edit by Ben Silberman

Hoops Hello: Caleb Houstan Comment Count

Matt EM October 30th, 2020 at 1:26 PM

5-star wing Caleb Houstan gave Michigan the NUMBER ONE RECRUITING CLASS IN AMERICA when he pledged to the Wolverines today. A quote from the Frankie Collins Hello Post intro seems quite appropriate given the circumstances:

For all the moaning about some of the recent misses on the recruiting trail, Juwan Howard just secured his third 4star of the 2021 cycle when Frankie Collins announced his commitment to Michigan tonight. Collins joins 4star wing Kobe Bufkin, 4star wing Isaiah Barnes and 3star big Will Tschetter to give Michigan a top 5 class in America on the heels of a top 15 haul in 2020. 

Perhaps this will calm the bevy of naysayers with respect to Juwan Howard’s recruiting chops.

GURU RANKINGS

Rivals ESPN 247 Endless Motor
5*, #11 overall,
#3 SF
5*, #10 overall,
#2 SF, #2 FL
5*, #9 overall,
#2 PF, #1 FL
5*, #9-12 overall PF

There is consensus on Houstan as a 5-star prospect, within the 9 – 12 range overall. All four services list Caleb at 6’8, with ESPN reflecting an outdated weight of 175 pounds. While there aren’t any recent measurements to verify, he does look to be a legit 6’7 – 6’8 and likely in the 190-200 pound range. 

Note – I haven’t taken up the task of individual player rankings in 2021 with the health crisis precluding live evaluations to a large degree. I need live evaluation opportunities against legit competition on a relatively level playing field in order to adequately rank hundreds of prospects. I am comfortable issuing a general star ranking/tiered structure as indicated above. In more simplistic terminology, I’d probably have Houstan in the 9 - 12 range overall pending more detailed live viewings.

[Hit THE JUMP for scouting, video, and the rest.]

SCOUTING

The 5-star wing curse has ended! This is a monster pickup for perception and momentum purposes in addition to the on-court value that Caleb brings to Ann Arbor. 

Caleb fills the void of designated wing shooter in a class that features two playmaking perimeter players in Frankie Collins and Kobe Bufkin. He’s literally the perfect complimentary piece to the best haul in the country as we speak. 

Houstan is one of the premier perimeter shotmakers in America. He’s at his best as a catch and shoot threat coming off screens or from a stationary position on the wing/corners. His mechanics are remarkably consistent, with a high release point, good arch and nice rotation. The sheer volume of his makes that don’t touch the rim is almost unbelievable. While Caleb has more of a set-shot, his combination of size/length will make that largely irrelevant at the college level, where closeouts aren’t likely to bother his shot. He also excels at relocating to give his guard optimal passing windows that maximize spacing. 

While he was primarily an off-ball shooter for a loaded Montverde team during his junior season, Houstan was more of an on-ball option in the half-court for Canada at the 2019 FIBA U16s. He did display some ability to create plays for himself and others in that setting, but he’s not a shifty prospect that changes direction with a live dribble very often. He’s more adept at attacking in a straight line after getting off-ball screens, while flashing the occasional pull-up from midrange and isolation drive from the wing. 

As a finisher, I really like Caleb’s willingness to use his body to negate shotblocking. He consistently gets into the chest of the defender to create space and convert or draw fouls. He shot nearly 9 free throws per contest during the 2019 FIBAs because of this exact approach. That is extremely impressive for a prospect whose best weapon is a catch-and-shoot jumper. While he’s not a great athlete, his size/length and physicality as a finisher probably means he’ll be solid at drawing free throws for the Wolverines when attacking closeouts. 

Defensively, Houstan is solid at jumping passing lanes on the wing where his length aids him in getting deflections and steals. He doesn’t move well enough to defend legitimate guards, but his size/length will allow him to defend pure wings as a freshman and he’ll likely add enough muscle mass/strength to defend bully-ball power forwards down the line. 

