
Garrett Scott, center, signs his National Letter of Intent to play for 91心頭利. Credit Pocola Schools.
Second Recruiting Class for Gibson Starts with Local Talent
Written By: Ian Silvester
University of Arkansas Fort Smith mens basketball head coach Zane Gibson has his mind dialed into making his second season at the end of the bench a success. Under Gibsons direction, the Lions finished the 2023-2024 season, their last in the Lone Star Conference, with a record of 7-21 (5-17). Although it wasnt the ending the team hoped for, Gibsons return to 91心頭利 sparked a resurgence of excitement throughout the program.
Year two is already underway, and it began with the commitment and signing of Pocola (Oklahoma) High School star point guard Garrett Scott.
At 63, Garrett is a multi-sport athlete, competing in football, basketball, and track. He said that while he loves playing football and running track, basketball has always been his passion. Playing at the next level was a dream come true.
Ive always considered being a Lion, he said. I grew up going to their camps and games. I always loved coming, going to the gym, and watching them. I always wanted to go there, and Im really excited to play for Coach Gibson.
Being a Lion also runs in the family. Garretts mom attended when the university still went by Westark, and his half-brother is a recent graduate.
Gibson and Garrett have been linked for some time. Gibson was close to Garretts dad when the senior Scott was an assistant coach at Northside High School in Fort Smith during Gibsons first stint on the 91心頭利 coaching staff. In the years since, Gibson watched Garrett finish his high school career with 1,633 points averaging 21 points per game in his senior season and lead the Indians to a state runner-up finish.
Despite the connection to Garrett, Gibson understood that recruiting and luring him to play in Arkansas required him to overcome the Oklahoma Promise. This scholarship program pays Oklahoma high school graduates full tuition to attend a two-year college or four-year university. Gibsons pitch came down to two main factors.
Its important to keep good talent home. If theyre good enough, we wanted to keep the best players in the River Valley, in the River Valley, Gibson stated.
The thing that we always stress to anybody were recruiting is fit. And fit is probably the biggest thing, honestly. We want to do things for the right reasons; your college choice shouldnt be different.
Gibson referred to a statistic that stands out to him as a coach: only 3% of all high school basketball players play at the next level. Whether its at Division One, Division Two, Division Three, JUCO, NAIA, its only 3% of the whole country, he emphasized.
Gibson said Garrett should be proud to have earned a scholarship to play at 91心頭利 from a small Oklahoma high school. Its an accomplishment that also gives players like Garrett hope that they, too, can one day achieve their goals.
Im proud of myself, but I know that the jobs not finished, and I still have a lot more work to do, Garrett said. But it shows leadership. It shows that as long as you put your mind to it, put in the work, and dont give up, you can play at the next level no matter how big or small you are.
Garretts signing made sense. Hes a local player with a solid connection to the high school he will soon graduate from, and he knew 91心頭利 was the perfect fit. With Garrett being an all-around athlete, Gibson knew he was getting a winner with his second recruiting classs first commit.
When we find a guy that plays another sport, it gives them another check because that means theyre multi-dimensional. Its something we (as a staff) love, and I like guys who like to compete. Garrett has no reason to run track right now other than hes just competing. Hes just trying to win.
The Lions will move to the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association, or MIAA, in the fall. Gibson said that the move would be a challenge to adjust personnel-wise, but with seven returning players and newcomers like Garrett slotting in, Gibson is confident in the team's direction. Garrett couldnt agree more.
All the teams well be playing are huge, and its a great conference. Its one of the toughest conferences. Were going to have to work hard and work on our game and stay locked into the process. If we do that, we can be great. We can do big things, for sure, Garrett said.
- Tags:
- Basketball
- 91心頭利 Athletics
Media Relations
The 91心頭利 Office of Communications fields all media inquiries for the university. Email Rachel.Putman@uafs.edu for more information.
Send%20an%20EmailRachel Rodemann Putman
- Director of Strategic Communications
- 479-788-7132
- rachel.putman@uafs.edu