Billy Gillispie is familiar with the depth and quality of talent the state of Texas produces annually. While an assistant for Bill Self at Illinois, Gillispie specialized in recruiting Texas talent north to Champaign. While the head coach at UTEP and A&M, he stockpiled homegrown talent in building those programs from obscurity to NCAA tournament regulars. In his short tenure at Kentucky, it was argued by some that he was overemphasizing 2nd tier Texas talent when Kentucky fandom desired the types of recruiting classes that Calipari is presently providing. In Lubbock, Gillispie will be back recruiting where he is most comfortable and he is definitely focused on establishing relationships and pipelines in the great state of Texas. One talented Texas prospect who is currently drawing and reciprocating interest with the Tech staff is Jelon Hornbeak.
Jelon (or Je’lon) Hornbeak is a 6’3+ two guard. He plays in the DFW metroplex for powerhouse Grace Prep (Arlington). This past summer he played for another powerhouse, Texas PRO. Accompanying him at Grace Prep and Texas PRO are Ike Austin (2012, Baylor verbal) and Emmanuel Mudiay (2014). Austin and Mudiay are two of the top players in the country. Incoming A&M freshman guard Jamal Branch also played this past season at Grace Prep. Also playing with Texas PRO are two other top 100 recruits who are 6’7+, Chicken Knowles (2012) and Danuel House (2012). While not a true point guard (Mudiay does that as well as anyone in the high school ranks, regardless of age), Hornbeak is certainly capable of running a team in a pinch. He is a versatile and athletic guard who does a little bit of everything on the floor. Playing with such talented teammate hinders Hornbeak’s stats but speeds up his development. Learning how to affect a game as a team’s third or fourth option is something that most players are not forced to do until reaching college. Giving good effort on defense and knowing how to pick his spots offensively is not something that Jelon will be unfamiliar with by the time his freshman season rolls around. This will allow Hornbeak to be ready to contribute on the college level from day one. What college Hornbeak will be contributing from day one has yet to be decided. According to NBEBasketball.com, Hornbeak has no favorites and lists Texas Tech, Pitt, Iowa, Cal, Oregon, Oklahoma, Providence, and Penn State as the school after him the hardest.
Tech is one place where Jelon certainly would be counted on to play major minutes immediately. And even though he claims no favorites, Jelon plans on signing early. This would be a huge instate recruit for Gillispie to pair with Jordan Goodman in 2012. Two big for their position, athletic, versatile athletes who have competed and proven themselves at the highest levels of both summer and school ball would be a very welcome start for Red Raider fans to Gillispie’s first recruiting class.
Coming up later this week will take a look at an in state post player that Tech is hard after.