Connect with us

NIL

'A moving target'

Cam Ward, the frontrunner to be the No. 1 pick by the Tennessee Titans in the 2025 NFL draft on April 24, attended three schools over the course of his five-year college career. In another era – one without college athletes maintaining the ability to earn money based on their name, image and likeness and […]

Published

on

'A moving target'


Cam Ward, the frontrunner to be the No. 1 pick by the Tennessee Titans in the 2025 NFL draft on April 24, attended three schools over the course of his five-year college career. In another era – one without college athletes maintaining the ability to earn money based on their name, image and likeness and the transfer portal – the quarterback’s journey from Incarnate Word to Washington State and, ultimately, Miami (Florida) would have been highly unlikely, if not impossible. 

Instead, the new rules are the biggest driver of why Ward will likely hear his name called first by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell next week. For executives, coaches and scouts throughout the league, it’s a new reality. One that’s constantly changing and evolving – the Nico Iamaleava saga at Tennessee serving as the latest example of the uncharted territory college football and its participants find themselves occupying. And there are pros and cons to it all.

“The McShay Show,” told USA TODAY Sports. 

Compared to decades prior and broadly speaking, rookies now enter the league more experienced. Transferring and earning money matures them.

The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

McShay thought back to the advice former NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer imparted upon him during the year they spent as teammates at ESPN. 

“The hardest part of evaluating is trying to predict what a human being will do with more money, fame and free time than he’s ever had before,” Schottenheimer told McShay. 

‘Too many hands in the pocket’

Schottenheimer’s words still resonate in the league now.

McShay said he had pages of reports from talking to general managers and scouts about players with “too many hands in the pocket” and other external factors that come with money. Maturity concerns are easier to spot, if the proper research is done, once money is involved. It’s up to each pro organization to contextualize each transfer. 

per NBC Sports. Nineteen of the 37 players drafted in the seventh round in 2024, for example, played for multiple schools, according to research from The Athletic. In 2019, one player fell into that category. 

Figuring out the path has fallen onto the Falcons’ scouting department, Morris said.  

“You (transferred) back in the day, it was because of some over-the-top reason,” he said. “Now it’s a little bit more normal.” 

A player can make more on a one-year NIL deal than a late-round pick or undrafted free agent. That’s led to an increase in the number of players available to be drafted who are 22 to 25-years-old, Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst said at the combine. 

Draft analysis Todd McShay believes the college transfer portal and NIL process can mature players.

“I think a lot of that has to do with guys that wouldn’t come out in the last couple drafts and having the opportunity to go back and make money and stay in,” Gutekunst said. “We’re seeing the effects of it, but it’s a moving target right now with the landscape of college football. I give our staff a lot of credit for really thinking outside the box of how we attack. It’s an immense challenge.”

Carolina Panthers head coach Dave Canales opted to not refer to the shifting dynamics as “a challenge,” rather an opportunity to find information from multiple sources. 

“Do their stories corroborate or was he one guy here and then somebody different?” Canales said. “I think you have more eyes on these players, which does help us evaluate the character and kind of go into those things. I understand players that have opportunities, financially, to go from one school to the next, that makes sense. They don’t know how long their careers are, so all these things kind of help us to be able to evaluate them.” 

One hurdle is evaluating a player as he transitions from one scheme to another over the course of a calendar year. But that’s just another data point.

“It’s the onboarding process that we have to be really detailed about and make sure that we’re vetting the right players, right? Why did they move? Why were they going from place to place?” Coen said. “A lot of guys are just trying to climb and go get better for themselves.” 

Area scouts vital in NIL, transfer portal era

The job has changed the most for area scouts, the members of the scouting department who oversee a particular area of the country. 

“I would say for the area scouts it’s probably the hardest,” Titans head coach Brian Callahan said. “In years past, before all these guys transferred, you’d have two, three, four years of information-gathering on a player if you’re an area scout. Let’s say you’re the Southwest area scout and you’re building four years’ worth of a profile on a player. Well, now these guys transfer – usually at least once; sometimes twice – and now there (are) gaps in the information.”

College programs are establishing their own versions of front offices and doing the first line of evaluating as players move up from lesser conferences or even Division II and Division III. A player such as NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Jared Verse, who ended his career at Florida State, doesn’t stay at Albany for his entire college career anymore. 

On the flipside, not as many underclassmen enter the draft now. What incentive would a mid-round quarterback have to try his hand in the NFL when he could play at a more visible school and make more money if he hasn’t yet exhausted his eligibility? McShay estimates that the number of underclassmen taken in this draft will range from 55-65 rather than the usual 90-110.

McShay has friends who have been area scouts for nearly two decades. At a given Power 4 school – South Carolina, for example – there would typically be 12-14 players to write reports about. Some were underclassmen. A few probably weren’t going to pan out, but it was important to start the research early. Now that number is closer to 30. 

