I don't think those numbers are true, at all, for the Fab Five. Even before doing research, Howard and Rose only being "top 20s" sounds rather unbelievable (as does Chris freakin' Webber merely being "top 10" -- c'mon, there's basically no way he wasn't at least top-two along with Glenn Robinson). Sure enough, according to this, Webber was No. 1, Howard was No. 3, Rose No. 6, and King No. 9 (http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketball/news?slug=jn-tophoopsclasses052909). Four of the Fab Five (short Ray Jackson) were McDonald's All-Americans. Weber was number one it think. Let me check on the others real quick. Edit ok , wow they had four top 10. How in the hell was Jimmy king a top ten guy? Well, yeah, King certainly seems overrated in retrospect. But Webber was dominant -- he left after two years, before that was commonplace, and was the top pick in the NBA draft. Howard was the fifth pick after his Junior year, then played eighteen years in the NBA. Rose was the thirteenth pick after his Junior year, then played thirteen years in the NBA. Those guys were really, really good. I'm aware they were great, just thought king was closer to Jackson.