How to watch 2024 Quincy Shootout, boys high school basketball

Watch live as some of the top high school basketball teams and nation's biggest recruits go head-to-head at the 2024 Quincy Shootout

High school basketball fans will have a chance to watch some of the top teams and best players in the country face off this weekend at the 2024 Quincy Shootout in Quincy, Illinois. 

Scheduled for January 19-20, the 2024 Quincy Shootout will feature 20 teams from nine states, and 12 players ranked in the top 100 of 247sports' national rankings for the classes of 2024 and 2025. 

All but one of the 18 games scheduled for the tournament can be seen live on the Central Illinois Sports YouTube channel for a one-time fee of $9.99. 

States represented at the Quincy Shootout include Illinois, Missouri, Utah, Florida, Pennsylvania, Texas, West Virginia and Nebraska. 

Two of the teams participating — No. 5 Link Academy (MO) and No. 8 Wasatch Academy (UT) — are among the top 10 teams in the nation per the latest SBLive top 25 national basketball rankings.

A majority of games will be held at Quincy High School, but there will also be four games played at Quincy Notre Dame High School, and one game that will take place at Vashon High School in St. Louis, Missouri. 

Here is how you can watch the 2024 Quincy Shootout:

How to watch 2024 Quincy Shootout 

What: Some of the best teams and biggest recruits in the country will be in action at the 2024 Quincy Shootout

When: Friday, January 19 - Saturday, January 20

Where: Quincy High School and Quincy Notre Dame High School in Quincy, Illinois, as well as Vashon High School in St. Louis, Missouri

How to watch the live stream online: You can watch 17 of the 18 games scheduled live on the Central Illinois Sports YouTube channel*

*A one-time fee of $9.99 is required in order to access the live stream

-- Sam Brown | sam@scorebooklive.com | @sblivesports


Published
Sam Brown, SBLive Sports
SAM BROWN, SBLIVE SPORTS

Sam Brown covers high school sports as well as NCAA football and basketball. Sam began his professional career as a high school sports reporter for The Tennessean in Nashville where he covered boys and girls prep sports full-time and helped cover Vanderbilt football, Tennessee Titans football and Nashville Predators hockey. He graduated from Middle Tennessee State University with a double major in journalism and communication studies and currently lives in Seattle with his girlfriend and dog.