Pitt JamFest offered another reminder that Pennsylvania’s next wave has real upside, and two of the more intriguing young names were Riverside guard Nico Antoniacci and Chartiers Valley wing-guard Luca Federico.
There is a difference between a young player having a strong weekend and a young players continuing to demonstrate the kind of traits that make evaluators come back for a second and third look. At Pitt Jam Fest, Nico Antoniacci and Luca Federico felt like two of those names.
Both are part of Pennsylvania’s 2028 class. Both already carry real visibility inside recruiting circles after successful high school seasons. But what makes them especially interesting is not that they are simply producing early this spring. It is that each brings a distinct type of upside to the floor.
Antoniacci gives off the feel of a young guard who can eventually become an offensive catalyst . Federico looks like the kind of bigger perimeter piece whose long-term value could rise quickly because of size, skill, and positional flexibility. Different games. Same conclusion: both look like prospects worth monitoring as Pennsylvania’s rising junior class keeps developing.
Nico Antoniacci is the kind of young guard who can tilt a game with scoring pressure
With Antoniacci, the first thing that stands out is the pressure his game can put on a defense. He is naturally wired to attack scoring windows, whether that means shooting with confidence, pushing pace when space opens, or turning defensive plays into offense.
Plenty of young guards can put points on the board. Fewer show the kind of shot-making belief and offensive instinct that suggest their scoring will continue to matter as the level rises. Antoniacci has some of that. No moment is too big, he wants the ball.
The long-term intrigue with him is easy to see. If the body keeps developing and the playmaking keeps expanding, he has a chance to become more than just a productive young scorer. He can grow into the kind of guard who not only gets buckets, but also dictates tempo, creates advantages, and carries real lead-guard responsibility.
That is where the ceiling discussion becomes interesting. The scoring profile gets attention first. The next question is how much the rest of the game can grow around it.
Luca Federico brings the kind of size-skill combination that always draws eyes
Federico’s appeal starts from a different place. Bigger perimeter players always get evaluated through a different lens, and for good reason. Size changes matchups. Size creates lineup flexibility. Size gives skill more value.
That is what makes Federico so interesting early.
He already looks like a prospect whose game can be discussed from more than one angle. He is not just a wing because he has length, and he is not just a guard because he can operate on the perimeter. That blend is what makes him worth tracking. The more his handle, reads, and overall creation game continue to tighten, the more his projection expands.
Federico’s long-term upside feels tied to becoming a matchup problem. Bigger defenders may have to respect the perimeter skill. Smaller defenders may have trouble with the frame. Prospects who can create those kinds of questions for a defense usually keep rising as they mature physically and mentally.
That is why his profile carries real intrigue. He looks like a player whose role could become broader, not narrower, with time.
Two different evaluations, one strong Pittsburgh storyline
Antoniacci looks like the young scorer who could eventually grow into more on-ball command and offensive control.
Federico looks like the bigger perimeter prospect whose size gives his skill package extra importance.
Neither has to be fully formed right now. That is not the point. The point is that both already show traits that evaluators tend to circle early when they are trying to identify which underclassmen may have staying power as prospects.
Pitt Jam Fest did not just provide another batch of names. For PREP SCENE, it also offered another look at the kind of sophomore talent that may shape the next few years. Antoniacci and Federico both fit that conversation.
Prep Scene Take
Nico Antoniacci looks like a young guard whose ceiling is tied to offensive numbers. The scoring instincts are clear, and if the passing, strength, and command continue to grow, so does his value.
Luca Federico looks like the type of bigger perimeter prospect coaches always keep an eye on. Size and skill on the same frame tend to age well, and Federico already shows the outlines of that kind of upside.
Pennsylvania’s 2028 class is still young, but the early signs are there. Antoniacci and Federico are two more reasons it deserves real attention.
