Not every player is discovered through rankings.
Some players force their way into the conversation through production, film, size, and consistency.
That is the case with Jeybrehm Price, a 6’5”, 190-pound 2027 guard/wing from Maumee Valley Country Day School in Toledo, Ohio. Price recently competed at the Mid-Atlantic Independent School Team Camp, and the production he put together is worth noting.
Against credible independent school competition, Price posted:
25 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists vs. Phelps National
18 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists vs. St. Luke’s
15 points, 8 rebounds vs. Blair Academy
Those numbers tell a story.

Jeybrehm Price (X/Twitter Account)
This was not just a scoring output. Price impacted the game in multiple areas. He scored the ball, rebounded his position, and showed flashes of playmaking. For a player with his size, that combination matters. At 6’5”, Price has the frame of a big two guard with the ability to slide into a small forward role depending on lineup and matchup.
He is not a pure point guard, and he should not be evaluated as one. His value is tied to positional size, floor running, rebounding, scoring touch, and continued development as a perimeter player.
On film, Price moves well for his size. He runs the floor, uses his length, finishes in the lane, and shows enough touch to score from different areas. He is not being labeled as an elite three-level scorer, but he has shown the ability to score at all three levels. His mid-range game has promise, and his three-point shot is most effective when his feet are set, especially in catch-ready situations created by drive-and-kick action.
That is where the evaluation has to stay honest.
Price is not being presented as a finished product. He is being presented as a player who deserves more eyes. His recent camp production backs up the film. His size backs up the intrigue. His activity on the glass backs up the value. And his ability to produce against recognizable competition gives coaches a reason to keep watching.
The long-term potential is there because of the foundation. A 6’5” guard/wing who can rebound, run the floor, finish, make open shots, and continue developing his skill package is worth tracking. The next step will be consistency: shooting growth, defensive reliability, ball security, and continued production through his senior season.
But this much is clear.
Jeybrehm Price has done enough to be placed on the radar.
For coaches who may not have seen him yet, this is a name worth writing down.
We don’t chase noise. We study the game.
Editorial Note
This is an independent Unit 1 Hoop Source player spotlight based on available film, reported camp production, direct player-provided information, and basketball observation. This is not a ranking, projection, or guarantee of recruiting level. All recruiting interest, offers, and official information should be verified directly through the athlete, family, coach, school, or recruiting platform.
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