• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

SG Daequan Cook (Ironi Hai Motors Nes-Ziona - Israel)

At the Beach Ball Classic this past week, Cook put up huge numbers and was named to the all-tournament team.....Dunbar won the consolation bracket of the tournament.

Game 1: 27 points, 14 rebounds
Game 2: 17 points
Game 3: 30 points, 10 rebounds
Game 4: 27 points, 9 rebounds
 
Upvote 0
link

1/5/06

Of course, the Beach Ball Classic was going to select a player from the championship team for MVP, even if there were better individual performances. That is how it works.


If I had a MVP vote, it would have gone to Dayton Dunbar's Daequan Cook, and no, it is not because I am an Ohio State graduate, where Cook will play next season.

Cook, who had little help on his Dayton team in comparison with powerhouses such as Mitchell, Mater Dei and DeMatha Catholic, led Dayton to the consolation championship.

But he was the most impressive player in the tournament. He shot 50 percent on his three-point attempts, finished alley-oop dunks and showed off a talented midrange game.

Cook averaged 25.3 points per game, just behind Mater Dei's Taylor King, while pulling down 8.5 rebounds. He would have been in the top 10 in assists, too, had his teammates been able to handle some of his laser no-look passes.
 
Upvote 0
link

1/7/06

Quote:
OSU recruits Cook, Lighty to face off in future home

Saturday, January 07, 2006




Ohio State basketball recruits Daequan Cook of Dayton Dunbar and David Lighty of Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph will go head-to-head Jan. 16 in Value City Arena when their teams play in the Martin Luther King Day Challenge.

The game is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. The schools’ juniorvarsity teams will play at 3 p.m.
All tickets are general admission and are $7 apiece. They are available at the Schottenstein Center box office or at Ticketmaster outlets, ticketmaster.com or by calling 614-431-3600.
 
Upvote 0
link

1/16/06


Lighty and Cook are more concerned with getting a win today, when VASJ faces 9-2 Dayton Dunbar


Daequan Cook and David Lighty have squared off on the basketball court in Columbus before.

Today's meeting between the No. 1- and No. 2-ranked seniors in the state, and two-fifths of the vaunted Ohio State recruiting class dubbed the Thad Five, comes with just a little more fanfare than the AAU battle two summers ago.

Lighty will lead Villa Angela-St. Joseph (7-2) against Cook and Dayton Dunbar (9-2) in a premier nonconference matchup of two state-ranked teams at Value City Arena on the OSU campus.

It will be the first meeting on the hardwood for Lighty and Cook since an AAU game in Columbus the summer before their junior seasons, and the first time the two storied high school programs have played since a state semifinal won by the Wolverines in Dayton in 1987.

The two did not face off last summer as Lighty was rehabilitating from a torn ACL in his right knee suffered in the district final against Chanel in March.

And unless Ohio State coach Thad Matta wants to pit two-fifths of the incoming Thad Five against one another in practice, it will be the last time Lighty and Cook will be opponents.

So what better place for two of the Buckeye State's best to have their one and only head-to-head high school meeting in the very building where Matta hopes to see them working together for the next several years.

Matta's vaunted recruiting class also includes Indianapolis Lawrence North teammates Greg Oden, a 7-foot center regarded as the top high school player in the country, and 6-1 guard Mike Conley. The fifth member of the group is Othello Hunter, a 6-9 forward/center from Hillsborough Community College in Tampa, Fla.

"Hopefully, this game will be something for us to talk about when we are at Ohio State next year," Lighty said. "I'm really excited to go down to play at OSU, but I am trying not to feel any pressure, and I am sure Daequan feels the same. He has proven how good a player he is, and when he gets started, he is tough to stop. I am just going to try to play my best and play hard and hopefully help my team get a win."

Today's VASJ-Dayton Dunbar clash is a glimpse into the future of OSU men's basketball.

Just don't call it a showdown between the pair of Mr. Ohio finalists from a year ago.

Lighty and Cook - both ranked among the top 25 prospects nationally as well - feel as though they have nothing left to prove, and they simply are heading to Columbus this afternoon to win a high school basketball game.
The OSU talk and the individual comparisons can take a back seat for 32 minutes. Winning is the most important thing this afternoon.

"I'm trying to treat it as just another game," Cook said. "I am going there to try to win a game, and I hope my teammates are with me doing the same.

"People know what Dave's capable of, and they know what I'm capable of, so even if one of us has a bad game, it shouldn't matter. I don't look at it as me against him. What is important is that we go get a win. All the college stuff can wait until I am done with my high school career."

