Know you guys miss long post so I'll start out with one. Was finally was able to logon without everything saying premium content on this WBB forum. Weird part is someone on the first thread I was able to read said, I'm too poor for premium content, I'm just here for free stuff (paraphrased). Odd how mine always said WBB forum was premium content until ~a week ago. Anyways, glad to be back with you again!
These stats were taken from sports-reference.com for all 5 Star players from the Class of 2025.
Only compared Deal to all the 5 Stars from that class because that's what others are comparing her to like the OP.
First, there are layers/grades also given to 5 stars.
5 Star Grades and Class Counts (31 total):
98 - 3
97 - 11
96 - 17
Deal is rated #23 and grade 96. Agot is #6 (97) according to ESPN.
Here's what position she came in compared to her ranking to all other 5 Stars (only included the main categories for guards.):
56 AST (7th)
29.7 3PT% (14th)
529 Mins (16th)
46.9 2PT% (17th)
45.9 eFG% (18th)
173 Pts (19th)
68.0 FT% (19th)
39.4 FG% (20th)
59 TOV (22nd)
12 STL (24T)
1 of 8 on the B1G Freshman of the Year Team
She succeeded her rank in every listed category except for steals where she tied for #24.
So yes, there would be many teams interested in acquiring her from the portal for equal to better NIL especially if they understand systems.
Now we'll get into the heart of the matter. Jan's went back to the Triangle system used under Megan G and doesn't showcase off-guards to fit Deal's style. If Jan would of stayed with Read and React (R&R) it would of fit Deal better although I would also argue Jan's modifications of R&R last year would still hamper Deal somewhat but not as bad as the offense this year. Coaches will understand this, normie fans most likely not so much. Thus, Deal should find suitors at the same price range IA got her at or even higher because of her flashes when put into a more rhythmic modern paced offense.
For more on that, you can read her recent eval at IA:
Conceptually Thinking Basketball: Addie Deal Evaluation
@deal_addie @IowaWBB
Why Addie Deal’s Stats Don’t Tell the Story
Addie Deal’s freshman season at Iowa should not be evaluated through a production lens. It should be evaluated through a systems lens.
Because what shows up in the box score is not the problem.
What shows up in the structure is.
On paper: 173 points, 56 assists, 59 turnovers, 529 minutes across 34 games on a 27–7 team.
In reality: a five-star, McDonald’s All-American deployed without a clearly defined developmental pathway.
Deal is not a plug-and-play scorer. She is a connective operator—a secondary initiator, a spacing amplifier, and a possession stabilizer. Players like that require
intentional ecosystem design. They do not self-create value in broken environments. They scale value in aligned ones.
Iowa did not consistently provide that alignment.
The minute distribution limited rhythm. The role definition limited clarity. The lineup usage limited optimization.
The 56-to-59 assist-to-turnover ratio is not a reflection of poor guard play. It is a reflection of compressed decision windows, inconsistent spacing, and late-
clock responsibilities that do not match her archetype.
More concerning is what did not happen.
There was not enough exploration of lineups where Deal could function as a true secondary playmaker. There was not enough investment in dual-creator
configurations. There was not enough structural commitment to developing her within primary action layers.
Instead, her usage often felt reactive, not designed.
That is where the conversation must expand beyond one player.
All freshmen must improve. That is baseline. But improvement is not just individual—it is institutional.
And right now, Iowa is showing early signs of leakage.
From a tactical standpoint, there are questions about offensive evolution. The system has not fully adapted to modern role specialization, particularly for
connective guards who operate between usage tiers.
From a player development standpoint, there is a gap between recruitment profile and utilization pathway. Bringing in elite talent is one phase. Converting that
talent into optimized impact is another.
From a regional recruiting standpoint, this matters more than it appears. Iowa’s visibility—attendance, media presence, national brand strength—positions it as a
destination program. But perception shifts quickly if high-level recruits are not maximized within the system.
Winning masks inefficiencies. It does not eliminate them.
A 27–7 record should not end the conversation. It should raise the standard of it.
Because if Iowa envisions itself as a sustained national program, the margin for developmental misalignment shrinks. Elite recruits are not just evaluating wins.
They are evaluating role clarity, progression pathways, and how players like them are leveraged.
Right now, there is enough evidence to question whether that pipeline is fully aligned.
Coach Beechum’s Verdict
This is not a one-player critique. This is a system audit.
Addie Deal was not put in position to succeed at the level her profile demands. That is a developmental inefficiency.
More importantly, it is a signal.
If Iowa does not tighten its alignment between recruiting, tactical design, and player development, this will not be an isolated case. It will become a pattern.
Deal remains a high-level, system-elevating guard. That has not changed.
What must change is the environment around her.
Because at the national level, talent acquisition gets you in the room.
Development and deployment determine whether you stay there.
References:
Get the inside scoop on the top ranked high school girls' basketball players. In-depth player briefings, film and more on ESPNHS.com.
www.espn.com
Addison Deal - Stats, Game Logs, Splits, and much more
www.sports-reference.com
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