This is the correct answer.
David Greenwood, Sam Bowie, John Williams, Clifford Allen, Chris Mills, Shawn Kemp, Ed O’Bannon, Jason Kidd, Lamar Odom all great players in their respective classes.
Lloyd Daniels was a generational talent. At the time he was the best high school prospect out of NYC since Lew Alcindor. More sought after than Mullin, Tiny, Bernard King, Albert King, Sid Green, Kenny Smith, Walter Berry, Pearl Washington you name them. Howard Garfinkel at the time said the three best high school prospects he had seen in NYC were Connie Hawkins, Lew Alcindor and Lloyd.
In the 86 LV invitational led the Gauchos over a loaded ARC Mid-Valley program (arguably to top AAU program in the county at the time) with Don McLean, Sean Higgins and Chris Mills in the championship game. Took it to JR Reid who was considered one of the top players in the class of 86 in an infamous battle at 5 star camp, took it to Anthony Jones who was a NBA first round pick and a couple of years older than Lloyd at The Sporting House.
At the prep level he could play four if not all five positions, had very few deficiencies in his game. The only person who could stop Lloyd was Lloyd which was what unfortunately happened.