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Husky Transfer Portal Comparisons

Trying to figure out whether a player will pan out in the transfer portal is an incredibly difficult task. Player performance is based so heavily on the system they’re playing in, who their teammates are, and the level of competition they’re facing. All of those things change when they transfer which makes guesswork extremely volatile. […]

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Husky Transfer Portal Comparisons

Trying to figure out whether a player will pan out in the transfer portal is an incredibly difficult task. Player performance is based so heavily on the system they’re playing in, who their teammates are, and the level of competition they’re facing. All of those things change when they transfer which makes guesswork extremely volatile.

Last year I wrote a piece trying to determine the best historical comparisons for Great Osobor. A look at what previous big men transfers have done when moving up a level concluded that Osobor would likely see a drop in his numbers and that similar players in the past went from averaging 17.3 pts and 8.4 reb at their previous stop to 14.7 pts and 6.3 reb after. What actually happened for Osobor? He went from 17.7 pts and 9.0 reb to 14.8 pts and 8.0 reb. Pretty good job on my part if I do say so myself.

With UW once again turning over almost the whole team via the portal, let’s go ahead and do the same exercise for all of UW’s transfers so far. I want to admit up front this got trickier because my internal database I keep has been using Synergy Sports individual points per possession data. They discontinued that service for individual users this year so I don’t have the totals for the UW transfers’ performances this year. But I’ll do the best I can with other data sources.

Today we’ll start with Quimari Peterson and Jacob Ogancevic.

East Tennessee State PG Quimari Peterson- 6’1, 190 lb

For both Peterson and Ognacevic upcoming, I wanted to specifically look at players that came from similar competition levels. Both of them won conference player of the year awards in a conference that got a single auto-bid but Peterson’s road was tougher. According to KenPom, the SoCon was the 13th ranked conference out of 31 total. Over half of the SoCon finished in the top-150 at KenPom (6/10) but there were also 2 teams at 346 or lower who were among the dregs in all of D-1.

I decided to first look at recent players who have transferred up from the SoCon to the power conference level regardless of position. I went through the last 5 years to see any player who finished in the top-5 in KenPom’s Conference PotY algorithm that transferred up (Peterson was #1 for 2025).

There were a total of 7 players during that time who met the criteria. They scored an average of 17.6 points per game while in the SoCon. Peterson was a little above that mark at 19.5 ppg. Those players had an average BPR of +3.35 which is an all-in-one stat from evanmiya.com and they played an average of 1,495 possessions. Although it’s worth noting that 2 of those came in the 2020-21 season which were partially affected by Covid cancellations still which meant there were fewer total possessions available for them.

What happened at their new schools? Their average scoring went down to 7.1 points per game, a BPR of +3.13, and they played an average of 1,034 possessions. That’s a drop to 40% of the scoring, 93% of the BPR, and 69% of the playing time. Unsurprisingly, playing on a more competitive team meant that playing time went down but having better teammates meant scoring dropped even more than minutes as usage rate plummeted. BPR is a rate stat that isn’t dependent on volume so it makes sense it didn’t drop all that much.

If we applied all of that to Peterson it means he would score 7.9 points per game playing 1220 possessions with a BPR of +2.85. If you need some context based on Washington last season that is roughly equivalent to DJ Davis’ scoring totals, Mekhi Mason’s playing time, and somewhere between Zoom Diallo and Great Osobor’s impact while on the court. I think most Husky fans would probably take that right now although I’m sure many would like to see him score more given the 19.5 ppg this year.

There were only three of the players in the sample who could be considered guards. Let’s take a slightly closer look at just them.

  • Malachi Smith went from Chattanooga to Gonzaga after averaging 19.9 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 3.0 assists per game on 40.3% 3-point shooting (the only player in the sample who scored more than Peterson). He excelled with the Bulldogs in Spokane as their 6th man averaging 8.7 points per game while leading the country at 50.6% 3-point shooting.
  • Storm Murphy followed his head coach from Wofford to Virginia Tech after averaging 17.8 points and 4.3 assists per game on 40.4% 3-point shooting. He started every game at PG for Virginia Tech and averaged 8.0 points and 2.9 assists per game on 35.8% 3-point shooting.
  • JP Pegues transferred from Furman to Auburn after averaging 18.4 points and 4.8 assists on 35.8% 3-point shooting. It turned out Pegues couldn’t beat out Auburn’s 5-star freshman PG or their returning starter combo guard and he never made the rotation for a team that was the #1 overall seed in the NCAA tournament this year. He averaged just 1.4 points per game.

