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St. Bonaventure Basketball: Analyzing Bonnies 2021 incoming recruiting class

Jan 22, 2020; Dayton, Ohio, USA; St. Bonaventure Bonnies head coach Mark Schmidt reacts during the first half against the Dayton Flyers at University of Dayton Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Kohl-USA TODAY Sports
Jan 22, 2020; Dayton, Ohio, USA; St. Bonaventure Bonnies head coach Mark Schmidt reacts during the first half against the Dayton Flyers at University of Dayton Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Kohl-USA TODAY Sports /
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4. Oluwasegun Durosinmi, Nigeria

The 6-9 center, a three-star recruit per Rivals, averaged 10 points and 9.9 rebounds over  23 minutes a game for Harcum College last season. Duro, his nickname, recorded 78 blocks as well.

Josh Ball, an assistant at Harcum, spoke to Pickin Splinters about Durosinimi.

“He is humble, an extremely hard worker, always trying to get better in his downtime, and an excellent student. He has a nice, soft touch around the rim and can step out to hit some jumpers. He also is a defensive presence as a rim protector and rebounder.”

3. Linton Brown, Wellington (FL)

The 6-5 junior college transfer chose the Bonnies over offers from New Mexico and Southern Miss in addition to at least a dozen Division I programs. Known as a sniper, Brown averaged over 18 points per game while shooting over 51 percent from the floor and better than 48% from beyond the 3-point line (73-for-151) this past season at Indian River (Fla.) State College last season. The NJCAA first-team All-American selection topped the 30-point mark three times.

“Linton is a scoring wing who can play multiple positions,” Schmidt said. “He is a tremendous three-point shooter with a great stroke. The shooting ability jumps off the page, but he can rebound and really be a multi-dimensional player. He fits our system and what we’re looking to do. We’re looking forward to him joining our team.”