Most third party scouting reports are recent in nature, as Caleb is originally from Canada, thus depriving US scouts from seeing him live until the 2019 FIBAs for the most part. The mainstream Canadian scouting service is North Pole Hoops, who concurs with the shooting mechanics but probably oversold his on-ball ability back in their 2019 evaluation:

He’s got a great blend of size and skill at the wing, with clean shooting mechanics and an ability to create his own shot at all three levels. He plays with a great sense of poise and it feels like he always makes the right play when he has the ball. Now in his second season with Montverde Academy, Houstan should continue putting NCAA and NBA scouts on notice.

A May 2020 report from former Rivals’ scout Corey Evans pretty much mirrors my take on Houstan:

Growing to 6-foot-8 and weighing 200-pounds, Houstan is a reflection of all that one looks for in a new-age forward: he is a supreme jump shooter that can hit off of the spot-up, running off a variety of screens and out of the mid-range pull-up.

Clint Jackson of the Rivals affiliate for Duke jumped on board with Caleb as an elite shooter in his July 2020 piece:

Houstan is a tremendous shooter off the catch and shows the propensity to make shots on the move in a pull-up fashion. He loves the long-range bombs, but really stands out as a mid-range and high-post shooter, too.

247 highlighted Houstan’s versatility as a scorer and athletic limitations last month:

Has good size as a combo forward with shooting range. Not overly athletic, but plays with strength and has body control. Dangerous three-point shooter. Finishes well inside the arc. Is composed with the basketball. Solid handler and passer. Strong rebounder. Comes up with points off the glass. Positional defender with versatility defensively.

OFFERS

Caleb chose Michigan over remaining finalists Duke, Virginia and Alabama. He also held offers from North Carolina, Arizona, Michigan State, Maryland, Oregon and others. Juwan Howard just beat Duke(!) and another blueblood in a head-to-head matchup…again.

HIGH SCHOOL

Houstan attends Montverde Academy in Florida. The team is annually loaded with elite talent and will likely roll out another top 5 roster nationally. Current Wolverine Zeb Jackson also attended Montverde. 

STATS

Caleb put up 22.4 points, 5.3 rebounds and 2 assists per contest during the 2019 U16 FIBAs for Canada.  

VIDEO

2019-20 Season Highlights at Montverde:

2019 FIBA U16 Highlights:

2018 Canadian HS Highlights:

PREDICTION BASED ON FLIMSY EVIDENCE

Caleb Houstan will see the court early and often as a freshman with Isaiah Livers very likely to pursue professional opportunities and Franz Wagner a candidate himself. The Wolverines needed a shooter with size to step in immediately, and Juwan Howard and crew have their guy. 

While he may need to add some muscle mass, his size and role on the wing means that physicality isn’t an issue here. We must also remember that Houstan is still 17 years old, he can mature a lot physically over the next year. 

Caleb has a very defined role at Michigan, make perimeter shots. You can expect the coaching staff to put him in positions to do just that. I’d expect a good volume of Spain PnR, the double-stagger and using Houstan as a popper in traditional pick and roll action to get him catch-and-shoot looks from distance. These actions will also put him in position to attack closeouts off the bounce. 

While he isn’t necessarily an isolation scorer just yet, his aggressiveness and physicality bode well for him being able to generate free throw attempts later in his freshman season and beyond. He’s never going to be a primary on-ball creator at Michigan, and he doesn’t need to be with Zeb Jackson, Frankie Collins and Kobe Bufkin all setting the table. A secondary playmaking threat is what we need, and he’ll be just fine in that role. 

Defense is the only place where questions are presented. Caleb doesn’t move well enough to defend at the point of attack and may not be strong enough early on to adequately defend physically imposing slashers. But he does possess good size/length and displays solid defensive instincts. He should be fine at defending traditional catch and shoot wings where that length should prove helpful in contesting jumpers on the perimeter and coming up with deflections and steals. He projects to be a solid defender after his freshman year with additional strength and muscle gains. 

I’d expect Houstan to play at least 20 minutes per contest as a freshman wing, regardless of whether Chaundee Brown’s waiver is denied (doubtful, but this is the NCAA so nothing is certain). Caleb will be the best shooter on the team from the day he steps on campus and he’ll have a Zak Irvin freshman shooter role at minimum. If Livers, Franz and Brown all depart, we’re likely to see Houstan log closer to 30 minutes a game. 

