adamson (2), Julian Kabri (2), Yeshua Kesse-Beda (5), Leo Curtis (8), Gaetan Wafo (2), Mabor Chol (5)

GB Academy (58) – Colin Okparaigwe (2), Tomas Valentiny (16), Eduards Abele (6), Kristijonas Strackaitis (9), Jonas Koulisianis (6), Martin Javansky (2), Paval Czudek (3), Tadeas Manak (3), Jakub Pohanka (6), Jakub Baxa (4), Ivan Dzuibenko (3)