2027 four-star point guard Nasir Anderson has received an offer from the Indiana Hoosiers basketball program.
Nasir Anderson officially reported the offer on his X (formerly Twitter) account earlier this week.
Anderson is ranked as the No. 40 player nationally in the 2027 class, the No. 4 player in the state of Georgia according to 247Sports and the No. 9 point guard nationally.
Anderson is ranked the No. 29 overall player in the On3 rankings and the No. 8 point guard in the class.
Anderson plays at Norcross High School in Norcross, Georgia and for Game Elite on the adidas 3SSB circuit for summer league.
This guard is NASTY 😮💨🔥
— SLAM HS Hoops (@SLAM_HS) June 14, 2025
Nasir Anderson put on a show at NBPA Top 100 Camp fresh off winning MVP at the FIBA U16 AmeriCup. @canttstop3 @Top100Camp @TheNBPA pic.twitter.com/uMDAUeDAdf
Coaches are able to directly contact class of 2027 prospects as of June 15, so activity in the rising junior class is starting to increase.
He was named the Most Valuable Player of the 2025 FIBA U16 AmericasCup last week in Mexico, where he averaged 12.3 points, 6.8 assists, and 3.5 steals.
The 6-foot-2 Anderson is averaging 18.5 points, 4.9 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 1.9 steals, shooting 54.8% from the field through eight games in the Adidas 3SSB 16U division with Game Elite.
Aside from Indiana, Anderson also has offers from Cal, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Maryland, Missouri, Kansas, Kansas State, Louisville, Florida, Tennessee, Cincinnati, Virginia Tech, USC, Miami, Mississippi State, Virginia and Florida State.
“Nasir Anderson is a problem at the point of attack,” On3 National Recruiting Analyst Jamie Shaw wrote. “His consistent ability to create advantages at the most dangerous place on the court is very intriguing. He is a strong and physical lead guard who plays with excellent balance. The jump shot will need to continue growing but his explosive presence is difficult to ignore.
“He has a physical and twitchy athletic disposition. He moves well laterally, has long arms, and has great anticipation. On the ball, Anderson played with excellent pace. He has a crafty left-handed handle and was consistently able to put two feet in the paint to collapse a defense.”