While the outcome shouldn't drastically affect either team's ranking in the state polls (Dayton Dunbar fifth in Division II and VASJ seventh in D-III) and it has no bearing on a conference race or postseason seeding, it is hard to imagine it as just another game.

It's not often teams get the opportunity to play regular-season games at Division I college venues such as the home of the Buckeyes. VASJ coach Dave Wojciechowski recognizes the matchup is not only a chance for OSU fans to see two members of the Thad Five, but a chance for the Vikings to measure themselves against one of the top teams in Ohio.

"They are a talented team, and we have some talent, but obviously Dave and Daequan being on the same floor playing against each other adds a little more juice," Wojciechowski said. "Dave's going to be Dave, and Daequan is going to be Daequan, but the supporting casts for both teams are going to be huge. We have to have other guys step up and have big games. But it should be a great weekend overall."

Lighty is hoping the trip to Value City Center is a weekend the Vikings can repeat in late March.

While Cook helped lead Dayton Dunbar to the Division II state semifinals played there last season, Lighty has never made it to the Division III final four in his first three seasons with the Vikings. So it is easy to understand why the 6-foot-5 guard would like today's game not to be his last on OSU's home floor until he is wearing the scarlet and gray next year.

"This is where the Final Four is played, so hopefully we can get back here," Lighty said. "It's real big for us to play well and for the goal to return. It will be good preparing us for the tournament and should help further down the road."

Preparing for a player like Cook is not easy, even though Lighty has checked the 6-4 shooting guard before in AAU games. He said the matchups were pretty even, and he thinks their games are similar, although Lighty said Cook has a better jump shot and he is a little better post-up player.

Lighty called Cook "smooth" and said he makes everything seem "effortless," which are words often used to describe VASJ's leading scorer.

Wojciechowski said expecting Lighty to shut Cook down on his own is unrealistic, but watching the two future Buckeyes go head-to-head will be a sight to watch.

"Individually, Daequan is the best player we have played against, and you can't expect one guy to go out and stop him," Wojciechowski said.

"Daequan has a ton of talent, but I expect Dave to also go out and show that he is one of the top two or three players in the state. He always rises to the occasion. I'm looking forward to Dave being the stud we know he is."

Lighty and Cook have continually risen to the occasion their entire high school careers. Today is one last chance to do it on the very floor where their college careers will unfold.

"It's exciting but sad at the same time for us as a staff because our relationship with Dave and all our guys transcends basketball, and we know we only have a little bit of time left together with the seniors," Wojciechowski said.

"For Buckeyes fans to get a chance to see Dave and Daequan play on this floor one time before seeing them grow and develop as college players is something special. It should be an exciting day for everyone."
 
Upvote 0
sup?

Went to the VCA today and watched three quarters of VASJ vs Dunbar. (Sat at Hosket's play-by-play table for awhile til they made me move back a row.)

I was around when JJ played for the Bucks. It was really nice to see him in action again - in the form of Daequan Cook.

Smooth as silk - effortless moves to the basket. Can square up anywhere and get a shot off whenever he pleases. Deadly accurate.

You may read that Lighty had a bad game. His only problem was that Cook was guarding him and you do not want to be guarded by Cook. Lighty, on the other hand, could do very little so slow Daequan.

I was also impressed by his floor sense. I saw Lebron a couple of times in HS as well. LJ was the show. Did what he wanted and had a supporting cast. DC does what he does in the context of the game. Had some great passes and always looking for the open man. In fact his eye movement itself was noticeable. Always aware of everything going on around him and looking for opportunities for steals, drives and passes. Just a great player with a great sense of the game - far beyond what you would expect from a HS player. I can't recall a single play that one might call stupid - and you can't say that about our current 5th year seniors.

Also have to mention his demeanor. No trash talking. Rarely changed his facial expression. Got called for a cheap foul early and didn't flinch. The most emotion I saw was after a missed free throw. All business.

One of my biggest impressions was a play with about 30 seconds left in the first quarter. He was mismatched agains a smaller player in the corner and calling for the ball. He got the pass just as the coach was calling for "one shot". It was an easy three - the type any HS player would take. But he immediately brought the ball back out as instructed.

He is complete.


Lighty really did not look bad. Some nice moves, good shot. He might even be a good defender against someone within reason. He just looked like a very good HS player - as opposed to Cook who looked like someone Krzyzewski had schooled for a few years.
 
