In a room full of NBA superstars, it was a kid coming out of high school that stole all the attention at a practice for the US Olympic basketball team on Monday.
17-year-old Cooper Flagg showed off his skills against some of the best defenders in the NBA - including Anthony Davis, Jrue Holiday, and Bam Adebayo to name a few - in a stunning display that stole headlines.
The inbound Duke freshman was part of the select team invited to work out against the Olympic squad during their training camp and Flagg already looked like he belonged.
'The opportunity, it was great,' Flagg said. 'It was a blessing to be here.
'I think just the physicality, and just the level of where I want to get to, there's a lot to get better at, a lot where I need to keep improving. This showed just how big the details are.'
The star of Team USA Basketball's Olympic practice on Monday was Cooper Flagg
Flagg, who's an incoming freshman at Duke, beat the likes of NBA champion Jrue Holiday (R)
He will surely get better. That might be a scary concept.
'He kicked butt here,' U.S. select team coach Jamahl Mosley of the Orlando Magic said.
'There's a respect factor for what he's done. People who have not seen him play, as he gets himself going within the game, they quickly see what he can do.'
The select team is typically made up of young NBA players, brought in to scrimmage the national team and help them prepare for either World Cup or Olympic competition.
Flagg was the first college player asked to be part of the select team since Doug McDermott and Marcus Smart were asked to join a mini-camp in 2013.
But those situations weren't anywhere near the same as Flagg being part of this camp. McDermott had played 110 college games for Creighton at that point and was a two-time consensus All-American.
Smart was coming off a freshman season when he won Big 12 rookie of the year and player of the year honors at Oklahoma State. They were already proven.
Flagg has zero college points. He still proved plenty in this camp.
Cooper Flagg (31) puts up a dunk on defender and Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo (13)
Flagg said he was 'really excited for this opportunity' adding 'It was a blessing to be here'
'He wants it,' U.S. guard Devin Booker said. 'I know this experience, he's going to take with him and move forward.'
In Monday's scrimmage - the Olympic team beat the select team 74-73 - Flagg was in the middle of everything down the stretch and looked perfectly comfortable.
And when it was over, there were plenty of pictures with everyone; the select team's final day in camp was Monday, though some may be invited to stick around to continue assisting the Olympic squad.
'To be able to do what he did, not even playing a college game, let alone an NBA game, there's no fear,' select team forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. of the Miami Heat said. 'It's relentless. And the thing that you can tell about him is that he just has a knack and the will to win.
'He doesn't need the ball. He just finds a way to it. And the ball finds its way to him. That's something that you can't teach. He's just got a great feel for the game.'
Flagg is a 6-foot-9 forward from Newport, Maine, but played his last three years of high school basketball at Montverde Academy in Florida.
Flagg (31) shakes hands with USA Basketball head coach Steve Kerr after the practice
Three generations of Duke Basketball players (L to R): Jayson Tatum, Grant Hill, and Flagg
He chose Duke over Connecticut, was USA Basketball's male athlete of the year in 2022 after leading the Americans to gold at the U17 World Cup, and was the Gatorade National Player of the Year, Naismith Player of the Year and a McDonald´s All-American in his final high school season.
'I was shocked, I was surprised, and I was really excited for this opportunity,' Flagg said. 'And I'm just really blessed that I was able to come out and capitalize on it and show what I have. I was really grateful to come out and learn.
'That was the biggest thing for me, just being able to learn and grow, to share a gym with all of these great, great names. Legends. So, I'm just truly blessed.'