Special to ZAGSBLOG.COM
Is Ian Baker his brothers’ keeper?
Baker, a junior guard at Arlington Country Day school in Jacksonville, Fla., is certainly keeping the Baker name intact on the court.
Seton Hall has recently offered Baker, a cerebral 6-foot-1 combination guard, a scholarship. Potential Division-I suitors such as West Virginia, Virginia Tech, and Kansas State have all expressed significant interest in Baker.
Baker may have all the essential attributes to evolve into the most promising of the hoop-crazed family.
Two of Ian’s older brothers, Evann and Jeremy, played under former UConn assistant Tom Moore at Quinnipiac in the Northeast Conference. They helped the Bobcats earn a berth in the NIT for the first time in school history this season.
Ian’s other brother Travis is headed for the prep ranks after averaging 18 points, four dimes, and five boards at High Point High School in Beltsville, Md. Travis Baker earned All-County, turning in two 25-point performances against Oxon Hill.
Oxon Hill, as we know, is the alma mater of former Georgetown star Michael Sweetney and DeMario Anderson (Central Connecticut/Quinnipiac), whose scoring exploits have allowed his game to prosper over the waters.
Oh and while we’re on it, Baker’s other older brother, Corey, was the MVP at High Point in 2009 and recently accepted a scholarship at Garden City Community College in Kansas.
Jeremy Baker authored a memorable career at Garden City.
The JUCO All-American drained a number of clutch shots, handed out assists like a club promoter hands out flyers (early, often, and whenever he goes to work), and always handled the chore of clamping down on every All-American in sight.
So, is Ian Baker his brothers’ keeper?
As the youngest of the Baker boys, he’s got pairs and pairs of sneakers to fill. As his emergence as one of the more highly sought after recruits in the D.C.-area would indicate, the kicks are a perfect fit.
“That’s when they first started recruiting me, so I guess I did something that caught their eye.”
Baker, taking after Jeremy, loves to create offense. He draws in the defense with his serious handle and precise, pinpoint passes. He embraces his role as a dish-first player, albeit Baker has found himself calling his own number and stuffing the score sheet as of late.
Baker transferred to Arlington Country Day from Proctor Academy in New Hampshire, where his second cousin (former UConn guard and 2010 NBA draft hopeful) Jerome Dyson played. If you get invited to an extended Baker family barbeque, bringing a Spalding would probably get you one of the first-cooked burgers.
“When it comes to basketball, since he was the baby and he got to see everybody go through, he’s got like a basketball old soul,” explained longtime D.C. basketball guru Walter Ray III, the founder and president of E.G.O.S. (Education, Goals, Opportunities In Sports).
“That’s what his strength is, experience. As far as talent goes, his talent is right there with the rest of them. He gets to kind of incorporate that into the wisdom and knowledge and experience thing that you get from having older brothers. That just adds to what he is, because most of these players now have robotic games. Now he can play instinctively. Like I said, he’s seen some of the best. I mean, he’s been out there with me getting his ass busted.”
Is Baker a Big East caliber baller?
“I’ve seen some 11-12th men (from the Big East) he’s better than, I’ve seen some starters he’s better than,” opined Ray. “Historically and currently, yeah. He can play in the Big East.”
Ray would know a thing or two about the Big East.
He’s nurtured the success of players such as Roy Hibbert and the aforementioned Dyson, both of whom were part of the E.G.O.S. program since elementary school.
Ray has also coached the likes of former George Mason guard Tony Skinn, the aforementioned Bakers, former NCAA scoring cyborg Rob Monroe (fourth in the nation in scoring his senior year at Quinnipiac), Binghamton’s Troy Hailey II, Jerome Habel (San Diego State), Steve Harley (Nebraska) and plenty others from Maryland/D.C.’s basketball real estate.
RECRUITING NOTES BY ALEX KLINE AND ADAM ZAGORIA