Vanderbilt picked up a major win on Tuesday, landing Gabe Nesmith, the highest-ranked recruit of the Mark Byington era and a player who brings real star power to Nashville.
Nesmith, a standout wing, is ranked No. 20 in the high school class by 247 Sports, carries five-star status in the composite ranking and checks in as a four-star in the site’s base ranking. That makes him Vanderbilt’s highest-ranked commitment in nearly a decade and the third-highest ranked player to commit to the program in the era of recruiting rankings, behind only Simi Shittu and Darius Garland.
The numbers from this summer back up the buzz. Nesmith is averaging 18.6 points, 3.8 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.2 steals per game on the EYBL circuit, and he entered the commitment process as one of the most sought-after uncommitted players in the 2027 class.
What Vanderbilt is getting is a wing with juice. Nesmith can score in a hurry, create off the dribble and get to the basket with force, and he has the kind of athletic pop that can change the feel of a game. At 6-foot-5, he has the size to shoot over defenders, the handle to manufacture his own looks and the confidence that big-time scorers usually carry.
There’s still polish to be added. His jumper can become more consistent, and his overall efficiency has room to grow.
But the ability to create his own shot is already advanced enough to justify the hype. Industry people believe he’s a better shooter than his numbers suggest because of the shots he takes, and that will matter as he adjusts to college defenses and a more structured offense with other dynamic scorers around him.
Nesmith also brings a little more than pure scoring. There appears to be passing ability there, though it will need to show up more regularly at the next level. And on the defensive end, the tools are obvious: length, athleticism and the chance to become disruptive if he becomes more consistent, especially off the ball, and gets stronger.
The fit in Vanderbilt’s system looks clean. Byington’s scheme should give Nesmith room to run, attack in space and use his athleticism the way he does best. He’s almost certainly the most athletic wing Vanderbilt has landed in the Byington era, and that matters because the open floor gives him a chance to play fast, take risks and finish above the rim.
If this was about finding the right basketball environment, Vanderbilt may have nailed it. Byington likely won’t box him in, and that freedom could help Nesmith become the kind of blue-chip player the Commodores have been looking for.
In Other News...
Vanderbilt May Finally Have The Backfield Depth SEC Games Demand
Vanderbilt has spent enough time in the SEC to know how quickly a ground game can get tested, and this years backfield looks built a little more for that grind. The offense already leans on variety, with running backs carrying much of the load while quarterbacks and even wide receivers can add a few more wrinkles, and that has made the room a central part of the plan. Sedrick Alexander and MK Young bring experience, while younger backs give the group more bodies and more ways to keep the pace from dipping as games wear on.
Running backs coach Ghaali Muhammad-Lankford has pointed to that depth as a real advantage, especially when the schedule turns physical and every snap seems to matter a little more. Alexander has also embraced the give-and-take inside the room, where different skill sets can sharpen everyone involved, and that kind of balance can be hard to find when a team is trying to survive SEC Saturdays. The bigger question is whether that mix is enough to hold up once the league starts asking tougher questions of the Commodores on the ground. [Read more 🡒]