That grouping doesn’t really tell us a whole lot. Two of the three went to teams that finished in the top-8 overall at KenPom that year. That’s nice and we’d love to see it become 3 of 4. One of them was the 6th man and the other was technically the backup point guard but never played because Auburn just moved their starting SG to PG whenever their starter left the game. The other started every game but saw his scoring dip a little more than in half and his 3-point shooting go down 5 percentage points.

Put it all together and I think that expecting a stat line in the neighborhood of 9 points and 3 assists per game on 36% 3-point shooting seems like a reasonable expectation for Peterson based purely on the historical comps.

Lipscomb v Arkansas

Photo by Wesley Hitt/Getty Images

Lipscomb F Jacob Ognacevic- 6’8, 220 lb

I wanted to do the same exercise for Ognacevic that we just did for Peterson. There’s only one problem… Only 2 players to finish in the KenPom top-5 of the Atlantic Sun PotY algorithm over the last 5 years have transferred to a power conference team afterwards.

Kind of shocking but it reflects that the ASun is in general a much worse conference than the SoCon and those players just aren’t as valuable to high major teams. This year the ASun was 24th of 31 at KenPom with the difference between it and the SoCon the same as between the SoCon and the Atlantic 10.

Neither of the two players fit the profile of Ognacevic as both are guard/wing types but we’ll go ahead and look at them both anyways. Spoiler alert: they had very different outcomes.

  • Chaz Lanier won the ASun PotY in 2024 at North Florida then transferred to Tennessee after averaging 19.7 points and 4.8 rebounds per game on 43.4% 3-point shooting. It turns out he had absolutely no problem moving several rungs up the ladder. Lanier led Tennessee in scoring this year at 18 points per game on 39.5% 3-point shooting and actually took a higher % of his team’s shots while playing for a #2 seed in perhaps the hardest conference ever. His BPR rose from +0.55 (thanks to a negative defensive rating) to +4.7 at Tennessee.
  • Meanwhile, Jalen Blackmon in 2024 averaged 21.3 points per game on 36.2% 3-point shooting at Stetson before transferring to Miami. The Hurricanes were the worst team in the ACC this year and Blackmon played 18.2 minutes per game before missing the last third of the season due to injury. He averaged 6.9 points per game on 32.4% 3-point shooting. His BPR still rose though from +1.0 to +2.26.

That’s as divergent as it gets. One player became a borderline All-American. The other was a part-time starter on a 7-24 in a very down ACC. Hard to learn much from that.

Let’s try broadening the pool. Instead of looking at exclusively ASun players, we’ll look for PF upperclassmen transferring from a single bid league (could be better or worse competition than the ASun) who were unrated out of high school in the 247 Sports Composite and averaged better than 1.0 points per possession over 450+ possessions on offense. Those are all marks I feel comfortable saying that Ognacevic hit even without the complete Synergy data.

From 2022 through 2024 there were 6 such players. The most notable names of that group are Kevin Obanor (Oral Roberts to Texas Tech) and Grant Nelson (North Dakota State to Alabama).

The average stat line in their last year at their previous school was 17.8 points, 8.0 rebounds, 0.8 blocks on 57.5% eFG and 32.4% 3-point shooting. Pretty close to Ognacevic. That dropped to 11.2 points, 5.4 rebounds, 0.6 blocks on 53.5% eFG and 29.3% 3-point shooting.

This past season Ognacevic was at 20.0 points, 8.0 rebounds, 0.4 blocks, 63.3% eFG and 40.2% 3-point shooting. He was the best 3-point shooter and thus most efficient offensive player in the sample but was the 2nd worst rim protector. If you apply the same percentage reduction to Ogancevic’s numbers then he ends up with the following stat line at UW: 12.6 points, 5.4 rebounds, 0.3 blocks on 58.9% eFG and 36.4% 3-point shooting.

Those are pretty solid numbers that I think Coach Sprinkle would probably sign up for right now. It’s worth noting that everyone involved in any of these samples played at least 18 minutes per game so it is almost a lock that Ognacevic should be considered at worst a heavy rotation player.

*****

We’ll be back later to look at the rest of UW’s transfer pickups which right now also includes rising sophomores G Wesley Yates III from USC and PF/C Lathan Sommerville from Rutgers.

