The 2026 Trib HSSN all-star team is filled with guards who are quick, long and can score the basketball. There’s also some big men to do the dirty work on the blocks.
While all of these players can score, they can also defend. Fans probably noticed in the district and state playoffs, defense still wins championships.
Here is a salute to the seven seniors and three juniors who make up the annual Terrific 10 all-star team.
Terrific 10
Mykel Bruce-McCrommon
Gateway
6-6, senior, guard
The slick-scoring guard was a big reason Gateway won the Section 1-5A crown by three games. Bruce-McCrommon averaged 21 points per game with a 54% field goal percentage and a 43% average from 3-point land. He averaged seven rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocks per game for the Gators. Bruce-McCrommon finished with 1,251 points and is getting Division I interest with offers from Iona and Missouri-Kansas.
Drew Cook
South Allegheny
6-1, senior, guard
Hit hard by graduation, 2025 district Class 3A champion South Allegheny struggled at points this season, but the consistent scoring of senior guard Drew Cook helped steady the choppy waters and lead the Gladiators back to the WPIAL title game. In 26 games this season, Cook led District 7 in scoring with 695 points for an average of 26.7 points per game. He finished his career with 2,025 points. Cook is going to Duquesne to play football.
Bobby Fadden
Mohawk
6-2, senior, guard
Bobby Fadden is an athlete for all seasons, but his success this winter on the hardcourt allowed Mohawk to enjoy one of the best regular seasons ever — undefeated Section 1-3A champs and a 24-3 overall record. Fadden averaged 20.7 points per game and scored 560 points this year. He hit 131 shots from the field and connected on 57 3-pointers. From the free throw line, he was 127 of 148 for 86% from the charity stripe. He finished his hoops career with 2,262 points. Fadden has not decided on his future school or which sport, if any, he will play in college.
Jason Fredericks
North Catholic
6-0, senior, guard
Over the last two seasons, Jason Fredericks has been one-half of a backcourt scoring dynamic duo with Jude Rottmann to lead North Catholic to district silver in 2025 and 21 victories this winter. This season, Fredericks averaged 23.4 points per game. He connected on 97 3-point shots and shot 74% from the free-throw line. In a district quarterfinal victory over Elizabeth Forward, he led the way with 30 points. Fredericks will continue his basketball career at Franciscan.
Kedron Gilmore
Neighborhood Academy
5-9, junior, guard
Kedron Gilmore picked up in the scoring department where graduate Courtney Wallace (Yale) left off last season. Both piled up the points and led The Neighborhood Academy to a WPIAL Class A crown and a spot in the PIAA championship game. Gilmore this winter averaged 24 points, six assists and four rebounds per game. He scored 387 points in the regular season, averaging 24.2 ppg to finish in fourth place in scoring in the entire WPIAL.
Amon Hawthorne
Penn Hills
6-3, senior, guard
Hawthorne helped Penn Hills win the Section 2-5A title by three games over Shaler. The senior guard averaged 21.1 points per game, along with 5.2 rebounds, over three steals and three assists per game. Hawthorne shot 47% from the field, 32% on 3-pointers and 76% from the free-throw line. He orchestrated one of the most incredible playoff performances in WPIAL playoff history by scoring 44 points in a quarterfinal loss to Thomas Jefferson, with 30 of those points scored in the fourth quarter.
Enzo Khalil
Central Catholic
6-2, senior, guard
Enzo Khalil helped lead Central Catholic to one of its best seasons ever in winning 24 of 28 games this season, but the Vikings just couldn’t get past Upper St. Clair and New Castle in the postseason. Khalil was 147 of 278 from the field this season, 30 of 100 on 3-pointers and 93 of 168 from the free-throw line for 482 points (17.2 points per game). He had 229 rebounds (8.1 rpg), 55 assists and 70 steals. He finished his career with 1,031 points. Khalil has yet to decide on where he will play in college.
Josh Pratt
Lincoln Park
6-3, senior, guard
A lot changed for Josh Pratt this offseason as he and his younger brother, Jeremiah, transferred from Class 3A Aliquippa to Class 5A Lincoln Park. The one thing not lost in the move was the tremendous scoring touch for the senior guard. In his first year as a Leopard, Josh Pratt averaged 25.5 points, four rebounds, six steals and four assists per game. He shot 40% from 3-point range. Pratt will play his college ball at Columbia in the Ivy League. This is his second straight Trib Terrific 10 appearance.
Ryan Robbins
Upper St. Clair
6-7, junior, center
Ryan Robbins continues to follow in the footsteps of his brother, Tyler (now at Miami, Ohio), in being named to the Trib Terrific 10 all-star team. While Ryan was a contributor off the bench for the 2024 and 2025 WPIAL title runs for Upper St. Clair, he was front and center for a third straight Class 6A championship this winter. He scored 442 points, had 325 rebounds and 67 blocks this season. Robbins plans to play football in college and hopes to make his decision sometime this summer.
Aaron Webb
Indiana
6-8, junior, forward
The play of Aaron Webb was a big part of Indiana finishing four games over .500 and returning back to the district playoffs. Aaron, who’s twin brother Darius is also on the team, averaged 24.1 points, eight rebounds, three assists, 1.5 steals and 1.5 blocks per game. He had two games where he scored over 40 points, including a school- record 49 points in a win over Plum. Webb has received several Division I offers.