A reasonable projection for Caleb if Franz returns is 7-11 points per game on 18-23 minutes along with a few rebounds and some occasional flashes of creating off the bounce. If Franz decides to test the professional waters, Houstan likely becomes a top 3 option offensively, where he’s likely to average double-digit points during his first year.

Defensively, he’ll have some struggles as a freshman as they all do. But I do believe his length on the perimeter will mitigate some of his agility issues. Once he adds muscle mass, his defensive chops will improve considerably. 

Caleb’s best comp for a recent Michigan player is Isaiah Livers. Similar size, with Houstan probably a better shooter in high school and Livers the better athlete. And the roles at Michigan will be similar, though I expect Caleb to be a better on-ball creator once he establishes comfort at the college level. That probably looks like a 35%+ shooter from distance, while drawing fouls at a higher rate, with a similar impact on the glass. 

While he’s a 5-star prospect in the 2021 class, Caleb Houstan doesn’t possess NBA caliber athleticism. He’s going to need a monster year shooting the ball in order to be appealing to NBA GMs after year one. There is a reasonable chance he returns for his sophomore campaign where all-conference recognition is certainly attainable. 

UPSHOT FOR THE REST OF THE CLASS

It is absolutely pointless to project the upshot here with the NCAA granting an additional year of eligibility for seniors. We’ll likely have at least 1 more spot for the 2021 class.  Enjoy the #1 recruiting class in America and don’t worry about the future for now. 

Comments

Matt EM

October 30th, 2020 at 2:45 PM ^

I'm no football expert, but I think the comparison is a bit unfair. In order for Michigan to win the B10 in football, it likely means being the best team in America. In contrast, Michigan basketball winning a conference title really translates to being a good/very good team that isn't necessarily elite.

Basically Ohio State is an elite machine in football at this point, and to overcome that we have to be an elite machine. In basketball, beating Michigan State/Wisconsin translates to being a very good team, but probably not championship worthy.

Totally different circumstances in my opinion since our path to championships (Both conference and national) is exponentially more difficult on the gridiron. 

trueblueintexas

October 31st, 2020 at 2:07 AM ^

I agree the season and playoff formats for the two sports should not be compared. I think the qualifications within their respective sports is fair. 
In the past 10+ years in basketball Michigan has: played in the championship game twice, had other deep tourney runs, won the post season conference tourney multiple times, competed at the top of the conference during the regular season, beat elite teams outside the conference repeatedly, been ranked #1 at least once and in the top 15 fairly consistently, and had multiple players drafted in the first round.

In football over that same span: no conference titles, horrible record in bowl games, poor record against elite teams outside of conference, poor record in road games against .500 teams or better, not ranked #1 once (at least with Harbaugh they have been ranked in top 20 consistently), and since Harbaugh has arrived getting guys drafted has significantly improved but it was getting pretty bad pre-Harbaugh. 

when looking at those two resume’s it is easy to make the case that one program has performed really well within their sport over that time period and the other has performed ok but not really well. I’m hoping the next decade sees Michigan performing exceptionally well in both sports (plus hockey). I think Harbaugh is capable of getting Michigan there. I hope Howard can, early returns are promising, and I think Pearson is about to go on an epic run. As always, big props to Coach Hutch for what she continues to do with the softball program.
 

My Name is LEGIONS

October 30th, 2020 at 3:39 PM ^

to trublueintexas... no other program in the country has two top end football and basketball programs.  None, except us.   The football program arguably is the most storied in history, although the past 40 years have been worse.... and the basketball program is a sleeping giant...... when they are on, there is no spotlight that is brighter...  if we ever get back to a even a hint of the Fab Five style of play, the light will outshine all again.

dragonchild

October 30th, 2020 at 1:40 PM ^

Sounds like a great pick-up for the team, but I'm now confused as to why he's considered a 5-star if the NBA isn't excited about him and he's not an elite shot-creator.  I get that he's got a sweet stroke for a high-schooler but FWIW, so did Duncan Robinson*.  Not really knocking on him so much as I think it's unusual for scouting services to hand out a fifth star to a prospect who's neither a complete player nor an elite athlete.

