Prep Hoops eyeing top Indiana prospects for IU team camp in Bloomington
Bloomington's IU team camp is more than another summer stop: it is a live test for five Indiana prospects trying to raise their standing.

Bloomington turns into a live sorting ground
The second IU team camp of the month is set for Saturday in Bloomington, and Prep Hoops Indiana is treating it like a real evaluation window, not a casual summer stop. With staff on site and a slate of strong school teams in the building, the setting gives prospects a chance to move up by proving they can function in a team setting, not just in open-court bursts.

That distinction matters. In school jerseys, with more structure and more accountability, the players who separate are usually the ones who make winning plays without needing the ball every trip. For Indiana coaches, recruiting followers and anyone trying to understand the state’s next wave, this is exactly the kind of camp that can reorder a class conversation in one day.
Bradley Basila has the clearest chance to climb
Bradley Basila enters Bloomington with a profile that already looks like it is moving upward. The Chesterton forward is listed as a class of 2028 prospect and stands 6-foot-7, which gives him obvious value in any team camp where size, mobility and decision-making all have to show up together. He has already popped in Prep Hoops’ Futures Game coverage, and that matters because the market for wings and forwards who can play in a system is only getting tighter.
What Basila has to prove this weekend is simple, but not easy: he has to show that his spring momentum is not a one-off. If he rebounds, runs the floor and makes the right reads against older or more physical competition, he can strengthen the case that he belongs near the top of Indiana’s 2028 conversation. If he looks comfortable doing the dirty work inside a team structure, his stock can take another clear step.
Naji Meux and Tristan Breland are the guard names to monitor
Naji Meux and Tristan Breland give the camp an important underclass guard lane. Meux is another younger guard whose development is being tracked for what comes next, while Breland, a 2029 guard from Fishers, represents the kind of long-term upside that can turn a watch list into a longer recruiting conversation. Their appeal is not just burst or shot-making; it is whether they can organize a group and avoid looking like freshmen or early-cycle guards trying to force the issue.
In Bloomington, these guards have to show pace, poise and a willingness to make the next pass. Team camp usually rewards the player who can stay steady when the game gets more structured, and that is where Meux and Breland can separate themselves from the pack. If either one looks like a guard who already understands how to fit into a school offense, that is the type of performance that can move him from intriguing to unavoidable.
Carter Murans and Levi Lindeman bring the more polished wing test
Carter Murans and Levi Lindeman give the watch list a more mature high school feel, which is why they may matter just as much as the younger names. Murans is a 2027 wing, and Lindeman is a 2027 wing from Bloomington North, so both should already be in a stage where advanced physicality and decision-making are expected rather than projected. That makes their camp value different from the freshmen-and-sophomore upside plays: they need to show they can control possessions and defend across multiple actions right now.
Lindeman’s local connection adds another layer, because Bloomington North players tend to feel the weight of performing in front of the home basketball audience. For both wings, the bar is not simply to score, but to look like players who can anchor winning habits in a structured environment. A strong Saturday for either one could sharpen where they sit inside Indiana’s class hierarchy, especially if they show they can translate athletic traits into school-ball production.
June keeps stretching the evaluation ladder across Indiana
The IU team camp does not stand alone. It comes in a June calendar that has already included the Indiana All-Star Futures Game, where 24 freshmen and sophomores were split into North and South teams at New Palestine High School, with the North All-Stars winning 120-103. That result matters less as a scoreboard line than as another reminder that the state’s next cycle is already under a microscope, and the players earning attention now are the ones who can carry that attention into the rest of the summer.
The same pattern shows up at the IBCA Top 100 Showcase, which is framed as a live evaluation period with multiple Division I coaches expected to attend. Put together, these events create a clear ladder: Futures Game for the youngest emerging names, IU team camp for school-setting translation, and the Top 100 Showcase for higher-end statewide exposure. For Basila, Meux, Breland, Murans and Lindeman, Bloomington is the next chance to turn summer visibility into a stronger place in Indiana’s basketball conversation.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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