The first MaxPreps Freshman All-American Team was released in 2010 when Aquille Carr of Patterson (Baltimore) was named National Freshman of the Year. Brian Bridgewater, D.J. Fenner, Kasey Hill and Julius Randle joined him on the first team. Since then, nearly 400 high school basketball players in 40 states have etched their place in history by earning the honor.

Alabama

Arizona

Kaden House, Desert Mountain — 2023

Kalek House, Desert Mountain — 2023

Jakyi Miles, Mesa — 2025

Koa Peat, Perry — 2022

Arkansas

California

LiAngelo Ball, Chino Hills — 2014

Lonzo Ball, Chino Hills — 2013

D.J. Dudley, San Ysidro — 2019

Stanley Johnson, Mater Dei — 2011

Ira Lee, Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth) — 2014

Jarod Lucas, Los Altos — 2016

Brandon McCoy Jr., St. John Bosco — 2023

Onyeka Okongwu, Chino Hills — 2016

Cody Riley, Sierra Canyon — 2014

Tyrell Robinson, Lincoln — 2010

Gene Roebuck, La Mirada — 2024

Jovani Ruff, Long Beach Poly — 2022

Cassius Stanley, Harvard-Westlake — 2016

Kyree Walker, Moreau Catholic — 2017

Mikey Williams, San Ysidro — 2020

Colorado

Connecticut

Levi Gillespie Jr., Capital Prep — 2011

Delaware

Nnanna Njoku, Sanford — 2018

District of Columbia

Terrance Williams, Gonzaga — 2017

Florida

Cayden Boozer, Columbus — 2022

Cayden Gaskins, Columbus — 2026

Kasey Hill, Mount Dora Bible (Mount Dora) — 2010

Caleb Houstan, Montverde Academy — 2019

Jeremy Jenkins, Riviera Prep — 2024

Alex Lloyd, Westminster Academy — 2022

E.J. Montgomery, Montverde Academy — 2015

Georgia

Kanaan Carlyle, Milton — 2020

Dwon Odom, St. Francis — 2017

Illinois

Jabari Parker, Simeon — 2010

Javonte Taylor, Morgan Park — 2020

Howard Williams, Whitney Young — 2024

Indiana

Jalen Blackmon, Marion — 2018

Noah Washington, New Albany — 2025

Iowa

Kansas

Mitch Ballock, Eudora — 2014

Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, Bishop Miege — 2016

Kentucky

Jordan Mitchell, Male — 2025

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Juwan Gooding, Milton — 2012

Michigan

Eric Davis, Arthur Hill — 2012

Minnesota

Mississippi

Daeshun Ruffin, Callaway — 2018

Missouri

Nebraska

Nevada

New Jersey

Temple Gibbs, Seton Hall Prep — 2013

Andrew Kretowski, Rutgers Prep — 2024

Flory Kuminga, Patrick School — 2026

Dom Mauro, College Achieve — 2026

Mackenzie Mgbako, Gill St. Bernard’s — 2020

Trey Patterson, Rutgers Prep — 2018

M.J. Postell, St. Benedict’s Prep — 2026

Antonio Sellers, Hudson Catholic — 2019

Dajuan Wagner Jr., Camden — 2020
Leondre Washington Jr., Teaneck — 2014

Michai White, St. Benedict’s Prep — 2025

New York

R.J. Davis, Archbishop Stepinac — 2017

Adrian Griffin Jr., Archbishop Stepinac — 2018

North Carolina

Ty-Shon Alexander, Concord — 2014
Julius Barnes, Garner — 2012

Jaylen Curry, Zebulon B. Vance (Charlotte) — 2020

Grant Duggins, Greensboro Day — 2026

Dionte Neal, Reidsville — 2023

D.J. Nix, Cannon — 2019

North Dakota

Ohio

Meechie Johnson, Garfield Heights — 2018

Oklahoma

Jalen Montonati, Owasso — 2023

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Silas Graham, Haverford School — 2024

Justice Williams, Roman Catholic — 2019

South Carolina

Tennessee

Chandler Lawson, Memphis East — 2016

K.J. Lawson, Memphis East — 2012

Jalen Lindsey, Christ Presbyterian Academy — 2011

Texas

Keon Edwards, Sam Rayburn — 2018

Keith Frazier, Irving — 2010

Utah

Virginia

Trevor Keels, Paul VI — 2018

Knasir “Dug” McDaniel, Paul VI — 2019

Jeremy Roach, Paul VI — 2017

Jordan Smith, Paul VI — 2023

Isaiah Todd, John Marshall — 2017

Quincy Wadley, Bishop O’Connell — 2023

Washington

Wisconsin



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