*I'm talking about 17-year-old Duncan.  HS Duncan <<<<< NBA Duncan.

Matt EM

October 30th, 2020 at 1:43 PM ^

I've referenced this on prior occasion, but 2021 is likely the weakest recruiting class in history. So a 5star in 2021 isn't necessarily a 5star in 2012 if that makes sense. High School basketball talent has been declining for the last 5 years and that's why the on-court product in college has been very sub-par the last 2-3 years. 

Matt EM

October 30th, 2020 at 2:11 PM ^

I don't have any quantitative date to back that up, but as someone that has spent the last 8 years scouting basketball for a living, its definitely true. For context, Jalen Rose was ranked similarly to Houstan coming out of High School. Let me tell you, there is a HUGE distinction between where Rose was a HS prospect in relation to Houstan. 

East German Judge

October 30th, 2020 at 2:38 PM ^

Thanks so much for the insight!  Any thoughts as to why BB talent has been declining over the last few years?  I could understand if you said FB talent is declining as parents don't want their kids have CTE issues later in life, etc., and thus more kids are playing and focusing on other sports.

Matt EM

October 30th, 2020 at 3:22 PM ^

Perhaps, but I think the bigger factor is evaluation opportunity and platform. Most national evaluators focus on a handful of HS programs because they tend to play in events where talent is consolidated. In other words, its simply more efficient to follow the Montverdes, IMGs, Wasatch Acadamies of the world because those teams tend to play each other and you have 10-15 D1 prospects on the court in any given game.

Also, relationships factor into rankings. National evaluators need access to information. A quick way toward establishing that is to give those kids a rankings bump at those premier programs. 

I really like Houstan as a prospect, but there is simply no way he's on the same level as a JD Davison despite what the mainstream rankings may convey. 

Champeen

October 30th, 2020 at 1:45 PM ^

The NBA is excited about him.  But he is 17 - he need to grow physically and mentally, and develop other parts of his game.

He is an NBA player/lock 2/3 years out.  Isn't that a 5*?

Also, with the NBA turning into a 'get to the 3 point line and chuck it' back and forth league, im not so sure he isn't a 1 and done.  He may be the best shooter in the entire class, and is 6'8", and only 17.

The NBA would take that over a 5'11" athletic productive all-american with a poor outside shot.

KTisClutch

October 30th, 2020 at 2:26 PM ^

You're underselling his other quantities. He's an ELITE shooter. Like shot 50% from 3 last year at Montverde in the toughest HS competition. And he has good size, and he's a very intelligent basketball player. I guess you could say scouting services would normally rank that player a little lower, but I think that is more because scouting services get that wrong fairly often.

dragonchild

October 30th, 2020 at 1:59 PM ^

Nah.  Let's be happy to give Howard's family their own legacy, whatever that might turn out to be.

In this day and age of utterly shameless recruiting hijinks the The Fab Five scandal would be considered business as usual for at least half the frequent flyers of the NCAA tournament, if not for the NCAA really having it out for Michigan for some reason.  But scandal is scandal; their Final Four appearances were vacated.  It looks like we might have a good thing going here, so I see no need to weigh it down with nostalgia, let alone one that was erased.

njvictor

October 30th, 2020 at 1:43 PM ^

Another thing that I think hasn't been mentioned enough about Juwan's recruiting is the connections he's making at some power house programs. Team Takeover in the DMV area, where we've pulled Dickinson, Williams, and potentially lead for Dug McDaniel, Montverde, where we've gotten Zeb and now Houstan, then IMG, where Jett Howard plays and multiple Michigan targets play (Reid, Walker, Bradley, Dailey). Building connections with these basketball powerhouses is going to pay dividends for us in the future.

Super excited for Houstan. Reminds me of Tobias Harris

AC1997

October 30th, 2020 at 1:45 PM ^

While there have been a lot of 5-star wings who didn't pick Michigan, I like how Houstan fits with the class and the program as much as most of them.  He's not necessarily a 1-and-done first of all, which I think is critical for sustaining success as a program.  He's also a combo forward who can thrive without the ball in his hands and compliments the slashing/driving skills of Collins & Bufkin.  