Upvote 0
i think you forgot to menchion that he had 41 points, 15 boards and 5 assists.



also...did you catch the 1st 3 quarters or the last 3?

also, i heard bad things about Pouge, did you see any negative things from him?
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0
Pogue was constantly running his mouth at St.Joe's players.It wasn't with mean intentions he was just talking trash and laughing about it.The game was a blowout and he still wouldn't shut-up.Reminded me of Cincy players under Huggins.
 
Upvote 0
DDN

1/17

Tom Archdeacon: Cook's moves get crowd off their feet

By Tom Archdeacon
Dayton Daily News
COLUMBUS | He'd already put on a show with his no-look passes, steals, that tomahawk dunk, the windmill dunk and an assortment of other shots including a tightly-defended, falling-out-of-bounds, right-at-the-buzzer three-pointer before the half.

Daequan Cook's stats in a 101-53 win over Cleveland Villa Angela St. Joseph.
  • Points: 41
  • Rebounds: 15
  • Assists: 5
  • Steals: 3
  • Jammed thumbs from dunking so many times: 1
But nothing got the Value City Arena crowd buzzing like this play:
Daequan Cook — the hoop headliner from Dunbar High — got the ball near the top of the key with just over two minutes left in the third quarter Monday and found himself guarded by David Lighty, the highly rated Cleveland Villa Angela St. Joseph guard who will join him at Ohio State next season.
The two are friends, they talk regularly on the phone, but as Cook would put it later: "Outside the court we can be friends every day. But like I tell everybody, between the lines I don't have any friends."
And with moves like this, no wonder.
He juked one way, then the other and then came his patented cross-over dribble.
Lighty, who already had his right knee in a big brace, now found himself bundled in deceit. As he lunged one way, Cook went the other and drove unimpeded to the basket for a rousing left-handed dunk that made the crowd roar.
Up in the stands, some of current Buckeyes players — from J.J. Sullinger to Terence Dials to Jamar Butler — howled their approval. Sitting atop Section 107, Matt Terwilliger, the OSU center from Troy, called over to teammate Matt Sylvester, who simply shook his head in disbelief.
As St. Joseph's coach Dave Wojciechowski would sum up the play and the day — following Dunbar's 101-53 annihilation of his seventh-ranked Division III team in the Martin Luther King Day Challenge:
"We were pretty much overwhelmed. Daequan was just tremendous. He's going to be a heck of a college player. I was very, very impressed. He was unstoppable today and the thing is, he has the ability to do that all the time."
Cook scored a career-high 41 points, had 15 rebounds, five assists, three steals and promised this was just the tip of the iceberg.
"This meant a lot to me," he said. "I wanted to put on a show for everybody . . . just give them a taste of what it's going to be like next year at Ohio State . . . And this was just one-fifth of the Thad Five."
Cook and Lighty, along with Lawrenceville (Ind.) North's 7-foot Greg Oden and guard Mike Conley and Hillsboro Community College's 6-9 Othello Hunter have all agreed to play for Ohio State coach Thad Matta next season, giving the Bucks the most anticipated recruiting class since the Fab Five came to Michigan in 1991.
"We just want to play hard, put Ohio State back on the map and win a national championship," Cook said matter-of-factly.
While Matta privately bubbled to friends about Cook's performance, he shook off any public comment. With other recruits in the Arena, he's not supposed to assess prep talent. "I'm not allowed to say anything," he said. "The (NCAA) microscope is pretty intense around here these days."
Was it fair to say he was smiling, Monday?
He nodded: "You can say I had a big smile."
While Matta couldn't talk, nothing hindered Bill Hoskett, the former Buckeye great from Belmont High, who watched from court side: "(Daequan's) upside is fabulous. He's so smooth. His scoring, that's obvious, but his ability to see the floor and make his teammates better is what impressed me."
The last time Cook played on this court was in the Division II state semi-finals, a game where Dunbar was beaten by Upper Sandusky.
"He was disappointed with that because he didn't have a complete game," said Dunbar coach Peter Pullen. "He didn't shoot very well that day — I think he was just two-for-10 from three-point range — and he's usually a 40 percent shooter from out there. So he wanted to do better today and I think he wanted to put on a good show in the place he'll be playing next season."
Alfred Powell, the Dunbar assistant football coach, said he sensed Cook was going to have a big game Monday: "This week was different than before their games this year at Myrtle Beach or even over in Indianapolis. This week Daequan was a different monster."
Sunday — when 19th-ranked Ohio State fell in double overtime to Michigan State on this very same court — Cook, Lighty, Oden, Conley and several recruits all were sitting behind the Buckeyes' bench.
Monday, it was two of the prep kids' time to shine and the current Buckeyes came out to support them.
"This shows you the type of family Coach Matta has them in," said Lighty. "We don't even go to Ohio State yet and they were supporting us."
As for the younger players who were there, Lighty beamed: "I think there were about nine or 10 recruits there and they could probably start in the next two years at any college in America. Hopefully they'll all come here and we can do something good."
After struggling Monday and finishing with just 10 points — 11 below his average — Lightly admitted: "After that performance, you gotta at least be happy that (Daequan) is gonna be your teammate next year."
Although Lighty was totally eclipsed Monday, part of it has to do with that right knee brace that protects the surgically-repaired ACL he tore during the state tournament last March. He also doesn't play with nearly as talented a team as does Cook.
And then there's the fact this was just Cook's day.
"When he gets like that, he's hard to stop," Pullen said. "After seeing that today, you've got to say he's one of the best in the country. Everything went right for him today."
Well, almost everything.
After the game, Cook came out of the dressing room with an ice bag on his right hand.
"I jammed my thumb pretty bad out there," he said.
How?
"On the rim," he shrugged. "Then it got worse as the game went on. Got swollen and pretty painful."
Why, did someone bump it?
"No, as I kept dunking and dunking, it just kept getting worse."
 
