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Throwback Thursday: Tyreke Key, Tennessee Bobcats/Indiana State

23, Jan 2020

Throwback Thursday: Tyreke Key, Tennessee Bobcats/Indiana State

You’ll have to Google Celina, Tennessee just to know anything about it. 

The results will tell you it is true small town America. It will tell you things don’t change much there. Since 1950, the population has never risen past 1,600 total residents. It will tell you the city is the county seat in Clay County sits just south of the Tennessee-Kentucky border. 

What Google won’t tell you is this - The small town is home to Tyreke Key, basketball star. 

Key defies the “you can’t be from a small town and be recruited” theory that sometimes gets tossed out there in the travel basketball community. If you’re good enough, they will find you. Key is certainly good enough. And he had plenty of people looking at his skill set. 

His prep career was legendary in the state of Tennessee. He helped Clay County win a Class A state title. He was Class A Mr. Basketball. He earned all of the awards. With his 3,287 career points, Key is 10th most in state history. He broke Tony Delk’s single-season scoring record and averaged 37.3 points a game. We can go on and on about his career at Clay County. 

As a member of the Tennessee Bobcats, Key was a regular on our HoopSeen All-Tournament and Top Performer sections (2016 Atlanta Jam & 2016 Best of the South) from our events like the Atlanta Jam and Best of the South. He was a stud on our platform

We wrote this about him at the 2016 Best of the South: 

Tyreke Key is a popular guy here at the Best of the South. And he should be. 

The 6-foot-2 guard from the Tennessee Bobcats is one of the best scorers in the tournament and has given recruiters plenty of things to think about. 

Key pumped in 27 points to open the Friday schedule up did so against a good Team Blueprint team. College coaches lined up from end to end to watch the guard from Celina (TN) Clay County High School. 

Key said he currently holds offers from UT Martin, Tennessee Tech, Furman and Evansville, he said. All of these programs have seen him so far at the Best of the South. 

Head coaches from Murray State, Western Kentucky, Lipscomb, and Northern Kentucky have all logged hours watching Key here at the Best of the South, too. 

Indiana State knew it, too. They came out and watched him play several times. Now Key is the team’s leading scorer for the second straight season and one of the top three scorers in the always-tough Missouri Valley Conference. He’s already scored over 1,000 points in his career for the Sycamores. 

He’s halfway through his junior season. The book on him remains the same as it always has - he’s about buckets. Lots of them. 

Key didn’t play on a shoe circuit. He shined at the Atlanta Jam, helping his team win a title in 2016

A lot of big-time college players take a similar path. Talent rises to the top, no matter the platform. We saw with Key when he was a Tennessee Bobcat. And we’re seeing the same story play at for him as a star at Indiana State. 

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Justin Young
Editor-in-Chief

Justin Young has been the editor-in-chief of HoopSeen.com since 2013. He manages the day-to-day operations on the site and in conjunction with our national and regional events. He was the national basketball editor for Rivals.com and a contributing editor at Yahoo! Sports. Young has been earned numerous awards for his work in sports journalism, including the Georgia Press Association Columnist of the Year. His Justin Young Basketball recruiting service has been in existence since 2002 and worked with over 300 schools from all levels. He is the director of HoopSeen Elite Preview camps and our national Preview camp series. 

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