NIL
Ranking the Big Ten MBB teams in the transfer portal
The landscape of college sports is forever changing. The transfer portal is now the norm across the country and especially for teams in a power conference like the Big Ten. This is a ranking of how the conference has done in the transfer portal so far: No. 1: Michigan The Wolverines made a big splash, […]


The landscape of college sports is forever changing. The transfer portal is now the norm across the country and especially for teams in a power conference like the Big Ten. This is a ranking of how the conference has done in the transfer portal so far:
No. 1: Michigan
The Wolverines made a big splash, landing the top rated player in the transfer portal in UAB’s Yaxel Lendeborg from UAB. Lendeborg is still going through the NBA Draft process to see if he gets any first round interest, but if he doesn’t (which he hasn’t yet), then he’s going to be the top dog on Michigan. Last season with UAB, Lendeborg averaged 17.7 points and 11.4 rebounds per game and was one of the top players in the country last season. The Wolverines also got three four-star caliber players on top of landing Landeborg: center Aday Mara from UCLA, forward Morez Johnson Jr. from Illinois and guard Elliot Cadeau from UNC. Specifically with Mara, he showed flashes at UCLA and with Dusty May’s coaching, he could be in for a huge breakout season. Michigan is looking better than ever despite some of its own transferring out (guards Tre Donaldson and Justin Pippen as well as forward Sam Walters). Don’t be surprised if the Wolverines go back-to-back with a Big Ten Championship in 2025-2026.
No. 2: USC
I’m gonna start off with talking about who USC is losing in the portal this year. Desmond Claude, in his one and only year as a Trojan, led the team in scoring with 15.8 points and tied for first in assists with 4.2 per game. The other player to average 4.2 assists, Saint Thomas, is also in the portal alongside Claude. Both are currently looking for a new team. USC’s second leading scorer from a season ago, Wesley Yates III, is still playing in the Big Ten, just not for the Trojans. On the other hand, Chad Baker-Mazara from Auburn and Rodney Rice from Maryland were the two big splashes made by USC. Baker-Mazara was the second leading scorer behind Naismith College Player of the Year runner-up Johni Broome as the Tigers made it to the Final Four. Rice was the third leading scorer for the Terps behind Derik Queen and Ja’Kobi Gillespie as they made a run to the Sweet 16. Adding onto this transfer class are Jacob Cofie from Virginia and Gabe Dynes from Youngstown State. USC improved despite losing its top end talent from 2024-2025.
No. 3: Drake..I mean Iowa
Iowa hired former Drake head coach Ben McCollum. With that hire came an influx of former Bulldogs who followed their coach to Iowa City. The Hawkeyes added one of the top players in the portal in Drake’s Bennett Stirtz. The 6-foot-4 guard averaged just over 19 points per game on close to 50/40/80 splits. Also from Drake is four players who saw run in the 2025 NCAA Tournament. This includes Drake’s rebounds leader Cam Manyawu. Iowa also landed Robert Morris’s second leading scorer and top rebounder Alvaro Folgueiras and Kansas State’s sharpshooter Brendan Hausen. The Hawkeyes did say goodbye to Pryce Sandfort, Josh Dix, Owen Freeman, Brock Harding and Ladji Dembele, but Ben McCollum has brought over his players and his culture to reshape Iowa basketball into a tournament team.
No. 4: Indiana
Yes, Malik Reneau, Mackenzie Mgbako, Myles Rice and Bryson Tucker among others are no longer with Indiana, but the Hoosiers got a whole bunch of dogs and look to be stronger entering the 2025-2026 season. Tucker DeVries from West Virginia and Lamar Wilkerson from Sam Houston State headline the transfer class for Indiana. DeVries averaged 14.9 points and 4.9 rebounds while shooting 47.3% from three. He did only play in eight games after an injury ended his season early. Wilkerson averaged 20.5 points for the Bearkats last season (11th in the country) and was one of the best three point shooters in the country, making 109 on 44.5% shooting. Davidson’s Reed Bailey, Elon’s Nick Dorn, Troy’s Tayton Conerway and the North Florida duo of Jasai Miles and Josh Harris also headline this transfer group. Indiana got 10 transfers in and all could easily be playing next season.