It is really hard to predict roles and minutes next year, but realistically you can start to see all of this coming together - especially if they can land that center prospect that remains a hole in the class:

PG - Collins & Jackson

SG - Bufkin & ??

SF - Houstan, Barnes, Nunez?

PF - Johns, Williams, Tschetter

C - Dickinson, ??

(maybe Brooks, Davis, or Brown stick around another year or maybe we grab another grad transfer who can play the 2)

AC1997

October 30th, 2020 at 1:56 PM ^

You're right of course.  But we can always have fun with guessing.  My take?

Franz & Livers - gone.....no reason to stay unless there's an injury or they struggle. 

The rest - I don't know.  They'll all be pretty old and feels like they may be ready for their next chapter.  But realistically not sure any of them are going pro even overseas so maybe they stay.  I could see the coaches pushing for a couple of them to stick around like Davis and Brooks.

TrueBlue2003

October 30th, 2020 at 1:59 PM ^

My guess is that Brooks stays.  There will be minutes for him at the SG position.  Johns will play a lot of center this year and next year.  Possibly Tschetter too.  And Houston will be a four mostly likely, if he gains some weight and muscle.

So there should be good balance.  Davis might stick around if invited as a 7 min a game guy as well.  They'll be fine at center even if they don't get one this class.

BigVig

October 30th, 2020 at 1:47 PM ^

So based on your not an NBA elite athlete comment, I'm assuming there is a decent chance he does enroll and doesn't go to the G League?  Any info on his family and how important education is, financial situation, etc?  After being burned last year, with 5 star commits I care more about their likelihood of enrolling than anything about their game.

AC1997

October 30th, 2020 at 1:53 PM ^

Good question....maybe we aren't out of the woods yet.  

I think it is encouraging that there haven't been any discussions about it yet, his athleticism isn't Isaiah Todd freaky to draw their attention, and he's a younger re-class who may be even further from his ceiling.  Todd wowed the NBA because there are times when he can do things physically that remind you of Giannis so they're going to over-look how raw he is.  Someone with Houstan's skills is going to need to show that he can make those jumpers against better competition with a longer three point line and a shot clock.  If he has a strong freshman year - I could see him leave.  Doesn't seem like the G-league would be as attractive.  

I also think there's still a bit of a "let's see how this G-league thing works out" for some players.  

Megumin

October 30th, 2020 at 2:35 PM ^

For those wondering why we keep pursuing 5 stars even after heartbreak after heartbreak: this is why. Big hit for Juwan and crew here!

Feel like he's a better fit than Ingram would have been, especially since Ingram fancied himself a lead ball handler. The shooting stroke looks automatic, very nice. If that's as advertised, I agree, he'll be on the floor fron day 1 as an outlet for our young ball handlers, even if the defense needs to come in.

Not fair to compare him to NBA finals player Duncan Robinson, but maybe there's shades to the Michigan version? Probably with less shooting and more athleticism?

Jordan2323

October 30th, 2020 at 2:40 PM ^

First of all, great pickup. I'm wondering how the scholarship breakdown works. Let's say Livers is done and Wagner goes pro but Davis, Brooks, Smith and Brown want to come back, that gives us 16 on scholarship. Can Michigan recruit anymore players or are they done because they are over the limit? Or does the roster have to stay at 13 total?

And I'm not trying to speculate on who might stay, go, transfer, etc, just curious about the rules. 

AZBlue

October 30th, 2020 at 4:11 PM ^

I asked something similar in the original post.

I believe M could still add 2 in that scenario for potential 17(? by my Maths..) next year.  I am not sure if the 2 additions would have to be "conventional" HS recruits or transfers.  For the record I doubt all of your list would stay even if they can.

I also think there is going to be a LOT of gray-area mess that the NCAA will have ended up creating.  Things work out great for M because of the high number of non-NBA seniors -- they will all be gone in 2022 after the "big" roster year.  But what if all those guys were Juniors this year? as far as I know the roster sizes go back to normal in 2022. ---

If MBB is confusing just wait until we have to calculate football roster available spots and attrition.  Football example -- can a team take a player from the transfer portal if the are at 90 players but below 85 when removing the extended year players?