Editors note: The 2016-17 college basketball season will be the Year of the Freshmen,?featuring what could be the best class weve ever seen. Over the next two weeks, we will get familiar with the best of the best, examining who they are and where each of the top 10 prospects in the 2016 ESPN 100 came from.Read more: No. 10 Dukes Frank Jackson | No. 9 Kentuckys Malik Monk No. 8 Michigan States Miles Bridges | No. 7 Washingtons Markelle Fultz No. 6 Kentuckys DeAaron Fox | No. 5 Kentuckys Bam Adebayo No. 4 UCLAs Lonzo Ball | No. 3 Dukes Jayson Tatum No. 2 Kansas Josh Jackson | No. 1 Dukes Harry GilesThe Washington Marriott Wardman Park is a sprawling maze: 195,000 square feet of meeting rooms, breakout rooms, and ballrooms of various sizes designed to, as its web site explains, provide an ideal setting for whatever youre planning, regardless of size or scope.Salon 3, the ballroom into which Miles Bridges has just walked, is laughably surplus to current requirements. In a few hours, in an identical room next door, the setting will be far more ideal. Coaches and players will camp at team-specific conference tables; cameras and microphones will rove between them in packs.It will be hectic, but the scope will make sense -- especially for Bridges.The No. 8-ranked player in the class of 2016 might be Michigan State coach Tom Izzos most talented recruit ever. At minimum, the 6-foot-7 wing is the gem of the Hall of Famers most lauded freshmen class, a group State fans have called, simply enough, The Class. Bridges is the likeliest among them to be in the NBA less than a year from now. His athleticism and 1-through-4 versatility represent the most obvious key to the Spartans 2016-17 season. Given MSUs personnel losses last spring, its practically the start of a new era.Even Bridges presence at the event elicits a noise unto itself: In 21 seasons, hes the first freshman Izzo has ever taken to media day.Then, of course, theres the small matter of Bridges hometown: Flint, Michigan, the same place that birthed Michigan State legends Mateen Cleaves, Morris Peterson and Charlie Bell, better known as the Flintstones.And then theres this:I think Miles Bridges is the next Flintstone, Izzo said. Hes a blue-collar superstar. Which fits me, and our program, perfectly.BACK IN SALON 3, the only noise is the 18-year-olds voice, explaining how he dabbled with the idea of walking away from his own ideal setting -- between coach and recruit, player and team, program and hometown.Its true. For a minute there (or a few months, or maybe a whole year), Bridges was interested in breaking the Flint-Sparty mold.Everybody, literally everybody, from Flint goes to Michigan State, Bridges said. I wanted to switch it up at first. I wanted to be different.There is something to be said for forging ones own path. Or, at the very least, not wearing the same button-down shirt every other dude at the party is wearing. The impulse of Michigan State mens basketball could apply to the entire region: 40 minutes north of Flint on I-75 is Saginaw, Michigan, the other half of what Izzo calls the Flint-Saginaw group, which produced former Spartans stars Jason Richardson and Draymond Green, among others. But Flint, specifically, shares an elevated place in Michigan State basketball lore, and in Izzos heart.Every night when I go to bed and every day when I drive in to work, I realize the cars I drive, the house I live in, the summer Im going to have is probably because of the Flintstones, Izzo said in February.Its a hard act to follow. Its also a hard place to grow up.Few American cities were so thoroughly hollowed out by the prevailing economic and demographic forces -- deindustrialization, globalization, white flight, urban decay -- of the late 20th century. In 1908, General Motors was founded in Flint. In 1978, it employed nearly 80,000 people in the area. In 2010, it employed 8,000. Between 2010 and 2014, when U.S. median household income was $53,482, Flints was $24,679.In 2015, according to U.S. Census data, Flints poverty rate was 40.1 percent. Few cities are more violent per capita. In just the past year, a federal public health state of emergency was declared when lead poisoning -- from a contaminated local water supply -- was discovered among thousands of residents.Or, as Bridges put it: Everybody knows its tough out there.Bridges parents divorced when he was a kid; he felt like the man of the house by 11. He saw fights at schools, drugs sold in plain view, and, among peers, an understood goal: get out.In my generation, not a lot of people do, he said. They become victims to society.By his freshman year of high school, it was clear basketball would be Bridges chance. Before the start of 10th grade, he transferred to powerhouse Huntington Prep in Huntington, West ?Virginia, and, more or less, started over.Izzo and his staff had known Bridges since he was in eighth grade. They had built a strong relationship, gotten used to seeing him around. After the move to West Virginia, though, Bridges kind of disappeared for a while, Izzo said. The Spartans were still chasing him, of course, but his path was no longer so preordained. He looked at Kentucky, Iowa State, Indiana, UConn. He had left home, forced himself to come out of his own shell, matured as a young man and in my game, even interned under a circuit court judge. If he was tempted to make a clean break, to leave Flint behind for good, who could blame him?Then came his official visit to East Lansing.A few months later, on the first day allowed by NCAA rules, Bridges mailed Izzo his letter of intent.I just