No. 5: Washington
After finishing last in the Big Ten this past season, Washington has a chance to finish higher up in the conference next year. The Huskies did lose Mekhi Mason and Tyler Harris to the portal, but they more than makeup for those losses with what they gained. USC’s Wesley Yates III is the highlight of this transfer class. Beyond that, the Huskies landed Quimari Peterson from ETSU, Lathan Sommerville from Rutgers, Bryson Tucker from Indiana and Jacob Ognacevic from Lipscomb. Peterson led ETSU in scoring last season, averaging 19.5 points per game and shooting over 40% from three. Sommerville was the third option on a Rutgers team that included likely top-3 picks in Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper. Tucker is entering his sophomore season and showed flashes at Indiana. Ognacevic was Lipscomb’s leading scorer (20.0) and rebounder (8.0) as the Bisons won the ASUN conference to make the NCAA Tournament.
No. 6: Maryland
Maryland did lose a lot of significant contributors in the transfer portal. The main ones being Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Julian Reese and Rodney Rice. However, with Kevin Willard going to coach at Villanova and the Terps bringing in Buzz Williams from Texas A&M, some of Williams’ players followed him to College Park. Pharrel Payne is the highlight of the former Aggies following Williams, plus three others. Outside of the A&M transfers, Maryland got Elijah Saunders of Virginia, David Coit Jr. of Kansas, Myles Rice of Indiana and Isaiah Watts of Washington State.
No. 7: UCLA
There are both pros and cons to UCLA’s transfer class. Starting with the negatives, the Bruins saw Aday Mara, Sebastian Mack and Dylan Andrews along with a few others. Mara, despite only playing 13 minutes per game, was a game wrecker at times and has insane potential. Mack was the third leading scorer for the Bruins and Andrews led them in assists. Now onto the positives: New Mexico’s Donovan Dent is now playing at UCLA. Dent entered the portal after his former head coach Richard Pitino took the coaching job at Xavier. In each of his three seasons at New Mexico, Dent took massive leaps. In his junior season he averaged 20.4 points per game (12th in the country) and scored 21 points in the Lobos’ Round of 64 victory over seven seed Marquette. The Bruins also got Xavier Booker to come play in Los Angeles. Although Booker struggled at Michigan State, he was a five star recruit out of high school in 2023 and might just need a change of scenery. UCLA also landed UMKC’s Jamar Brown and San Diego’s Steven Jamerson to round out its class.
No. 8: Illinois
Despite some major adds overall this season, the Fighting Illini only got two of those additions from the portal while losing some contributing pieces. The most impactful outgoing transfers were Morez Johnson Jr. and Tre White. Dra Gibbs-Lawhorn, Carey Booth and Keaton Kutcher entered the portal as well. Even with some big blows to the roster from the portal alone, Illinois got two ballers. First is Tomislav Ivisic’s twin brother Zvonimir Ivisic from Arkansas. Zvonimir Ivisic averaged 1.9 blocks per game a season ago and was Arkansas’ fifth leading scorer. The other addition from the portal is California’s Andrej Stojakovic, son of NBA legend Peja Stojakovic. Andrej Stojakovic averaged 17.9 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.2 blocks per game on 40/30/80 shooting splits. If he is anything like his dad though, he can become a lethal three point shooter.
No. 9: Wisconsin
This is specifically transfer portal rankings, not power rankings. That’s why the loss of John Tonje doesn’t matter here. Wisconsin did very well in the portal this season. None of its top six scorers from 2024-2025 entered the transfer portal or have already transferred. The team’s biggest loss transfer wise is Carter Gilmore, who averaged just 3.9 points per game. On the flip side, the Badgers have brought in Andrew Rohde from Virginia. Rohde was the third leading scorer for the Cavaliers and led them in assists with 4.3 per game. Wisconsin also got Nick Boyd. Boyd played his first three seasons at FAU before transferring to San Diego State for the 2024-2025 season. He led the Aztecs in scoring and in assists. The other big get was Austin Rapp from Portland. The first-year was second on his team in scoring and averaged 1.5 blocks per game. The Badgers also landed Braeden Carrington from Tulsa to round out their transfer class.
No. 10: Minnesota
The Golden Gophers lost their top four scorers to the transfer portal. Dawson Garcia entered with the hope of being granted an extra year of eligibility, while Lu’Cye Patterson, Mike Mitchell Jr. and Femi Odukale are all still awaiting new destinations. On the other hand, new head coach Niko Medved, formerly of Colorado State, has enticed the fourth leading scorer for the Rams to come to Minnesota. Jaylen Crocker-Johnson averaged 9.0 points and 4.4 rebounds per game last season under Medved. Also joining the Gophers is Davidson’s three-point specialist Bobby Durkin, Northern Colorado’s Langston Reynolds, California’s BJ Omot and Western Michigan’s Chansey Willis Jr. among others headed to the Twin Cities.