College Sports

West Virginia now has an NIL policy for high school athletes | High School Sports

CHARLESTON —West Virginia high school and middle school athletes are now able to get paid for name, image and likeness deals. The state school board in July approved the first NIL policy for student athletes, and the policy went into effect Friday. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be […]

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CHARLESTON —West Virginia high school and middle school athletes are now able to get paid for name, image and likeness deals.

The state school board in July approved the first NIL policy for student athletes, and the policy went into effect Friday.


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South Carolina’s Rahsul Faison releases NIL apparel while awaiting eligibility decision

As he awaits an eligibility decision from the NCAA, Rahsul Faison released NIL apparel. Through a partnership with Fan Arch, the South Carolina running back launched #FreeSul apparel Tuesday. Faison released T-shirts and sweatshirts on Fan Arch’s website Tuesday. The T-shirts start at $29.99 and sweatshirts are listed at $49.99. Advertisement Faison is still seeking […]

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As he awaits an eligibility decision from the NCAA, Rahsul Faison released NIL apparel. Through a partnership with Fan Arch, the South Carolina running back launched #FreeSul apparel Tuesday.

Faison released T-shirts and sweatshirts on Fan Arch’s website Tuesday. The T-shirts start at $29.99 and sweatshirts are listed at $49.99.

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Faison is still seeking another year of eligibility from the NCAA after applying for a waiver. He’s still waiting on a response, and Shane Beamer said the program still had not heard anything as of Tuesday.

Beamer also confirmed Faison did not practice Sunday, though it was not due to the eligibility situation. Instead, he has a bruised shoulder, which is why he wasn’t on the field.

“I know I’m going to get asked about Rahsul,” Beamer told reporters. “I don’t have an update for you right now. He wasn’t at practice Sunday. That wasn’t because of his situation with the NCAA, he just got hit a little bit on the shoulder in our scrimmage on Saturday night. It’s nothing serious, just a bruise. But he was in the training room or actually getting some extra work done on that Sunday night when you guys were at practice.”

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Beamer also said the hope is Faison and South Carolina get an answer “soon” on the former Utah State running back’s situation. The head coach also said the program is respecting the NCAA’s process.

“He was back out there today in good spirits,” Beamer said. “Hope to get some good news on that soon. But we’ll see. But again, extremely respectful of the NCAA and the job they have. I know they’re analyzing other cases besides Sul’s. And appreciate them taking it under consideration or into consideration and optimistic that we’ll get some good news hopefully soon.”

More on Rahsul Faison’s waiting game

Rahsul Faison spent the last two years at Utah State and put up the best numbers of his career in 2024. He ran for 1,109 yards and eight touchdowns while adding 99 receiving yards. He graduated high school in 2019 and enrolled at Marshall, though he didn’t play a snap with the Thundering Herd. Faison then took online classes at Lackawanna College in 2020, though he didn’t play football.

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In 2021, Faison enrolled at Snow College and didn’t get onto the field until 2022. A year later, he transferred to Utah State, and he’s seeking another year of eligibility in light of Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia’s legal victory last year.

Pavia’s motion for a preliminary injunction was granted in the U.S. District Court of Middle Tennessee in December. The NCAA released guidance in March to its membership, issuing a blanket waiver to former junior college players.



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Three Named to Watch List; Owls Tabbed Third in American

HOUSTON – Rice soccer was selected third in the 2025 American Coaches Preseason Poll, the conference announced Tuesday afternoon. Eileen Albers, Leah Chancey and Lilly Reuscher were all named to the American Watch List. The Owls are coming off a 12-6-2 (5-4-1 American) season, finishing fourth in the conference. Rice reached the AAC Semifinals after defeating […]

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Three Named to Watch List; Owls Tabbed Third in American

HOUSTON – Rice soccer was selected third in the 2025 American Coaches Preseason Poll, the conference announced Tuesday afternoon. Eileen Albers, Leah Chancey and Lilly Reuscher were all named to the American Watch List.
 
The Owls are coming off a 12-6-2 (5-4-1 American) season, finishing fourth in the conference. Rice reached the AAC Semifinals after defeating UAB in the quarterfinal round. Chancey, Reuscher, Kat Lazor, Faith Hutchins and the Rice coaching staff all earned American honors last season.
 
Albers arrives to Rice after two seasons at Radford, where she emerged as one of the top scorers in the Big South Conference. A 2024 All-Big South First Team selection last year, Albers finished the season ranked fourth in goals scored (seven), fourth in points (17) and fifth in shots on goal (22). Her freshman campaign earned her Big South Freshman of the Year, All-Freshman Team and All-Big South First Team honors. Albers finished the 2023 season ranked in the top five in the Big South in goals (six), game-winning goals (three) and shots on goal (19).
 