felt it, Bridges said. I felt like I belonged there.TOM IZZO CAN?be self-critical to a fault.Example No. 1: He is haunted by last seasons first-round loss to Middle Tennessee State. This is understandable. The No. 2-seeded Spartans were a heavy Final Four favorite, led by senior guard Denzel Valentine, before they gave up 90 points on 68 possessions to Conference USAs seventh-best offense. That one stings. Fair enough.Less fair, perhaps: Izzo blames himself for not calling a timeout until Middle Tennessee had opened its early 15-2 lead. (Nobody else, I made the mistake, Izzo said last month. This year, if we get down 12-0, there will be a timeout called. And I mean that sincerely.) In reality, theres no one to blame for Middle Tennessees 40-minute, out-of-body experience. Basketball can be weird.Example No. 2: It took Izzo until this summer?-- after 19 straight tournament appearances, seven Final Fours and induction into the Hall of Fame -- to admit his program had built a culture.Early on, after we won the national championship, everybody was ready to canonize us, Izzo said. I thought, come back in 10, 12 years. Weve had some really good teams, but we had a couple of years where in my mind we were good but the culture wasnt the same.Its different now. Last season, Valentine and Matt Costello led one of the tightest-knit, hardest-working teams of their coachs career. Those good vibes have become self-sustaining. Seniors and juniors carry them forward. The Spartans are already equating this teams chemistry to last seasons, remarkable given the turnover in personnel. Meanwhile, it has become a bona fide recruiting advantage: Prospects want playing time and a chance to go pro, sure, but some are just as interested in being part of a family.When Bridges took his official visit, he stayed with senior guard Tum Tum Nairn, the teams universally beloved Bahamian, a born leader, one of Izzos favorite people in the world. What could have been a casual arms-length weekend was, instead, a two-day crash course in bonding.I believe its one of my gifts to understand people just from a conversation, Nairn said. I care about people. Thats just who I am. I show them love. So when guys come to visit, I can get a good feel for them, even in two days. You cant hide who you really are. And Miles was just himself -- just a regular kid who has great power and weight behind his name, but is so humble in spirit. It was easy to see.Bridges and Nairn immediately hit it off. As did Bridges, Joshua Langford and the rest of the freshman class.?Veteran?Eron Harris?described the star-studded newcomers as his brothers for life. Brotherhood and family are frequent terms; open expressions of love are the norm.In Bridges, Izzo saw a player whose ethos aligned perfectly with his own. The kid required none of the frills during his recruitment, didnt need heavy flattery or constant attention. Izzo has been even more impressed since Bridges arrived. Prospects of his caliber sometimes come in and think they know everything, Izzo said. Bridges, instead, is a sponge, a player with massive gifts and minimal ego -- a regular superstar.For reasons that go far beyond basketball, its a perfect fit.I guess I am willing to say it now, Izzo said. You know what? Weve built a culture.IF CULTURE YIELDS an advantage on the floor -- and what coach would argue otherwise -- the Spartans will need to draw on it immediately.Michigan States November schedule is almost masochistic. The Spartans open in Hawaii at the Armed Forces Classic against a top-15 Arizona team. Four days later, they fly to New York, where theyll meet No. 2 Kentucky in the Champions Classic. On Nov. 23, they begin the Battle 4 Atlantis, a field that includes Louisville, Baylor, Wichita State and VCU. And four days after that, theyre in Durham, North Carolina, for the ACC/Big Ten Challenge against loaded preseason title favorite Duke.If that wasnt brutal enough (and it was), MSU will likely take it on without Gavin Schilling and transfer big Ben Carter, both of whom suffered injuries this fall. Of last years significant contributors, only Harris returns, and with a much heavier load on his shoulders.To say Bridges, Langford, Cassius Winston and Nick Ward will be thrown in the deep end is like saying the Iron Islands crown kings with a gentle dip in the surf.To rise harder and stronger, Bridges will have to unleash his talents from the jump. The Spartans staff has a history of maximizing versatile wings with skills and size, and few have arrived in East Lansing with this combination thereof. The 6-foot-7 lefty has the chops to comfortably play the 2, 3 and 4 in States half-court sets. His coach will constantly probe the floor for mismatches he can exploit, and there will be plenty.On defense, Bridges has the size and speed to switch screens and credibly guard all five spots. Izzos teams are renowned for their rebounding, but less so for what those defensive rebounds often produce: attacking secondary breaks. (Everybody tries to make it into this plowhorse thing, that if youre a good rebounding team, youre this big, physical brute, Izzo said. Weve never been BIG big. We rebound ... and then we run.) Which should, in theory, allow Bridges to do stuff like this:Its an exciting prospect, to say the least. Bridges exhibition debut in late October -- 33 points (12-of-14), eight rebounds, four blocks and three assists -- did little to dampen the noise.Still, from the schedule to key injuries to plain old inexperience, plenty of trials lay ahead. And the bar -- next Flintstone -- is already high.AS A SENIOR