No. 11: Nebraska
The Cornhuskers brought in a lot of new faces from the transfer portal. It’s headlined by Pryce Sandfort from Iowa, Ugnius Jarusevicius from Central Michigan and Kendall Blue from St. Thomas. Sandfort only averaged 8.8 points per game but shot 40.0% from three. Jarusevicius led the Chippewas in scoring (16.2 points per game) and rebounding (7.3 rebounds per game). Blue was St. Thomas’ second leading scorer and its leading rebounder. Nebraska also didn’t lose much. Only two ‘Huskers entered the portal: Nick Janowski and Gavin Griffiths. Both didn’t have much of an impact in 2024-2025 for Nebraska so transfer portal wise, it’s a solid class.
No. 12: Ohio State
In terms of the transfer portal, the highest scorer for Ohio State that entered was Meechie Johnson Jr. who averaged just 9.1 points per game. Aaron Bradshaw and Sean Stewart also did enter which brings this class down a bit, but the Buckeyes got good returns out of the portal. Seven footer Christoph Tilly from Santa Clara averaged 12.5 points and 4.9 rebounds. Josh Ojianwuna from Baylor started in all 23 games he appeared in before going down with an injury. Before that, Ojianwuna averaged 6.4 rebounds while being on the same team as one of the best rebounders in the country in Norchad Omier. The last big get for the Buckeyes was Wright State’s leading scorer, Brandon Noel. Noel averaged 19.0 points per game on 50/35/70 shooting splits.
No. 13: Oregon
The Ducks didn’t lose too many impact pieces in the portal. Brandon Angel is the headliner of the transfer out group for Oregon as he was its fifth leading scorer and third leading rebounder. In terms of what the Ducks brought in, they chose to bet on younger players and upside. Penn State freshman Miles Goodman and Texas sophomore Devon Pryor haven’t played too much in their college careers. Ohio State sophomore Sean Stewart averaged 5.7 points and 5.8 rebounds for the Buckeyes a season ago in 18.4 minutes per game. Elon junior TK Simpkins is the veteran of this transfer class. Simpkins led the Phoenix in scoring on 16.4 points per game.
No. 14: Michigan State
The Spartans lost three players in the transfer portal. Xavier Booker was never able to find a spot in the rotation in East Lansing. The same went for Gehrig Normand. The big loss for Tom Izzo is Tre Holloman. Holloman was the Spartans’ third leading scorer and was second in assists. Coming in for Izzo is FAU’s leading scorer Kaleb Glenn. Glenn averaged 12.6 points for the Owls as they finished the season 18-16. The other transfer is Samford’s leading scorer Trey Fort. Fort averaged 14.6 points on close to 45/40/75 shooting splits.
No. 15: Northwestern
For Northwestern standards, this class is fantastic. The Patriot League’s 2024-2025 Rookie of the Year Max Green comes to NU, bringing a well-rounded skill set as a 6-foot-6 guard. The ‘Cats also brought in USF’s Jayden Reid, a volume three point shooter who can initiate the offense. Lastly, Northwestern added big man Arrinten Page from Cincinnati to try and fill in at the center position. The ‘Cats didn’t lose much to the portal; just Blake Barkley and Luke Hunger entered and are now with different teams. Because this transfer class has been discussed more in-depth on the site compared to the other Big Ten teams, make sure to check out the other Northwestern transfer portal content!
No. 16: Purdue
Purdue didn’t do much in the portal because it didn’t need to. Myles Colvin and Camden Heide were the main losses, but with Braden Smith and Trey Kauffman-Renn both returning, not much really changed for the Boilermakers. They did bring in Oscar Cluff from South Dakota State. Cluff led the Jackrabbits in scoring and rebounding, averaging a double-double and shooting 63.4% from the field. They also landed North Florida’s third leading scorer Liam Murphy. Murphy shot 42.3% from deep on 7.7 attempts per game.
No. 17: Rutgers
Obviously losing Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper to the draft is a big loss for the Scarlet Knights. That doesn’t change the fact that even without including them, they still don’t have a great transfer class compared to the rest of the Big Ten. Rutgers lost its first, second and fifth leading scorer from a season ago (not including Bailey and Harper) with Lathan Sommerville, Jeremiah Williams and Jordan Derkack either committed elsewhere or still waiting in the portal. They did bring in Baye Fall from Kansas State, Tariq Francis from NJIT and Darren Buchanan from George Washington. Fall has only appeared in 13 career games over his two seasons in college. Francis led NJIT in scoring with 19.2 points per game, but the team only won six games. Buchanan had a better year as a freshman than he did at a sophomore, with his scoring average dropping by five points from his first to second season.
