The 2024 McDonald's All American squad was released Tuesday. Including this year's participants, we looked at which high schools have sent the most players to the prestigious showcase that began in 1977.
Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Va.) leads the way with 34 all-time selections including Carmelo Anthony, Rajon Rondo and Keldon Johnson. In 1991, 1992, 1993, 2001 and 2004 the Warriors had multiple selections. Oak Hill also holds the record by having a selection in 12 consecutive years from 2001-12.
Montverde Academy (Montverde, Fla.) is second with 17 all-time selections including three this season in
Cooper Flagg,
Derik Queen and
Liam McNeeley. This is the seventh straight season the Eagles have had a player named to the team. It's also the second time that Montverde has had three players selected. Cade Cunningham, Scottie Barnes and Day'Ron Sharpe all earned the honor in 2020.
DeMatha (Hyattsville, Md.),
Findlay Prep (Henderson, Nev.) and
Prolific Prep (Napa, Calif.) each have at least 10 all-time McDonald's All American selections. Nineteen programs have at least five selections.
Players were counted based on the high school they last played basketball for.
Cooper Flagg is one of 17 players from Montverde Academy to be named to the McDonald's All American team since 2013. This year he will be joined by teammates Liam McNeeley and Derik Queen. (Photo: Eugene Alonzo)
Schools with most McDonald's All Americans
Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Va.) — 34Glen Mayers, 1980
Chris Brooks, 1986
Brian Shorter, 1987
Anthony Cade, 1990
Cory Alexander, 1991
Ben Davis, 1991
Chris Davis, 1992
Martice Moore, 1992
Jeff McInnis, 1993
Jerry Stackhouse, 1993
Curtis Staples, 1994
Ron Mercer, 1995
Stephen Jackson, 1996
Kevin Lyde, 1998
Rashaad Carruth, 2001
DeSagana Diop, 2001
Carmelo Anthony, 2002
Ivan Harris, 2003
Rajon Rondo, 2004
Josh Smith, 2004
Eric Devendorf, 2005
Ty Lawson, 2006
Nolan Smith, 2007
Brandon Jennings, 2008
Keith Gallon, 2009
Doron Lamb, 2010
Quinn Cook, 2011
Tyler Lewis, 2012
Dwayne Bacon, 2015
Billy Preston, 2017
Keldon Johnson, 2018
David McCormack, 2018
Cole Anthony, 2019
Chris Livingston, 2022
Kasey Hill, 2013
Dakari Johnson, 2013
D'Angelo Russell, 2014
Ben Simmons, 2015
R.J. Barrett, 2018
Precious Achiuwa, 2019
Scottie Barnes, 2020
Cade Cunningham, 2020
Day'Ron Sharpe, 2020
Caleb Houstan, 2021
Dillon Mitchell, 2022
Dariq Whitehead, 2022
Kwame Evans Jr., 2023
Sean Stewart, 2023
Cooper Flagg, 2024
Liam McNeeley, 2024
Derik Queen, 2024
Sidney Lowe, 1979
Dereck Whittenburg, 1979
Adrian Branch, 1981
Danny Ferry, 1985
Steve Hood, 1986
Jerrod Mustaf, 1988
Duane Simpkins, 1992
Keith Bogans, 1999
Joseph Forte, 1999
Travis Garrison, 2002
Austin Freeman, 2007
Markelle Fultz, 2016
Prolific Prep (Napa, Calif.) — 12Josh Jackson, 2016
Gary Trent Jr., 2017
Jordan Brown, 2018
Nimari Burnett, 2020
Jalen Green, 2020
Nate Bittle, 2021
Adem Bona, 2022
M.J. Rice, 2022
Aden Holloway, 2023
Zoom Diallo, 2024
Derrion Reid, 2024
Aiden Sherrell, 2024
Findlay Prep (Henderson, Nev.) — 11Avery Bradley, 2009
Cory Joseph, 2010
Tristan Thompson, 2010
Myck Kabongo, 2011
Brandon Ashley, 2012
Anthony Bennett, 2012
Nigel Williams-Goss, 2013
Kelly Oubre, 2014
Rashad Vaughn, 2014
Allonzo Trier, 2015
P.J. Washington, 2017
IMG Academy (Bradenton, Fla.) — 11Trevon Duval, 2017
Armando Bacot Jr., 2019
Josh Green, 2019
Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, 2019
Jaden Springer, 2020
Mark Williams, 2020
Moussa Diabate, 2021
Jaden Bradley, 2022
Keyonte George, 2022
Jarace Walker, 2022
Donavan Freeman, 2024
Matt Beeuwsaert, 1984
Tommy Lewis, 1985
Cedric Bozeman, 1991
Taylor King, 2007
David Wear, 2009
Travis Wear, 2009
Stanley Johnson, 2014
Bol Bol, 2018
St. Anthony (Jersey City, N.J.) — 8David Rivers, 1984
Bobby Hurley, 1989
Rodrick Rhodes, 1992
Anthony Perry, 1997
Elijah Ingram, 2002
Michael Rosario, 2008
Dominic Cheek, 2009
Kyle Anderson, 2012
Dunbar (Baltimore, Md.) — 7Reggie Williams, 1983
Michael Brown, 1984
Terry Dozier, 1985
Donta Bright, 1992
Michael Lloyd, 1992
Keith Booth, 1993
Norman Nolan, 1994
Milton Wagner, 1981
Billy Thompson, 1982
Kevin Walls, 1984
Dajuan Wagner, 2001
Aaron Bradshaw, 2023
D.J. Wagner, 2023
Patrick School (Hillside, N.J.) — 6Shaheen Holloway, 1996
Al Harrington, 1998
Dexter Strickland, 2009
Kyrie Irving, 2010
Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, 2011
Nick Richards, 2017
Roman Catholic (Philadelphia, Pa.) — 6Reggie Jackson, 1978
Alonzo McFarlan, 1980
Dallas Comegys, 1983
Mark Stevenson, 1985
Eddie Griffin, 2000
Maalik Wayns, 2009
Wheeler (Marietta, Ga.) — 6Shareef Abdur-Rahim, 1995
J.J. Hickson, 2007
Jelan Kendrick, 2010
Jaylen Brown, 2015
E.J. Montgomery, 2018
Isaiah Collier, 2023
Artesia (Lakewood, Calif.) — 5Ed O'Bannon, 1990
Charles O'Bannon, 1993
Avondre Jones, 1993
Jason Kapono, 1999
James Harden, 2007
Bishop Gorman (Las Vegas, Nev.) — 5Shabazz Muhammad, 2012
Chase Jeter, 2015
Stephen Zimmerman, 2015
Zach Collins, 2016
Chuck O'Bannon Jr., 2017
King (Chicago, Ill.) — 5Teddy Grubbs, 1979
Efrem Winters, 1982
Marcus Liberty, 1987
Jamie Brandon, 1990
Rashard Griffith, 1993
Sierra Canyon (Chatsworth, Calif.) - 5Brandon Boston Jr., 2020
Ziaire Williams, 2020
Amari Bailey, 2022
Kijani Wright, 2022
Bronny James, 2023
Sunrise Christian Academy (Bel Aire, Kan.) — 5Kendall Brown, 2021
Kennedy Chandler, 2021
Gradey Dick, 2022
Mark Mitchell, 2022
Matas Buzelis, 2023
Heights (Wichita, Kan.) — 5Darnell Valentine, 1977
Antoine Carr, 1979
Ricky Ross, 1979
Aubrey Sherrod, 1981
Perry Ellis, 2012