Upvote 0
link

1/17/06


Matta has a right to smile

COLUMBUS - Ohio State basketball coach Thad Matta was smiling in the fourth row behind the scorer's table in Value City Arena on Monday afternoon.
Villa Angela-St. Joseph coach Dave Wojciechowski was not, and for good reason.
A day after watching his Buckeyes lose a double-overtime thriller to Michigan State, Matta needed some good news. Especially after watching his team play solid defense, but managing just 59 points in 50 minutes of play.
The performance of Dayton Dunbar's Daequan Cook against the Vikings was nothing short of spectacular in a 101-53 rout of VASJ.
What was billed as a showdown of Buckeye basketball recruits - Cook and the Vikings' David Lighty, the top two senior recruits in Ohio - very quickly became a one-man show. Cook and Dunbar proved to be too good on this day for Lighty and his VASJ teammates.
It took Cook a few minutes to get his game in gear, missing his first two shots. But after connecting on a baseline shot for his first field goal a little over three minutes in, it quickly became a one-man show.
The 6-foot-4 swingman tormented the Vikings with a dazzling display of creativity to find countless openings for his own shot and to get his teammates involved. The results were 41 points on 17 of 29 shooting, 15 rebounds, five assists and three steals against just one turnover.
Cook also showed he might not be just the top senior prospect in the state. While many consider North College Hill junior O.J. Mayo the best prospect in Ohio, regardless of class, Cook made a strong case for himself Monday afternoon against the reigning Mr. Basketball award winner.
"Cook is tremendous," said Wojciechowski. "He's going to be a tremendous prospect. He was unstoppable today."
Lighty, who scored 10 points on 3 of 12 shooting, and the Vikings kept it close for most of the first quarter until Cook took over, scoring nine points in the final three minutes.
From there it was a rout.
So forgive Lighty if he seemed relieved he'll play with Cook next season, not against him.
"After that performance, you've got to love (Cook). I think it will be a while before I talk to him again," Lighty said jokingly.
Cook's abilities were on full display throughout:
n In the first quarter, Cook faked out a defender on the baseline and buried a 15-foot fadeaway shot.
n In the second, he stole a pass and slammed home the first of his three dunks. In the closing seconds of the half, he buried a 3-pointer to make it 48-21 at half.
n In the third, Cook faked a drive to the inside, before deciding to take it inside following a cross-over dribble that resulted in a thunderous dunk.
n In the fourth, Cook missed on a through-the-legs windmill dunk, but grabbed his own rebound and dropped it in.
"I just came out here today a little harder to give the fans a taste of what to expect next year," Cook said. "But the game was less fortunate for Dave. I just wanted to put on a show."
It's no wonder Matta was in the fourth row smiling like he had just won the lottery.
With Cook, Lighty and Greg Oden, the nation's consensus No. 1 recruit, en route to Columbus next fall for what is considered the core of one of the nation's top incoming classes, Matta might have done just that.
[email protected]
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top