Every year, families ask us the same question before enrolling: Where do your players actually go?
It’s the right question. The answer should be specific — not a tagline, not a logo wall, not a vague “500+ placements.” Actual names. Actual schools. Actual divisions.
This is that report.
The Numbers (2020–2025)
Over the past five years of tracked commitments, FCP athletes have signed with programs across every level of college basketball:
| Division | Placements |
|---|---|
| NCAA D1 | 13 |
| NCAA D2 | 9 |
| NCAA D3 | 2 |
| NAIA | 8 |
| JUCO | 27 |
| Professional | 1 |
| Total | 59 |
These 59 commitments represent the athletes in our verified commitment database from 2020–2025. Our full placement history since the program’s founding spans 500+ athletes across 43 U.S. states and 22 countries.
2025 Class
The 2025 class was the largest single-year class in our recent history — 29 placements across six division levels.
D1 Signings:
- Justin Allen — Northwestern State University (Southland Conference)
- Hikaru Awata — Troy University (Sun Belt Conference)
- Brock Rose — Radford University (Big South Conference)
- Nathan Mariano — Valley Suns / professional
D2 Signings:
- Pasa Akan — Lynn University
- Cameron Wright — Delta State University
- Brandon Lee — Augusta University
NAIA Signings:
- Mihail Gazvarov — Lindsey Wilson College
- Amar Hanusic — Missouri Valley College
- Josh Chiok — University of Maine at Augusta
- Oliver Mukisa — United International College
JUCO Signings (16): Jad Suleiman (Lakeland CC), Drew Ward (Three Rivers College), Ja’Michael Murray (Coastal Alabama CC), Nile Tinsley (Pellissippi State CC), Patrick Stewart (Snead State CC), Baptiste Filippini (Baltimore City CC), Sayveon Triplett (Wilbur Wright College), Marcus Eaves (John A. Logan College), Jon White (Missouri State-West Plains), Noah Daniels (Milwaukee Area Technical College), Wesley Roberson (Bevill State CC), Kevin Gillies (Southeastern CC), Jalen Schmieg (Southeastern CC), Isaiah Romero (North Country CC), Will Dykes (National Park College), Malik Montero (Frank Phillips College)
2023 Class
8 placements including a D1 commitment to UMKC.
- Yulian Ramirez Montero — UMKC (D1, Missouri Valley Conference)
- Filip Brkic — UVA Wise (D2)
- C.J. Yao Jr. — Cameron University (D2)
- Luka Kalinic — Davis & Elkins College (D2)
- Anderson Gigo — Roosevelt University (NAIA)
- Myles Morones — Cuesta College (JUCO)
- Tyler Jackson — Mt. Hood Community College (JUCO)
- Ben Mitchell — Mt. Hood Community College (JUCO)
2022 Class
10 placements including three D1 commitments — one to a Power Five-adjacent program.
- Brandon Maclin — DePaul University (D1, Big East Conference)
- Ring Malith — SIU-Edwardsville (D1, Missouri Valley Conference)
- Kylin Green — Houston Christian University (D1, Southland Conference)
- K.C. Udolisa — Texas A&M-Kingsville (D2)
- Judd Coan — West Liberty University (D2)
- D.J. Mask — Alma College (D3)
- Freek Wijnands — Eastern Arizona College (JUCO)
- Nadav Naim — Palm Beach State College (JUCO)
- Hayden Statz — Cuesta College (JUCO)
- Max Mlachnik — Bryant & Stratton College (JUCO)
2021 Class
7 placements including two D1 signings — Jack Hatten to the University of Idaho and Gerald Gittens Jr. to Northern Michigan University.
- Gerald Gittens Jr. — Northern Michigan University (D1)
- Jack Hatten — University of Idaho (D1, Big Sky Conference)
- Gavin Flowers — Southern University (D1, SWAC)
- Ruben Little Head Jr. — Bacone College (NAIA)
- Chris Herbort — Clark State College (JUCO)
- Terrian Roy — Utah State Eastern (JUCO)
- Ryan Previna — North Country Community College (JUCO)
What the Data Actually Shows
A few patterns worth noting for any family evaluating post-grad or high school prep programs:
JUCO is a legitimate path, not a fallback. Nearly half of FCP’s tracked placements are JUCO — and that’s intentional. The JUCO route keeps eligibility intact, builds confidence in a competitive environment, and has produced multiple D1 transfers from our alumni. Several players who signed JUCO out of FCP are now playing at four-year programs.
International athletes place at every level. Our 2025 class alone included athletes from Europe and international backgrounds placing at D1, D2, and NAIA programs. The 22-country footprint isn’t a marketing number — it shows up in every class.
D1 placements happen. Across our tracked years, 22% of documented placements were NCAA D1 commitments. That includes mid-majors and conference schools where players see real minutes and build professional profiles.
The spread matters. Players arrive at FCP at different stages — some with no offers, some with JUCO interest looking to upgrade, some with D2 offers trying to reach D1. The wide distribution across divisions reflects that. There’s no single “FCP type” — there’s a development path for where you are and where you’re trying to go.
The Honest Context
This report covers athletes in our verified commitment database. Our full history — 500+ placements across 43 states since the program’s founding — includes years not fully digitized in this system.
We’re publishing this data because we think transparency earns trust. If you want to verify a specific name or ask about a player from a particular year, call us or contact us directly. We’ll connect you with alumni who can tell you firsthand what the process looked like.
If your son is evaluating post-grad or high school basketball programs, we’d rather you compare the data than take our word for it.
View the full commitment list →
Data compiled by the FCP recruiting staff. Commitment records sourced from RealGM, program announcements, and direct athlete confirmations. Last updated March 2026.
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