North Carolina's frontcourt of the future is set.

Top-20 forward Day'Ron Sharpe committed to the Tar Heels in June 2018. Hours after completing his official visit to Chapel Hill on Sunday, top-15 forward Walker Kessler did the same, Kessler confirmed to 247 Sports.

"Honestly I just felt like I could see myself playing for coach Roy [Williams]," Kessler said. "He’s a great man and the coaching staff was a great coaching staff. The facilities were great, the campus was great."

Sharpe and Kessler give North Carolina its first class with multiple, five-star big men since 2008 (Ed Davis, Tyler Zeller). A 7-foot, 245-pound forward from Fairburn (Ga.) Woodward Academy, Kessler chose the Tar Heels over finalists Auburn, Duke, Michigan, and Gonzaga.

"Kessler is one of the more versatile bigs in the class of 2020," the 247Sports recruiting staff wrote during the July evaluation period, in which it labeled him one of the summer's top performers. "(During the period) Kessler was making threes, scoring in the post, hitting from the mid-range, blocking shots, and grabbing rebounds both inside and out of his area. The entire skill set was on display for Kessler, and every game out he seemed to get better. It was a very productive week for someone who is among the best in the country."

Kessler, who is ranked as the No. 15 overall recruit and the No. 3 center in the 2020 recruiting class according to the 247 Sports Composite, has extensive basketball bloodlines, all of which trace through the Georgia basketball program. His father, Chad, played for the Bulldogs (1984-87), as did his brother, Houston (2012-17). And his late uncle, Alec, was a first-round NBA draft pick out of Georgia in 1990.

North Carolina's pitch to Kessler centered on its inside-out offense, and its preference for a two-big lineup.

"Obviously, North Carolina knows how to use their bigs," Kessler told 247Sports over the summer. "They look for bigs who are versatile and can run the floor, which is basically their offense."

Roy Williams offered a scholarship to Kessler back in January, after watching him post 38 points, 12 rebounds and seven blocks in a Woodward Academy win. "Coach Williams is one of the top five coaches in NCAA college history, and that's enough right there to make anyone want to go there," Kessler said upon getting the offer. But a potential roadblock with UNC surfaced when Kessler began considering a potential reclassification to the 2019 class. Roy Williams made it clear he was only recruiting Kessler for 2020.

"He was saying how ‘we don’t have an offer available for you for 2019 but for 2020, we’d love to have you,’” Kessler said of Williams. “‘So if you decide not to [reclassify] we’re going to keep recruiting you. And if you decide to go [2019] we’re not going to be able to offer you.’"

Kessler's father, Chad, added at the time: "It certainly could be the case that Walker will look at things and say 'hey, I want to go to UNC' and that might be the reason he waits until 2020 ..."

Fast forward nine months and Kessler is indeed a member of UNC's 2020 recruiting class.