No. 18: Penn State
All Penn State did in the portal was bring in forward Josh Reed from Cincinnati. Reed played over 17 minutes per game last season but scored under five points per game. While his shot volume was low, his shooting percentages weren’t that good. With an increase in volume, Reed may end up blossoming for the Nittany Lions. He’ll likely need to do so too as Puff Johnson and Miles Goodman among others are either in the transfer portal or have already committed elsewhere.
NIL
Kansas State infielder Seth Dardar commits to LSU out of transfer portal
LSU is adding a big bat out of the NCAA transfer portal. Kansas State infielder Seth Dardar has committed to the Tigers, he announced on his Twitter account on Sunday evening. Dardar spent just one season with the Wildcats. He hit .326 with 18 doubles, 13 home runs and 45 RBI. He accounted for 39 […]

LSU is adding a big bat out of the NCAA transfer portal. Kansas State infielder Seth Dardar has committed to the Tigers, he announced on his Twitter account on Sunday evening.
Dardar spent just one season with the Wildcats. He hit .326 with 18 doubles, 13 home runs and 45 RBI. He accounted for 39 runs during the season.
“I have decided to come home and live out my dream to play at Louisiana State University!” Dardar wrote. “Thank you to everyone who was a part of my journey that has led me to this position, and thank you Coach Johnson, Coach Jordan, and the rest of the LSU staff for giving me the opportunity to live out this dream. Geaux Tigers!!!”
Before arriving at Kansas State in 2025, Seth Dardar spent three seasons at Columbia. He did not play during the 2024 season due to injury.
During that time, he produced a career slash line of .289/.383/.537. In his sophomore season, he slashed .299/.392/.575 with 11 doubles, one triple and eight home runs while driving in 32 runs. He also scored 32 runs with four stolen bases.
Though he spent only one year at Kansas State, Dardar had nothing but good things to say about the Wildcats on his way out. He penned part of his departure note about Kansas State.
“First and foremost I want to thank Kansas State University and the entire coaching staff for affording me the opportunity to make memories and friendships this year that will last a lifetime,” Seth Dardar wrote. “To the Manhattan community and K-State fan base, thank you for taking me in and making me feel at home. The overwhelming support and love I felt from everyone at Kansas State is something I will cherish forever.”
As things stand, Seth Dardar is set to join one of college baseball’s elite programs. LSU is currently looking to advance to the College World Series again in 2025, needing just one more win over West Virginia in the next two games in the Baton Rouge Super Regional.
LSU won the national title in 2023. That’s certainly something Dardar will be helping the Tigers pursue in 2026.
NIL
Evan Stewart releases statement following summer knee injury
Earlier this week, it was reported that rising-senior Oregon football receiver Evan Stewart would miss most of the 2025 football season, if not all of it due to a summer injury. On Saturday evening, Evan Stewart went to social media to confirm the injury and thank fans for their support. He shared this message on […]

Earlier this week, it was reported that rising-senior Oregon football receiver Evan Stewart would miss most of the 2025 football season, if not all of it due to a summer injury. On Saturday evening, Evan Stewart went to social media to confirm the injury and thank fans for their support. He shared this message on Instagram.
“Thank you for all the well wishes. I’m on the road to recovery. Don’t put a timeline on me. Following God’s Plan! Thank you for the Prayers! – 7,” posted Stewart.
There hasn’t been a confirmation from Oregon that states how long Stewart will be out of action, and there isn’t expected to be one from head coach Dan Lanning till likely August when fall camp opens up.

Following the injury, DuckTerritory.com’s Erik Skopil broke down how the Ducks could get by this upcoming season if they have to play without their expected star receiver.
Little details are currently known of the injury, aside from that it was to his knee. The initial report from College Football Headlines suggested it could cost him the entire season.
With Tez Johnson and Traeshon Holden gone, Stewart acted as the team’s leading returning receiver after catching 48 passes for 613 yards and five touchdowns in 2024. Formerly a 5-star recruit who began his career at Texas A&M, he was entering his senior season with the Ducks and had been expected to be among the team’s top targets this fall.
A lower back injury forced him to miss the final game of the 2024 season, a loss to Ohio State in the College Football Playoffs. He did not participate in April’s spring game either.