IN HIGH SCHOOL, even all the way out in Huntington, Bridges organized a collection for water access in his hometown. He feels a responsibility to help the people of Flint in any way he can after the water disaster. People will thank him on Twitter for lending a prominent voice to their anger.I can use that platform, Bridges said. I want to change my city.Said Izzo: The toughness and resiliency of that city, the way people keep getting knocked down and keep bouncing back up, it becomes a part of you.It has become an inextricable part of Izzos program. Bridges could have avoided all of it. He could have shrugged off the power and weight behind his name. He could have been just another talented future NBA draft pick at another elite basketball program. He could have let basketball take him far away from Flint -- out. He could have looked at the pressures inherent in legacy and opted for a different, quieter path.Instead, his ideal setting was right there all along.Because at the end of the day, I couldnt run from it, Bridges said. I knew where I belonged. Nike Air Max 1 Australia . Oyama had six birdies and two bogeys at Kintetsu Kashikojima in the event also sanctioned by the Japan LPGA Tour. "I have been having this neck ache thats been affecting my golf recently," Oyama said. Air Max 97 Womens Australia . This should be celebrated because it will not always be this way. With the amount of money given to players by their clubs these days, it is a wonder that so many of those teams allow the sport to continue to take away many of their assets so they can play for a different team in the middle of their season. http://www.outletairmaxaustralia.com/ . The 15th-ranked Canadian men lost the opening two games of their European tour: 19-15 to No. 17 Georgia and 21-20 to No. Air Max Outlet Australia . At a Manhattan federal court hearing, attorney Jordan Siev said his law office has gotten more evidence nearly every day to support its lawsuit accusing MLB and Selig of going on a "witch hunt" to ruin Rodriguezs reputation and career. He said the defendants went "way over the line. Air Max Deluxe Australia . On Mar. 16, coming off a "fight of the year" performance at UFC 154 the previous November, St-Pierre faced Nick Diaz at UFC 158 in what would be his eighth defence of the welterweight title. Using his superior athleticism, St-Pierre cruised to a five round, unanimous decision victory setting up a much-anticipated title defence against number one contender Johny Hendricks. If Andy Murray is hoping to avoid becoming involved in politics -- hes not going to be divulging whether he voted for Brexit -- his coach Ivan Lendls views are on the record. The Wimbledon Diary has seen messages that Lendl exchanged with President George Bush Senior, with the correspondence confirming that the former Wimbledon runner-up has long been a Republican voter.Some of the messages were in 1992, at a time when Lendls playing career was coming to an end and when Bush was running for re-election to the White House, a contest that he would lose to Bill Clinton. Archived in the George Bush Presidential Library is a handwritten note that Lendl sent, which reads: Dear Mr President, Samantha [Lendls wife] and I wanted to take a moment to wish you the best of luck during this years presidential campaign. Its my first chance to vote and of course Im voting for you and the Republican Party.Bush replied: The polls stink, but I remain confident of victory. Give Samantha a hug. I still follow your tennis actions closely.Tattoo parlour philosophyLooking for some philosophical insights? Need some life guidance? Then why not come to Wimbledon and read the players tattoos? You could start with Britains Daniel Evans, who will play Roger Federer in the third round, and who has these words inked on his skin: Every saint has a past, every sinner has a future.Or perhaps you prefer the thoughts in Svetlana Kuznetsovas tattoo: Pain doesnt kill me - I kill the pain. Borna Coric, a young Croatian, would like you to know -- for its there to all to see on his bicep -- that, theres nothing worrse in this life than being ordinary.ddddddddddddlearly, Stan Wawrinkas approach to tennis, and to life, is a little different, as he has this Samuel Beckett quote tattooed on his arm: Ever tried. Ever failed. No Matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better. Janko Tipsarevic, meanwhile, has opted for a line from Dostoyevskys The Idiot: Beauty will save the world.Touts turn the air blue as they haggle over pitchNever mind the rivalries on the grass; theres no more intense competition in this part of London than that between the ticket touts. Tennis fans coming out of Southfields station, which is the closest London Underground stop to the All England Club, were greeted by a group of touts shouting and swearing at each other in a dispute over who could work the prime piece of pavement opposite the exit. John McEnroe would have blushed at some of the language they were using.John Lloyds Trump cardLendls friendship with Bush isnt the only strong link between tennis and the Republican Party. John Lloyd, a former Australian Open singles finalist and the ex-husband of ESPN analyst Chris Evert, is on good terms with Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential candidate. Lloyd plays golf at Trumps course in Florida. And the Wimbledon Diary has learned that the billionaire introduces the Briton to others in the clubhouse as the great John Lloyd, a winner of three Grand Slam titles.What The Donald doesnt say is that those were mixed doubles titles. ' ' '