Recruiting Report: Nate Mohr (2018)
One of the best players west of I-35, 6-foot 2 combo-guard Nate Mohr continues to piece together a magnificent high school career with Glenwood.
Each season since his highly productive freshman campaign Mohr has improved, and this past season he posted some of the best numbers in 3A while leading the Rams to an 18-6 record.
Division I and Division II programs have been aware of the talented 2018’s game for some time now, and there’s a certain few that are starting to get more serious about recruiting him.
“I’ll probably go to Drake’s elite camp again if I get that invite. And I’ve gotten a lot more D2 interest this year; Northwest Missouri State, I went down there on a visit, and then I visited Sioux Falls, and Nebraska-Kearney has been talking to me a lot lately,” said Mohr.
“D2 would be good, I mean you’re always striving to try and get D1s, but I’d definitely be alright with D2.”
Mohr averaged 19.7 points this season on some decent shooting and also dished-out 4.7 assists per game. He also gotten it done defensively, swiping a team-best 2.6 steals per contest.
He mentioned to PHIA what he was working to improve most this past winter.
“I’ve worked on strength definitely, and then my footwork and balance. I’ve always worked on shooting, but I put a little more work into my ball-handling also,” said Mohr, who broke down his season.
“We were really young, full of juniors and sophomores and we just fell a little short as a team. And personally, I thought I scored the ball well and I thought I distributed the ball a lot better than last year.”
With still one season to go at Glenwood, Mohr highlighted some areas he’d like to improve for next season.
“I’d like to improve defensively, just being able to guard better,” he said. “And I’d like to shoot a little better from beyond the arc, and continue to work on my ball-handling.”
He’ll again play with one of the Midwest’s best grassroots programs this offseason, Omaha Elite 17U. Some guys from last summer left the team, so Mohr will have more opportunities to showcase himself this summer.
“I’d really like to get noticed by more schools than I have already,” he said. “We lost a lot of guys that went over to OSA, so I could probably prove myself a little more this summer.”