LOUISIANA La. - Louisiana-Lafayette head women’s basketball coach J. Kelley Hall announced on Wednesday the signing of five players to National Letters of Intent.
Heading the list is Lafayette native, Blair Brodhead. Brodhead is a 5-foot-7 guard from Teurlings Catholic High School. During her junior year, Brodhead averaged 19 points, five assists and two steals while leading the Lady Rebels to the Class 3A state runner-up. She was named to the 6-3A All-District first team, Class 3A All-State first team and named the Lafayette Daily Advertiser’s Parish Most Valuable Player.
“Blair gives us instant credibility in recruiting,” Coach Hall said. “She was one of the most sought after point guards in the country, as evidenced by the number of schools who recruited her and who we beat to get her.
“She is a tremendous point guard who can run the show and will be read to play as a freshman. Blair was well coached in high school and knows and understands every phase of the game. A tremendous competitor, Blair reminds me of the old saying ‘It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, but the size of the fight in the dog’.”
A second sought-after recruit will join the Cajuns in the form of Yolanda Jones. Jones will join the Cajuns from the five-time junior college national champion Trinity Valley Cardinals. She was the NJCAA National Tournament MVP, leading TVCC to a perfect 36-0 record and national championship in 2004. Jones, a Kodak All-American, was named to the NJCAA all-region and all-conference team. She averaged 17.4 points and 6.8 rebounds, shooting over 59 percent from the floor.
“Yolanda was the No. 1 rated junior college player in the country,” Hall stated. “She is an intense competitor, refusing to lose – and didn’t last season. She will inspire our team by pressing her teammates to raise their play to another level.”
Whitney Dunlap, out of Bishop Sullivan High School in Baton Rouge, is the Cajuns’ second Louisiana prep signee. Dunlap is less than 600 points from breaking Bishop Sullivan’s scoring record for a boy or girl. Her 48-percent 3-point average helped lead her to a 22 point-per-game average. She has been named to the 6-4A all-district first team all three years she has played.
“We are getting a true shooting guard in Whitney Dunlap,” Hall added. “She has the potential to start as a freshman, and score on anybody in this league – period.
“Whitney plays the game the right way; she is relentless, with that warrior mentality about her. She’s a true competitor that can’t stand to lose, the type of kid we’ve been looking for over the last three years.”
Two Texans round out the list in Ovigwerade Agbuke (pronounced Oh-veeg-wah Ah-boo-key) of San Antonio and Erin Kacey of Beaumont.
Agbuke, whose first name (Ovigwerade) means ‘hope’, is a 6-foot-5 center. She averaged 12 points, 12 rebounds and five blocked shots a game en route to leading Cornerstone Christian to the state semifinals of the Catholic League.
“OV has great size and strength and very good hands and feet,” said Hall. “She has competed on the National AAU level for seven summers, which says something about her commitment. She’s a legitimate 6-foot-5 low post player with inside presence.”
Kacey, a 6-foot-2 center, averaged 10 points and 15 rebounds for Monsignor Kelly Catholic High. She is a two time All-District at the Class 5A level.
“Erin is a terrific kid who is a banger down low,” Hall commented. “She loves to compete and hates to lose. I see her with the potential to play the 4-spot, but she’ll have to learn the system when she gets here.
“Erin is very strong and athletic and runs the floor well for someone 6-foot-2. She has a great work ethic.”
The signing class is the third for Hall. Last season, Hall’s class ranked as one of the best in the country. In 2002, UL Lafayette’s class ranked No. 48 in the nation by All-Star Girls Report.
“This is the best signing class in school history, no question about it,” Hall noted. “It will be ranked in the top 25 in the country in every scouting service.”
LOUISIANA SI