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Georgia prep basketball star is Beacon’s first athletic recruit

As Beacon College enters the United States Collegiate Athletic Association this fall, the school’s basketball program is already soaring to new “heights” with the recent signing of a Georgia prep star, the college’s first-ever sports recruit. Men’s basketball coach Sam Vincent recently signed 6-foot-9 power forward/center Caleb Whitlock, who played for the Central High Lions in Carrollton, Georgia.

Beacon College men's basketball coach welcoms Caleb Whitlock as the school's first athletic recruit
Beacon College men’s basketball coach welcoms Caleb Whitlock as the school’s first athletic recruit.

“I’m very honored to (get to) play ball with coach Sam Vincent, and I’m excited to help grow the basketball program at Beacon,” said Whitlock, who sees signing with Beacon as “an opportunity to continue to play basketball after high school and a great way to keep learning on and off the court.”

During his senior season, Whitlock averaged 10 points, seven rebounds, two assists, and three blocks per game. He is the product of a Central High School program that during his four years compiled a record that included 78 wins, three consecutive state playoffs, a Sweet 16 appearance and regional championship, and a Hilburn Patterson Basketball Invitational Tournament championship while producing nine collegiate players and team GPA of 3.68.

Yet, Vincent, a former NBA star and coach of the NBA’s Charlotte Bobcats, said Whitlock wasn’t on the Amateur Athletic Union radar, considered one of the prime pipelines for basketballers into college sports and the NBA. Timing played a role in Beacon landing Whitlock. His high school coach, Kenny Edwards, contacted Vincent after receiving an email about a Beacon athletic recruiting webinar.

Vincent described Whitlock as “the kind of ideal prospect we’re looking for: someone who wants to play the sport, who has been playing at a high school or junior high level, has a bit of a learning challenge, and needs to have that extra care on the academic side, but also wants to pursue it on the sports side. So, he [was] someone that was obviously a perfect fit for Beacon College.”

Edwards shared the email with Whitlock’s parents. They recognized the opportunity that Beacon — America’s first accredited baccalaureate institution dedicated to educating neurodivergent students with learning and attention issues — presented to their son.

Indeed, a recent study, “I Know I Can Learn: The Perceptions of NCAA Division I Football College Athletes with Learning Disabilities” in the Journal of Issues in Intercollegiate Athletics, found that “while 11% of all college students are reported to have a learning disability that percentage may be considerably higher when looking at National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college athletes. (One researcher) reported as many as 54% of athletes on three revenue-producing teams at one institution had documented learning disabilities.”

Vincent said Whitlock brings size and much more to Beacon’s maturing squad. “He’s a kid that is motivated to play basketball — he wants to play, so he’s working out now, and he’ll be working out all the way until he gets here. But more importantly, he’s the profile we can go after going forward: the competitive kid who wants to see how far the sport can take him. Someone that comes in here with a little bit of a competitive edge, who wants to win, who wants to play at a higher level. He’ll attract more like-minded LD students. I’m excited to get him into the program because he’ll add to the team next year, but also help how we build and add more players to the team.”

Whitlock, the student-athlete, is also eager to get on the hardwood – and into the classroom. “I am excited about getting my business degree and continuing to grow on the basketball court,” he said.

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