Morgan Park’s Adam Miller commits to Illinois

Adam Miller’s decision gives the Fighting Illini and coach Brad Underwood their best recruiting class since taking over the program in 2017.

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Morgan Park’s Adam Miller (44) drives around Curie’s DaJuan Gordon.

Morgan Park’s Adam Miller (44) drives around Curie’s DaJuan Gordon.

Kevin Tanaka/For the Sun-Times

Illinois landed a top in-state star Thursday when Morgan Park’s Adam Miller announced his commitment. Miller’s final three came down to Arizona, Louisville and the Illini.

Miller’s decision gives Illinois coach Brad Underwood his best recruiting class since taking over the program in 2017.

Miller, ranked among the top 30 players in the country, joins fellow top-50 recruit Andre Curbelo out of New York. That star-quality backcourt package joins 6-9 Coleman Hawkins, a three-star recruit from Prolific Prep in Napa, California, in this stellar recruiting Class of 2020 for Illinois.

The Class of 2018 that Illinois brought in included more bodies and depth and featured Ayo Dosunmu, but as far as immediate impact and bonafide stars, the Class of 2020 shines the brightest with the Miller-Curbelo tandem.

The last time Illinois landed two top-50 recruits in the same class was a decade ago when Jereme Richmond and Meyers Leonard were part of the Class of 2010.

It means the investment this Illinois staff has put into Morgan Park and the Mac Irvin Fire club program has paid off.

Miller follows up Dosunmu to Champaign, a star player who also prepped at Morgan Park and was part of the Mac Irvin Fire program for years. That pipeline is obviously strong and still flowing.

Despite the strong ties, the time invested by the Illinois staff in this recruitment cannot be underestimated.

There has been a shortage of overall high-major talent in Illinois during Underwood’s years at Illinois. But when it came to the place that had two of them, Illinois delivered, diving head first and weaving through what always seems to be some sort of territorial club basketball dynamic in this state.

It also means the potential loss of Dosunmu won’t sting quite as bad.

Even if Dosunmu’s stock climbs between now and this spring — when he must make the decision of whether to stay for his junior year or head off to the NBA — Illinois is in position to reload in the backcourt.

Most everyone assumes Dosunmu is gone after this season, and NBA mock drafts have him hovering around that first- and second-round bubble. Odds are that will be enough to push Dosunmu to the draft after playing two years at Illinois.

But a perimeter of Trent Frazier, who will be a senior next season, along with Miller and Curbelo, eases the mind of everyone around Illinois basketball with the departure of Dosunmu and current senior Andres Feliz.

Illinois continues to add pieces. Miller is a big piece. He not only brings some panache, but more importantly, he provides a high-level shooting prowess and the ability to play both guard spots with some ideal backcourt size.

There will be some upperclassmen in place, including Frazier and junior-to-be Giorgi Bezhanishvili, to lean on. There will be promising 6-8 Benjamin Bosmans-Verdonk, who will get some seasoning this year as a freshman. There will be older veterans who sat out this past year in junior transfers Jacob Grandison and Austin Hutcherson.

And, hopefully, there will be Kofi Cockburn, the impactful 6-10 big man, who would be a sophomore if he sticks around one more year.

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