Chancey returns after being named the AAC Offensive Player of the Year last season, leading the conference in goals (nine), points (22), shot accuracy (.528), shots on goal per game (1.40), second in game-winning goals (4), third in goal per game (.45), and fourth in points per game (1.10). She had a Rice record-breaking and NCAA-leading eight consecutive matches with a goal, and finished the season ranked in the TopDrawerSoccer Top 100 at No. 99, the seventh Rice soccer player to be ranked at the end of the season.
 
Reuscher is coming off an exceptional freshman campaign, where she earned a spot on the American All-Freshman Team. Starting in all 20 games, Reuscher was third on the team in total minutes with 1,753 minutes and played a full 90 minutes 17 times. Reuscher helped lead the defensive line to eight shutouts last season. She finished the season with one assist in Rice’s win over Texas Southern.

2025 American Women’s Soccer Preseason Coaches Poll
 

1 Memphis (6) 96
2 South Florida (4) 94
3 Rice 76
4 East Carolina (1) 64
5 North Texas 63
6 Tulsa 48
7 UAB 47
8 UTSA 38
9 Florida Atlantic 36
10 Charlotte 33
11 Temple 10

 
Note: (First-place votes)
 

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Men’s Ice Hockey Releases 2025-26 Schedule

Story Links BABSON PARK, Mass.— As Babson College men’s ice hockey gets set to compete in a new conference this winter, the Boxer-Rice head men’s ice hockey coach Jamie Rice ’90 officially released his program’s 2025-26 schedule on Tuesday afternoon. The Beavers, a member of the Little East Conference (LEC) for men’s ice hockey in […]

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BABSON PARK, Mass.— As Babson College men’s ice hockey gets set to compete in a new conference this winter, the Boxer-Rice head men’s ice hockey coach Jamie Rice ’90 officially released his program’s 2025-26 schedule on Tuesday afternoon.

The Beavers, a member of the Little East Conference (LEC) for men’s ice hockey in 2025-26, will play 18 games in the new league along with seven non-conference affairs. The inaugural season for LEC men’s hockey will include core institutions Keene State (N.H.), Plymouth State (N.H.), Southern Maine, UMass Boston, UMass Dartmouth, Vermont State Castleton and Western Connecticut as well as affiliate members Babson, New England College and Norwich.

The Green and White drop the puck on the season with a home-and-home non-conference series against Fitchburg State, beginning in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, on October 31 followed by a rematch in Babson Park on November 1. The LEC slate starts with road games at Keene State on November 7 and Western Connecticut on November 8, followed by the first Little East home games vs. Norwich on November 14, Vermont State Castleton on November 15, and Southern Maine on November 22.

Babson will step out of league play for three home games during Thanksgiving week against opponents from the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC), hosting Tufts on November 25, Williams on November 29, and Amherst on November 30. Following a break for final exams and the holidays, the Green and White return to action on January 2-3 at the Oswego State Holiday Classic. The Beavers open the tournament against former NEHC foe Elmira and will face either the host Lakers, who finished last season ranked No. 12 in the Division III national poll, or Williams to conclude the event. 

The Beavers resume conference play with home games against Plymouth State on January 9 and New England College on January 10, followed by road contests at UMass Dartmouth on January 16 and UMass Boston on January 17. The Green and White will return home to host Western Connecticut on January 23 and Keene State on January 24 at the Babson Skating Center.

After three straight road games at Southern Maine on January 31, Vermont State Castleton on February 6 and Norwich on February 7, the final regular season home games are set for UMass Boston on February 13 and UMass Dartmouth on February 14. The regular season slate winds up with road encounters at New England College on February 20 and Plymouth State on February 21.

The LEC Tournament begins with first-round games on February 25, with semifinals match-ups on February 28 and the championship game on March 7. The conference champion receives an automatic berth into the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament.

