DUBulldog wrote:I haven't seen Orukpe, so I can't really comment about his game, or his potential. My question to you.....if his potential is as sky-high as you seem to think, why wasn't he more highly recruited? Big guys, especially big guys with athletic ability, no matter how raw they are, tend to get over-recruited based on potential rather than under-recruited.
From his official profile on the WSU website:Orukpe, who originally signed with Liberty, was also recruited by Auburn, Western Kentucky, Illinois State and Winthrop…
Those are some decent programs, but not exactly powerhouses. If these schools were aware of him, I'm guessing other schools were as well.
I hope he turns out well for you guys.
Here is the Orukpe recruiting saga in a nutshell . . .
Dominic Okon (Nigeria native) was an assistant at Liberty. Liberty signed Orukpe (who was still in Nigeria and a relative unknown) like 4 years go. At the end of that season Liberty's coach was let go (same year Marshall was hired). Marshall hired Okon, Liberty let Orukpe out of his LOI. WSU recruited him and got his verbal and subsequent LOI.
Nigeria would not release his test scores after numerous diplomatic attempts. We finally get him in the states but the NCAA will not clear him without the scores. He goes to Three Rivers CC with the understanding he's to redshirt, then play one year, get his degree and come to WSU as a sophomore.
During his stint at TRCC (who was the NJCAA championship runner-up last year) Orukpe remained committed to WSU. There were other schools inquiring and as I understand it, even KU sent an assistant there to gauge interest. But everyone knew EO was committed to WSU so those inquiries and personal visits went nowhere. Now, 3.5 years after he first verballed to the Shocks, he's finally in uniform.
The thing to remember when WSU fans talk of EO's NBA prospects it is contingent upon him fulfilling his offensive potential, which is still very raw and has a ways to go. He's come a long way just since last year and if his curve continues to be steep, could be that NBA-caliber player in three years.