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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Joe Henricksen

Take an early look at the high school Player of the Year race

Morgan Park’s Adam Miller (44) stops at the three-point line. | Worsom Robinson/For the Sun-Times

A year ago Curie’s DaJuan Gordon emerged and Bogan’s Rashuan Agee came out of nowhere during the season to become legitimate Player of the Year candidates.

Maybe a player or two will follow that same path this upcoming season. But there is no question the field of Player of the Year candidates is headed by two front-runners.

With high school basketball practice beginning next week, here is a snapshot of the Player of the Year race for the 2019-2020 season.

The favorites: DJ Steward, Young and Adam Miller, Morgan Park

The POY race starts right here. These two were the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s top two prospects in the Class of 2020 when they entered high school and have certainly lived up to the billing.

The Duke-bound Steward and Miller, the best unsigned senior in Illinois, are special guards who check off all the boxes. They play for highly ranked programs, put up eye-popping numbers and have the opportunity to play in big games on a big stage.

The top challenger: Max Christie, Rolling Meadows

Although just a junior, Christie is the most-talked-about prospect in the state — and the highest ranked one. So the reputation is there, the numbers will back it up and he’s still getting better.

The versatile 6-6 guard is poised to add to his impressive totals of a year ago when he put up 26 points and 10 rebounds a game. He recorded a triple-double and scored 51 points in a game. Those are headline-grabbing POY moments right there.

Rolling Meadows has a chance to be solid, a conference contender in the Mid-Suburban League East this year. But how will monster numbers and solid team success match up against the other top POY contenders who will be playing for state-ranked teams?

Rolling Meadows could be very, very good — but probably not until a year from now.

The dark horse: Bryce Hopkins, Fenwick

Did you see the numbers the 6-6 do-it-all put up a year ago? As a sophomore? Hopkins averaged 23 points a game and had six games of 30-plus points.

He’s grown physically, as a player and should be even more efficient this season. This is one of the rare players in the state who is capable of putting a team on his back and carrying it.

While Fenwick has some younger talent in place, it’s yet to be determined how quickly that will translate into high win totals. But by the end of the season could Fenwick and Hopkins go on an extended March run in Class 3A and enhance his chances?

The long shots: Ahron Ulis, Marian Catholic and Jeremiah Williams, Simeon

Their cause will be helped by the fact these two play for top 10 teams and can fill a stat sheet.

Ulis led Marian Catholic to a East Suburban Catholic Conference title and 27 wins a year ago while averaging 18.3 points, 4.8 assists and 3.2 rebounds a game. Williams, a transfer from St. Laurence, is a versatile 6-4 guard who put up 18.3 points, 9.8 rebounds and 3.5 assists as a junior.

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