TeamTakeoverGirlsBB
11.7K posts

TeamTakeoverGirlsBB
@TeamTakeoverGBB
The 2025 & 2019 NIKE Nationals EYBL Champions🏆x🏆

Small guards aren’t the problem… bad evaluation is. March keeps exposing it. Skill > Size. Always. open.substack.com/pub/prospectus… #ProspectU #MarchMadness


OWU: Conceptually Thinking Basketball — TEAM TAKEOVER @underdog_jaylah @BMacLadyHoops @TeamTakeoverGBB Jaylah King (2028) — Bishop McNamara | 5’9–5’10 Guard High-leverage combo guard emerging from national-pressure environments with early evidence of real outcome-driving value. King’s profile begins with context that matters. Bishop McNamara is not a soft-launch environment. It is a national-tier program, and her ability to produce inside that ecosystem immediately raises the signal value of her resume. A 27-point, 14-rebound championship performance is not decorative production. It is evidence of responsibility under compression. Offensively, the strongest current indicator is role elasticity. She shows signs of being more than a scoring wing. The available data points toward a guard who can create downhill, absorb contact, and still function as a live-dribble connector. The 21-point, 6-assist circuit stat line matters because it supports combo-guard reality rather than label inflation. If the three-level scoring claim is supported by future efficiency data, her ceiling expands materially. Defensively, the rebounding and steals profile is the early separator. Guards who rebound with force and create events without disappearing from offensive load tend to scale. At 5’9 to 5’10, she brings enough size to pressure smaller guards and enough physicality to compete above her slot. Full defensive tiering still requires film, but the baseline tools are clear. The recruiting logic is straightforward. High-major environments value guards who can survive role shifts, create paint pressure, and still impact games when the jumper is inconsistent. King’s current profile supports that pathway. As a high-level prospect, she improves the EYBL standard by reinforcing what the circuit should reward: not empty visibility, but guards who produce in national environments, absorb physicality, defend, rebound, and carry real two-way accountability. The @coachbeechum Verdict: Jaylah King looks like a serious backcourt piece with high-major architecture. The upside is not built on hype. It is built on functional strength, scalable pressure, and evidence of performance in hard environments. When prospects like this enter the circuit, they do not just participate in the standard. They raise it. #OWUEvalDay #ConceptuallyThinking #BuiltDifferent #PlayerTrustNetwork #ScoutingTruths [@PGHBrooks ] [@NXTPROG] [@JrAllStarBB] [] [@IGBRcoverage [@WorldExposureWB] [@_BlakeDerrick] [@WKGameBall] [@EconAdjunct] [@FiveStateHoops] [@OWUTALENT ][@PGHiowa ] [@JrAllStariowa ] @gemsinthegym

📷 2026 All-Met 2ndTeam Announcement 📷 We are proud to present the 2026 All-Met 2nd Team, recognizing the top high school basketball talent across the Washington, DC metropolitan area. Congratulations to these players on an outstanding season and for representing their schools, programs, and communities at the highest level. These teams reflect the depth of talent across the DMV, with players selected from public and private leagues throughout the region, including: Anne Arundel County (MD) Howard County (MD) Montgomery County (MD) Prince George’s County (MD) Southern Maryland (MD) Alexandria / Arlington / Fairfax County (VA) Loudoun County (VA) Prince William County (VA) IAC Private ISL Private MAC Private WCAC Private Note: This year's Boys' 2nd Team includes 12 players due to a tie in the final voting. The DMV continues to produce elite basketball talent, and these young men and women have earned their place among the best players in the region. 📷 @WDCABballCoach

Conceptually Thinking Basketball Elite Guards OWU: Talent Projection – Conceptually Thinking @Nyair_Mccoy @BMacLadyHoops @TeamTakeoverGBB Nyair McCoy (2027) – Bishop McNamara (Forestville, MD) 5'4" Point Guard | Team Takeover EYBL | WCAC | #1 Team in the Country | 2025 EYBL Champion Descriptive Projection: Institutional floor general with elite point-of-attack disruption and national championship validation. Nyair McCoy operates from a rare evaluative intersection: starting point guard for the number one team in the country, 2025 EYBL Champion with Team Takeover, and primary organizer inside one of the most talent-dense ecosystems in America. At 5'3", the margin for error is thin. What separates her is not size, but processing speed, competitive leverage, and defensive disruption that scales upward against elite peers. Production and Offensive Analysis Within Bishop McNamara’s national-title infrastructure and EYBL championship rotation, McCoy’s value is structural. She stabilizes possessions, enters offense on time, and compresses mistakes. In a system loaded with Division I talent, she functions as the connective engine rather than a volume-dependent scorer. For a guard of her profile, efficiency and control are non-negotiable. The tape and role assignment suggest a guard trusted to reduce live-ball turnovers, manage tempo, and create paint touches through change of pace rather than raw explosion. Shooting scalability and pull-up reliability remain swing skills, but her offensive baseline is decision integrity. Facilitating and Basketball Intelligence McCoy’s defining trait is orchestration. She reads coverage early, manipulates help positioning, and delivers the ball to advantage scorers in rhythm. Being the point guard Coach Beechum leans on within a championship ecosystem signals cognitive trust. Her ability to function as both lead and combo guard enhances lineup flexibility. The question is not whether she understands structure; it is how much her assist-to-turnover profile can separate as competition density increases. Defensive and Competitive Character This is where her profile elevates. McCoy is one of Coach Beechum’s elite point-of-attack defenders and one of the most disruptive defensive guards in the country. She pressures the ball without gambling recklessly. She compresses driving angles. She turns ball-handlers east-west. In championship environments, that skill travels. On a roster built around length and physicality, her low center of gravity and lateral quickness create chaos at the perimeter. Defensive event creation is not aesthetic. It is possession equity. Competitive Infrastructure Assessment WCAC plus Team Takeover EYBL is an anti-inflation environment. You cannot hide. You cannot accumulate hollow production. Every possession is contested by future Division I athletes. Championship validation strengthens the translation profile. Physical Projection and Development At 5'4", physical growth margin is limited. Development must center on shooting range expansion, core strength, and finishing craft through contact. For small guards, skill elasticity determines ceiling. System Fit Evaluation Best fit: structured programs valuing ball security, tempo control, and point-of-attack defense over positional size orthodoxy. Switch-heavy schemes will require protection; pressure-heavy schemes will amplify her value. The @coachbeechum Verdict Nyair McCoy projects as a championship-caliber lead guard whose defensive disruption and cognitive command create institutional value. Her translation ceiling will be determined by shooting scalability and decision efficiency, not hype. Systematic preparation travels. Basketball intelligence compounds. #OWUEvalDay #ConceptuallyThinking [@PGHBrooks ] [@NXTPROG] [@JrAllStarBB] [] [@IGBRcoverage [@WorldExposureWB] [@_BlakeDerrick] [@WKGameBall] [@EconAdjunct] [@FiveStateHoops] [@OWUTALENT ][@PGHiowa ] [@JrAllStariowa ]

📝 Eric Spoelstra (@MiamiHEAT) details how you EARN MORE PLAYING TIME ⤵️ 😳 Only 5 players can play at a time… 💯 So, It’s your job to…⤵️ 1️⃣ Make the coach watch you 2️⃣ Make the coach play you 3️⃣ Make the coach not even think about playing anyone else