With Stewart gone, the Ducks will be forced to rely on a less experienced group of wide receivers. Upperclassmen Gary Bryant Jr. and Justiuis Lowe each have recent starting experience, but the pass game’s success will likely come down to the readiness of wide receivers like true freshman Dakorien Moore, redshirt freshmen Jeremiah McClellan and Dillon Gresham and unproven older players like Kyler Kasper, Jurrion Dickey and Florida State transfer Malik Benson.
NIL
Tony Vitello on House settlement: ‘Dumbest thing I’ve ever been involved in my life’
The long-awaited approval of the $2.8 billion House settlement was passed, allowing universities to pay their players directly. This sweeping change took five years to complete and was largely hung up on roster limitations, among other minor details. Tennessee Volunteers baseball coach Tony Vitello provided a brief statement on the House Settlement’s approval. His response, […]

The long-awaited approval of the $2.8 billion House settlement was passed, allowing universities to pay their players directly. This sweeping change took five years to complete and was largely hung up on roster limitations, among other minor details.
Tennessee Volunteers baseball coach Tony Vitello provided a brief statement on the House Settlement’s approval. His response, directly following Saturday’s 4-3 loss to Arkansas in the Fayetteville Super Regionals, may surprise you.
“Yeah, I don’t have anything specific. Tight game, so we’ll look back and see how I can do a better job,” Vitello said during his opening statement. “I know it was good to get to the park today. That deal last night (House settlement) was the dumbest thing I’ve ever been involved in my life. And I lived at the Lake of the Ozarks one summer. So it was just good to get here and play, get the series underway.”
It’s unclear based on Vitello’s initial vague comments whether he’s referring to his involvement in the matter, it’s prolonged outcome, or the contents of the settlement itself. Either way, it appears he’s glad that it’s over.
The overall response to the settlement has been a positive one, as it ushers in a new era with NIL in college athletics. SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey provided a statement of his own on behalf of the entire conference on Friday.
“The approval of the House settlement agreement represents a significant milestone for the meaningful support of our student-athletes and a pivotal step toward establishing long-term sustainability for college sports, two of the Southeastern Conference’s priorities,” Sankey said in a statement following the settlement. “As the journey to modernize collegiate sports continues, we remain focused on identifying and implementing innovative opportunities for our student-athletes across all sports while maintaining the core values that make collegiate athletics uniquely meaningful.”
The fallout from the approval will see schools be able to share $20.5 million with athletes beginning July 1. Football will receive 75% of the allotted amount, followed by men’s basketball (15%), women’s basketball (5%) and the remainder of the institution’s sports (5%). It’s expected that power conference football programs will have between $13 to $16 million to spend on rosters for the upcoming season.
Moreover, the NCAA will have to pay $2.776 billion in back damages over the next decade to former college athletes who had competed after 2016. The aforementioned roster limits and new NIL clearinghouses were all a part of the settlement as well.
NIL
Kansas Basketball Officially Misses Out on Top-50 Transfer Target
There’s been no shortage of chatter about Kansas’ lack of success this offseason. Seeing a perennial blue blood program fall short on multiple top targets (Darrion Williams, Dame Sarr, among others) is a rare sight in college basketball, although it’s becoming less uncommon with each passing year as NIL has evened out the college landscape. […]

There’s been no shortage of chatter about Kansas’ lack of success this offseason.
Seeing a perennial blue blood program fall short on multiple top targets (Darrion Williams, Dame Sarr, among others) is a rare sight in college basketball, although it’s becoming less uncommon with each passing year as NIL has evened out the college landscape.
Even in early June, well over a month after the transfer portal closed, the Jayhawks had an opportunity to save their offseason with a remaining option in the portal – and a high-quality one at that: USC transfer Desmond Claude.
On Sunday though, Claude officially came off the board, committing to a fellow west coast Big Ten squad in Washington.
Last season, as a junior at USC, Claude averaged 15.8 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 4.2 assists. Tabbed as the 31st transfer in the country by 247 Sports, Claude was the final top-100 player to make his transfer decision.
Back in April, the Jayhawks were heavily linked to the 6-foot-6 guard. Kansas made Claude’s final cut, alongside North Carolina, Virginia, and Florida.
Quickly, the defending national champion Gators became the frontrunner, but after landing highly-touted Princeton transfer Xaivian Lee, coach Todd Golden and his crew backed off in their pursuit of Claude.
