From our friends at Scout
Syracuse coaches Jim Boeheim and Adrian Autry will visit Taurean Thompson
Ben Sigel
Yesterday at 7:12 PM
Syracuse will travel to Brewster Academy on Monday night to visit 2016 four-star target Taurean Thompson, his mother confirmed to CuseNation.com.
"I haven't spoken to coach (Boeheim) as of yet," she said, "but I did hear from coach Autry confirming they were both going up for a visit."
Thompson, a 6-foot-10, 240-pound big man is the biggest priority for the Orange on the recruiting trail right now. Syracuse extended a scholarship offer back in early September, which he then followed up with an official visit later that month.
"I'm probably going to wait to see who goes to the draft and that's when I'll probably decide, all the way deep spring," Thompson told Adam Zagoria earlier this month.
Last month, Thompson's mother, Sherese Piper, told CuseNation.com that Syracuse, Seton Hall and Providence were among the schools working the hardest for her son.
"I'm probably going to take some visits in the spring, I got three more officials," he told Zagoria. "So I'm probably going to use that for long-distance schools."
Syracuse coaches Jim Boeheim and Adrian Autry will visit Taurean Thompson
Ben Sigel
Yesterday at 7:12 PM
Syracuse will travel to Brewster Academy on Monday night to visit 2016 four-star target Taurean Thompson, his mother confirmed to CuseNation.com.
"I haven't spoken to coach (Boeheim) as of yet," she said, "but I did hear from coach Autry confirming they were both going up for a visit."
Thompson, a 6-foot-10, 240-pound big man is the biggest priority for the Orange on the recruiting trail right now. Syracuse extended a scholarship offer back in early September, which he then followed up with an official visit later that month.
"I'm probably going to wait to see who goes to the draft and that's when I'll probably decide, all the way deep spring," Thompson told Adam Zagoria earlier this month.
Last month, Thompson's mother, Sherese Piper, told CuseNation.com that Syracuse, Seton Hall and Providence were among the schools working the hardest for her son.
"I'm probably going to take some visits in the spring, I got three more officials," he told Zagoria. "So I'm probably going to use that for long-distance schools."