THE COME UP: Wendell Moore Is About to Make Some Noise šŸ˜ˆ

It was August of 2014 and Wendell Moore was just a 12-year-old kid, but Dominic Bishop saw something special in him. 

Bishop, a former player at Creighton turned trainer and coach, approached Moore during an open gym near Charlotte, NC. 

ā€œWhen I first met him, I asked him, ā€˜Whatā€™s your dream school?ā€™ And he said, ā€˜Duke,ā€™ā€ Bishop remembers. 

In that same conversation, Bishop outlined five goals for Moore: To make the U.S. national team, to be the leading scorer at Cox Mill High School, to compete at the Nike camps, to participate in the McDonaldā€™s All-American Game, and to one day commit to Duke. 

Moore looked at him like he was crazy. 

And yet, five years later, heā€™s achieved them all. 

Amid the frenzy of rush hour in midtown Manhattan, Wendell Moore is casually posing for pictures. Heā€™s visiting for a few days from his hometown in North Carolina. Things move a lot faster here, but Moore is in no rush. He holds a basketball in one hand, rests the other on a green banister that leads down to the subway and smiles big. 

In just a couple weeks, heā€™ll be off to Durham for the next stop on his journey. It could be a brief one. 

ā€œObviously for individual goals, things like All-ACC teams and trying to be a one-and-done if it happens,ā€ Moore says, when asked about his aims for the upcoming season. ā€œMy main team goal is just to focus on winning. Our first step is to win our first game November 5th against Kansas.ā€

Though he checked everything off Bishopā€™s list and finished as the No. 3 small forward in his class, you probably havenā€™t heard Mooreā€™s name much. Cox Mill is on the outskirts of Charlotte and doesnā€™t get much hype. Itā€™s not a high-profile program like Oak Hill or Montverde, but Moore stayed there his entire HS career.

His game isnā€™t as loud as some of the other top young prospects, meaning youā€™re less likely to catch him on your Instagram feed. Heā€™s soft-spoken and keeps his circle tight. ā€œKind of like Kawhi Leonard,ā€ Bishop describes.

The similarities between Moore and Leonard carry over to the court, too. Like the reigning Finals MVP, Wendell is strong and athletic and has the ability to dominate a game on both ends. Kawhi is one of three NBA players whom he studies regularly, along with Jayson Tatum and Paul George. 

ā€œI feel like I score the ball really well, defend, get others involved,ā€ Moore tells SLAM. ā€œAnd most important to me is to win. I never like to lose. I donā€™t care what Iā€™m doing. I donā€™t care who Iā€™m playing against.ā€

He led Cox Mill to two state championships and took home a gold medal with USA Basketball. As a senior, Moore averaged 25.5 points, 8.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 2.5 steals and was named Gatorade North Carolina Player of the Year. 

ā€œHe literally does everything,ā€ says Bishop, who also coached Moore on the AAU circuit with Team CP3. ā€œIn a day and age where itā€™s all about highlights and dunks and maybe three-pointersā€”he does everything. He can pass. He has vision like a point guard and the length of a 2-guard. He plays defense better than anybody on the perimeter that I know, and he can score with the best of them.ā€

Moore is bringing that versatile skill set to an already-deep Blue Devils roster. Theyā€™ve got Tre Jones, Jack White, Javin DeLaurier, Joey Baker, Jordan Goldwire and Alex Oā€™Connell all coming back. Freshmen Vernon Carey Jr, Matthew Hurt and Cassius Stanley will have an impact as well. 

Among that group, itā€™s easy for the quiet kid from a small market who rarely floods social media pages to get overlooked. Thatā€™d be a huge mistake. 

ā€œ[Coach K] just wants me to come in and be a leader,ā€ he says. ā€œDo things Iā€™m comfortable doing. Play how I play.ā€

Itā€™s gotten Moore this farā€”from that open gym just over five years ago to his dream school. 

As Mooreā€™s photoshoot winds down on the streets of NYC, a few people stop to gaze. They look on curiously for a moment, trying to identify whoā€™s in front of the lens, before disappearing into a sea of other commuters. 

They might not know Wendell Moore now. But they will soon.

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Alex Squadron is an Associate Editor at SLAM. Follow him on Twitter @asquad510.

Photos by Johnnie Izquierdo.