FCP All-West Frosh/Soph: Most Versatile
LONG BEACH — McBride high school played host to the annual Pangos All-West Frosh/Soph camp which featured many of the top prospects from the classes of 2025 and 2026 on the west coast and beyond. Tounde Yessoufou of St. Joseph…
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Continue ReadingLONG BEACH — McBride high school played host to the annual Pangos All-West Frosh/Soph camp which featured many of the top prospects from the classes of 2025 and 2026 on the west coast and beyond. Tounde Yessoufou of St. Joseph (Santa Maria) took home the overall camp MVP honors while he was joined by Modesto Christian guard Rashod Cotton as being selected the Top 30 game Most Outstanding Players. This camp was loaded with multi-positional wings who impacted the game in a variety of ways and we take a closer look at those players in this piece.
Andre Gomez, 2026, Grant
Gomez’s combination of size, strength, speed, explosive vertical athleticism and high motor made him a guy who stood out on both ends of the floor. The 6-foot-5 wing was a slasher and finisher in transition, downhill driver and finisher through contact in the half-court setting and showed his versatility in the way he defended, rebounded and pushed the break with a playmaker’s mindset and the ability to make high IQ decisions in the open court.
Brannon Martinsen, 2026, Mater Dei
If you’re looking for a dribble, pass and shoot wing/forward look no further than Mater Dei’s talented freshman. At 6-feet-7, Martinsen has a smooth left-handed stroke that he hits consistently out to the three-point line, possesses the ball skills to take defenders off the dribble for drives and finishes and is a high IQ passer both out of the post and when getting two feet into the paint. What really stood out about Martinsen’s game was the smoothness in which he played in pick and pop and dribble hand-off situations.
Caleb Versher, 2025, St. Bernard
Versher is a highly talented guard who seems to get better each time we see him play. The 6-foot-2 combo guard is a knockdown shooter from three both off the catch and off the bounce and can also get into a smooth pull-up mid-range jumper when defenders over-pursue on their closeouts. His advanced scoring package is part of what makes him such a versatile player, but what drives that point home for Versher is the fact that he can play 1 through 3 offensively and guard those same positions on the other end.
Caspian Jones Caspian Jones 6'7" | SF St. Mary's | 2025 State AZ , 2025, Saint Mary’s (AZ)
Jones started out the camp with a scintillating offensive performance that saw him knock down a barrage of three-point shots and finish off a handful of powerful transition dunks. While it was difficult for him, or anyone for that matter, to sustain that type of efficient production for multiple games and multiple days, Jones managed to continue showing those in attendance that he’s one of the best 2025 prospects in Arizona. At 6-feet-5 with a strong frame, Jones defended multiple positions, rebounded well on both ends of the floor and was a guy who could play both on or off the ball on the offensive end.
Dillan Shaw, 2025, Heritage Christian
Shaw is an intriguing next-level prospect as a 4/3 type of player whose size, length and touch allow him to play inside, but his ball skills, shot-making ability and fluid athleticism off the dribble make him a player who can expose a mismatch. Shaw’s dribble, pass, shoot ability was evident from the camp’s opening tip as he got his deep ball going early and hit them in a variety of ways from catch-and-shoot, to stepping in when trailing the play and even drilled some off the bounce.
Isaac Carr, 2025, Central Catholic (OR)
At first glance Carr may look like just a spot-up shooter – a very good one – but as you continue to take in his game you start to see all the little things he does to help his team. The 6-foot-4 guard out of Oregon is a multiple spot, multiple range shooter from deep, but his ability to create for teammates off the dribble stood out once defenses began running him off the line. Carr didn’t force bad shots and really allowed the game to come to him.
Jalen White, 2026, Clark (NV)
White is your prototypical young wing to track over the next four years. At 6-feet-3 with a long, wiry frame, the freshman sharpshooter flashed his smooth shooting mechanics and dead-eye touch with deep range. In addition to his consistent three-point shot, White proved to be an efficient slasher and finisher who used his long strides to cover ground and length to extend to the rim and finish over rim protectors.
Kade Bonam, 2025, St. John Bosco
We’ve seen and written about Bonam a lot over the last 18 months and we never get tired of watching him because of his ability to do a little bit of everything on the floor. The 6-foot-7 forward can score inside on post moves, can step out to the three-point line and hit shots and really picks defenses apart with his passing IQ both out of the low block and on the perimeter.
Marco Varani, 2025, Bellevue (WA)
Varani was a guy whose overall feel for the game and ease in which he operated with or without the ball made us think he’s played in some high level games or practices. Most recently, Varani joined the Italian National Team where he competed in the FIBA U16 Europe and it was easy to see the shades of overseas play in is game. The 6-foot-6 wing is a smooth ball handler and pull-up jump shooter who also has the ball skills and pogo stick athleticism to rise up and finish strong over defenders.