Since then, the discussions around Claude’s status had been quiet, but Washington ultimately snuck in to land its second top-50 transfer this offseason, as Claude is set to follow his former USC teammate Wesley Yates III (24th transfer) to Seattle.
While Kansas had appeared to be out of the Claude sweepstakes for a few weeks, his commitment all but ensures the Jayhawks don’t make any additional moves through the portal. The two remaining options for coach Bill Self and his staff: international prospects or 2026 reclasses.
NIL
NIL house ruling impact on Colorado athletics
The House settlement has passed, marking a new era of college athletics. Beginning July 1, the University of Colorado will participate in revenue sharing with all of our student-athletes up to the prescribed cap utilizing Athletic Department funds. »… pic.twitter.com/F7uIw0qxOp — Colorado Buffaloes (@CUBuffs) June 7, 2025 The college athletic landscape drastically changed Friday […]

The college athletic landscape drastically changed Friday evening when a United States district judge approved a house settlement that will allow universities to directly compensate student-athletes for their name, image and likeness (NIL) rights.
To increase parity across college athletics, each school’s total student-athlete compensation will be capped at $20.5 million per year. In a message to Colorado fans, Colorado athletic director Rick George announced that the department’s entire allotment would be used to “remain competitive” in recruiting. He also shared that CU will adopt a “revenue-share budget that is proportional to the revenue that sport generates.”
In short, athletes in high-revenue sports like football and men’s basketball will receive higher payouts than those in non-revenue sports.
The ruling does not affect athletes’ ability to earn money through personal NIL deals. However, those deals will be subject to review by a national clearinghouse.
“For the first time ever, we will be able to share our revenue with student-athletes for their name, image and likeness rights to a cap of $20.5 million,” George said in a video posted to the athletic department X account. “In the next month, we’ll also be announcing some exciting new opportunities for student-athletes’ NIL engagement. This will be an incredible opportunity for businesses to work directly with student-athletes to enhance their brand.”
Colorado is significantly more prepared for the changing era of college athletics, with Deion Sanders leading the football program. Under Sanders, interest in Colorado athletics, beyond just football, has grown as more people attend games, generating revenue. With the new ruling, revenue can be distributed across all athletic programs, allowing student-athletes to be compensated, even if most of the revenue and engagement is driven by football.
Follow Charlie Strella on X, Threads and Instagram.
Contact/Follow us @BuffaloesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Colorado news, notes and opinions.
NIL
Maryland slugger Hollis Porter commits to Texas Tech baseball team
The Texas Tech baseball team on Sunday landed its first commitment this offseason from the NCAA transfer portal, one that might be hard to top for impact. First baseman Hollis Porter, the third-leading home-run hitter this season in what’s now a 17-team Big Ten Conference, pledged to the Red Raiders, according to a report by […]

The Texas Tech baseball team on Sunday landed its first commitment this offseason from the NCAA transfer portal, one that might be hard to top for impact.
First baseman Hollis Porter, the third-leading home-run hitter this season in what’s now a 17-team Big Ten Conference, pledged to the Red Raiders, according to a report by On the Clock | College Baseball and MLB Draft.
With Maryland this past season, Porter batted .303 with 21 homers and 64 RBIs on a team that went 27-29 and 12-18 in conference play. He had a .632 slugging percentage and a .997 on-base-plus-slugging, albeit with some swing and miss. He struck out a team-high 79 times in 231 at-bats.
Porter’s a 6-foot-4, 225-pound left-handed hitter from Moss Point (Miss.) East Central. He’s spent one college season apiece at Mississippi State, where he redshirted in 2023, Pearl River (Miss.) Community College and Maryland. At Pearl River, he hit .399 with 20 homers and 73 RBIs.
Now the Red Raiders might need to hold their breath to hold on to him. Having spent three years in college and about to turn 21, Porter’s eligible for the MLB draft that unfolds July 13-15.
Tech finished 20-33 this season, tying a program record for most losses set by the 1985 team that went 18-33.
The transfer portal window is open from June 2 through July 1. Ten Red Raiders players from this year’s team have their names in the portal, according to announcements by the players themselves or reports by reputable outlets. The most notable include catcher Dylan Maxcey, third baseman Garet Boehm and pitchers J.T. Drake and Zach Erdman.
Porter started all but one game for Maryland this season, and Tech first baseman Robin Villeneuve started all but three games while playing in all but one. Villeneuve, though a senior, has the option to return in 2026. The NCAA, in a December ruling, granted an extra year of eligibility to athletes who started their careers at non-NCAA programs and completed their eligibility this school year.
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