 



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Isabella Demarco Named to United Soccer Coaches "Forwards to Watch" List

Story Links Cullowhee, N.C. — Anticipation continues to build for the 2025 women’s soccer season as Western Carolina’s Isabella DeMarco was named a “Forward to Watch” by United Soccer Coaches earlier today. DeMarco is the first Southern Conference athlete to be named to the prestigious watch list since its inception in 2022 and is the only […]

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Isabella Demarco Named to United Soccer Coaches "Forwards to Watch" List

Cullowhee, N.C. — Anticipation continues to build for the 2025 women’s soccer season as Western Carolina’s Isabella DeMarco was named a “Forward to Watch” by United Soccer Coaches earlier today. DeMarco is the first Southern Conference athlete to be named to the prestigious watch list since its inception in 2022 and is the only current SoCon representative on the list this season. 
 
The lists are compiled and released by the Division I All-America Committees to promote college soccer leading up to the official start date for the regular season later this month. The lists include United Soccer Coaches All-Americans and All-Region players from 2024 who are scheduled to return for the 2025 season. 
 
DeMarco’s honor comes after a tremendous, first-team All-SoCon season in 2024, where she posted eight goals and nine assists, racking up 25 of WCU’s 152 points. She ranked within the top 50 nationally in shots on goal per game (21st – 2.00), total assists (26th – 9), shot accuracy (41st- .575), and shots per game (50th – 3.48). She ranked inside the top 100 in total points (63rd – 25), points per game (87th – 1.19), and game-winning goals (94th – 3).  
 
The only South Carolina native on either the men’s or women’s watch list, DeMarco is primed for an explosive senior season in Cullowhee. Already one of the best to don the Purple and Gold on the pitch, the standout striker is nearing a handful of school records going into the 2025 campaign, as she is just 32 points, 16 goals, five assists, 42 shots, and 12 shots on goal away from the program record in each of those respective categories.    
 
Isabella DeMarco and the Catamounts will be back in action for the first official match of the 2025 season as they host arch-rivals Appalachian State on August 14,  for a 6:00 p.m. start.  
 
Keep track of everything related to Catamount women’s soccer and WCU Athletics through its social media outlets on Facebook (fb.com/catamountsports), Instagram (@wcu_catamounts), and Twitter (@catamounts, @Catamountsoccer).   

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Local 16-year-old commits to play hockey for Boston College

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. (WCIV) — The future on the frozen pond is moving south. Consider this, the equivalent of a football player going to Alabama or a basketball player to Kansas. It’s not something that happens every day. That makes the move for Mt. Pleasant’s Sophia Garner even more spectacular. It’s a decision as big […]

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The future on the frozen pond is moving south. Consider this, the equivalent of a football player going to Alabama or a basketball player to Kansas. It’s not something that happens every day. That makes the move for Mt. Pleasant’s Sophia Garner even more spectacular.

It’s a decision as big as any she’ll make. As a 16 year old, who has only known a world with social media, it was a dream post to create. But what makes the post stand out, aside from the school listed- “Boston College”, the hometown of the player right below it – “Charleston, SC”.

“It’s so cool. Never see someone with Charleston. Asked me what I wanted to put on it, I definitely put Charleston because it’s awesome being here. Love how it is growing every day,” said Garner.

Home is where the hockey is. She hails from Maryland, she goes to boarding school in Rochester, New York, but when her family moved to Mt. Pleasant three years ago it became the perfect pairing.

“I found incredible coaches. Working with Hunter [Bishop] so much during summer, really improved. So good seeing all these kids on the ice,” she said.

READ MORE | “Hockey fans help raise $3,000 for One80 Place through Stingrays jersey auction proceeds”

She practices among professionals. There are plenty of them in town. Her growth in the game is pretty astounding. But heck, she always stood out burying goals since she was a little kid skating with her two older brothers.

Going into her junior year of high school, seven-time “Frozen Four” squad Boston College came calling.

“I have 2 older brothers who got me into it, for sure. Once I was knocking them around, I wanted to take it to the next level,” she said. “Going to boarding school was a really good move for me. Going to Boston College, knowing I can do that is pretty cool. Great to get it off my chest. Before I go back to school. Getting it off my chest. Know that everything worked out. All my hard work paid off. I can relax, get back to work and focus on getting to the next level.”

Think about it, pretty amazing. A blue blood of college hockey picking up a prized recruit from Charleston, SC. Not something that will ever be common. Or will it?

“It’s important to have the good coaches. Surrounding yourself with kids and people who are better than me,” said Garner. “Beautiful campus. Amazing coaches. Everything, being there, when I stepped on campus I knew it was it. I am so excited. Been a dream. Born, always wanted to go there. Being able to actually do it, I’m so excited.”

The Eagle will always return to nest, as the queen of the Ice Palace.



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