ICYMI: 2025 Rankings Were Posted This Week
In case you missed it, Prep Hoops Florida updated our 2025 Prospect Rankings earlier this week! The rankings now include 94 college prospects with a top five of Cameron Boozer Cameron Boozer 6'9" | PF Columbus | 2025 State #2 Nation FL , Alexander Lloyd Alexander Lloyd 6'4" | SG Westminster | 2025 State #64 Nation FL , Jamier Jones Jamier Jones 6'5" | SF Sarasota Riverview | 2025 State #16 Nation FL , Cayden Boozer Cayden Boozer 6'5" | PG Columbus | 2025 State #28 Nation FL , and Shon Abaev Shon Abaev 6'7" | CG Calvary Christian | 2025 State #24 Nation FL !
See where your favorite players stack up in the state by viewing the Florida 2025 Rankings!
We have begun analyzing the rankings updates in the following articles, too:
- 2025 Rankings: Watch List Prospects
- Nightrydas Invitational Day 1 Standouts
- Who Wants the Smoke Day 3
- 2025 Rankings: Making the Case for No. 1
- Roundtable Discussion: 2025 Rankings
- 2025 Rankings - Palm Beach/Treasure Coast
- 2025 Rankings: Potential Movers
- Mayhem in Maryland-Standout 2023 Wings/Bigs
- Top 5 Deep Dive: 2025 Rankings
- Carolina Cup: 16U Gamechangers
- 2023 Possible Rankings Risers
Things you need to know about our Prospect Rankings
How do you decide where a player gets ranked? Let us tell you.
Prep Hoops Florida prospect rankings are compiled by our Scouts with input from high school, AAU, and college coaches who watch a ton of Florida basketball. We put a lot of time and energy into it and we are as diligent as we can possibly be to get it right. We never intentionally set out to bury a kid or leave them off the list. We try not to be biased, other than favoring athletes with talent and a desire to get better. We work hard at being fair.
Most importantly, this list is about college potential, not current performance. Let us repeat that: This list is about college potential, not current performance. This is the big one, the factor that causes the most consternation, the most misunderstanding, especially among keenly interested parents. With that in mind, grassroots ball matters greatly. We are obviously not ignoring the high school season. It is a reality, however, that players who do not play in grassroots events that are highly attended by other collegiate prospects are diminishing their opportunity to get noticed and distinguish themselves as a recruit and therefore make the rankings.