What began as a Zoom call last week has turned into something more meaningful. Florida State men’s basketball is now set to host UNC Asheville guard Kameron Taylor for his first visit on Sunday, according to Warchant’s Matt LaSerre, moving the Seminoles’ recruitment of the Big South’s leading scorer from the digital realm to the real thing.
In a cycle where closing speed matters enormously, getting a player through the door at Doak Campbell Athletics Center is a critical step, and one that signals genuine momentum for Luke Loucks and his staff.
The visit carries extra weight given the competitive landscape surrounding Taylor’s recruitment. On3 currently ranks Taylor as the No. 78 overall prospect in their transfer portal industry rankings, and the interest in him has been expansive, with a team from nearly every conference in the country pursuing him.
Crucially, Florida State appears to be gaining ground where others are losing it. Taylor had been scheduled to visit Kansas this weekend before canceling and removing the Jayhawks entirely from his list of schools, with no reason given for the change. That development only raises the stakes for programs still in the mix and suggests Taylor is actively filtering his options down to the programs that have made the strongest impressions.
The profile driving all this attention is one that translates clearly to the high-major level. Taylor is a jump-out-of-the-gym athlete who attacks the rim with elite force, shooting 52.9 percent on two-point attempts and drawing 7.0 free-throw attempts per game as a primary point of attack in UNC Asheville’s offense. At 6-foot-7 with the ability to score in multiple ways, rebound, facilitate, and defend, Taylor logged 1.5 stocks per game (steals and blocks combined), adding a defensive dimension to a profile that is overwhelmingly offensive in its upside.
Programs that cannot make a compelling on-campus case, with the NIL infrastructure, developmental track record, and scheme fit to back it up, are unlikely to emerge victorious in this recruitment.
For Florida State, the scheduled visit is the opportunity to make exactly that case. Loucks has spent this offseason building out a roster from scratch, and Taylor — a Charlotte native with three years of eligibility remaining — represents the kind of multi-year investment that can anchor a program’s identity for seasons to come. The Seminoles got the meeting they needed. Now they need to make it count.
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This article originally appeared on FSU Wire: FSU basketball hosting transfer Kameron Taylor on first official visit