“The volume at these schools is wild,” McShay said. “Now, for those (scouts), they don’t get paid enough compared to what everybody else is getting paid. It’s just unbelievable, the amount of detail, work and background checks and stuff.”

NIL

UConn’s Alex Karaban set to return for senior year: ‘My heart remains in Storrs’

John Fanta College Basketball Broadcaster and Reporter Two-time national champion Alex Karaban wants one more shot at reaching the mountaintop in Storrs.  The UConn star announced Tuesday morning that he is running it back for his senior season, a rare situation in modern-day college basketball for a player to stay at his school for all […]

Published

on


Two-time national champion Alex Karaban wants one more shot at reaching the mountaintop in Storrs. 

The UConn star announced Tuesday morning that he is running it back for his senior season, a rare situation in modern-day college basketball for a player to stay at his school for all four years of his career. 

Connecticut head coach Dan Hurley has always said Karaban is the perfect fit for his program, so if there was a guy to make this move, the 6-foot-8 Massachusetts native is the poster boy for it. Averaging 14.3 points, 5.3 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game this past year, Karaban earned second-team All-Big East honors. This return is a sign of the benefits of NIL, with Karaban being able to earn seven figures during his senior year of college, as opposed to going the pro route where he would likely be in the G League next season. 

This is massive news for UConn, which will be a top-10 team in my FOX Sports Preseason Top 25 rankings. The Huskies return Solo Ball, Tarris Reed and Jaylen Stewart, while also ushering in the nation’s ninth-ranked recruiting class, headlined by Georgia transfer Silas Demary and five-star guard Braylon Mullins. 

Karaban will look to capitalize on some unfinished business after the Huskies fell in the first weekend of this past year’s NCAA Tournament and were knocked out in the Big East Tournament semifinals.

“I pride myself on accepting challenges and holding myself to the highest standard,” Karaban said in a social media post. “Last year, we didn’t achieve what we set out to, and I am not running from a chance to make that right. After deliberating the last few weeks with my coaches and family about my future, I’ve realized that my heart remains in Storrs, and I have unfinished business to chase another national championship with my brothers.”  

Hurley also announced the addition of former Villanova interim head coach and assistant Mike Nardi to his staff. Nardi, who was a four-year starter at Villanova from 2003-07, spent the last decade on the Main Line and was a part of Jay Wright’s dynasty with national championships in 2016 and 2018. After Kevin Willard did not retain Nardi, who served as interim after Kyle Neptune was fired and led Villanova to the College Basketball Crown semifinals, Nardi was looking for a new spot. The timing worked perfectly with UConn legend Tom Moore moving to the general manager chair in Storrs, opening the door for Hurley to hire a top-tier assistant who adds to Connecticut’s championship pedigree. 

The bricks are being laid in Storrs for a reload in 2025-26 and UConn looks more than poised to go at St. John’s for the top spot in the Big East. Expect that rivalry to only keep intensifying next season.

John Fanta is a national college basketball broadcaster and writer for FOX Sports. He covers the sport in a variety of capacities, from calling games on FS1 to serving as lead host on the BIG EAST Digital Network to providing commentary on The Field of 68 Media Network. Follow him at @John_Fanta.

Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!

FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience

College Basketball

UConn Huskies

Alex Karaban


Get more from College Basketball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more






Link

Continue Reading

NIL

NBA Draft Early Entrants Drop Amid NIL Boom and End of COVID Waivers

Today, the NBA released its official list of early entrants to the draft — players who still have collegiate eligibility but are testing the waters of professional basketball. The numbers confirm what many have suspected: NIL deals have changed the calculus for top college players. Instead of chasing second-round draft spots and two-way contracts, many […]

Published

on


Today, the NBA released its official list of early entrants to the draft — players who still have collegiate eligibility but are testing the waters of professional basketball. The numbers confirm what many have suspected: NIL deals have changed the calculus for top college players. Instead of chasing second-round draft spots and two-way contracts, many college stars have decided to return to campus and cash in on a hot, top-heavy player compensation market.

Only 106 athletes filed as early entrants this year — the lowest number since 2015. This year’s class is a dramatic reduction from last year’s 174 early entrants. However, there is crucial context to interpreting this data.

While the decrease in early entrants follows the longstanding trend of bucking professional opportunities for NIL, COVID waivers that granted every athlete who played in the 2020-21 season an extra year of eligibility have boosted early entrant numbers over the last several years. 

Last year, 55 of the 174 early entrants held an extra year of NCAA eligibility stemming from the waiver-eligible season. This year, that number has plummeted. Just five early entrants played in the NCAA during the 2020–21 season, indicating that college basketball is aging out of the COVID waiver era.  

Last summer, I researched how this was already reshaping NBA draft trends. Here’s a graphic showing the impact of COVID eligibility on early entrant rates:

Again, COVID waivers are only one factor in declining early entrant rates. With several concepts of professionalization making their way to collegiate basketball, athletes are earning more than ever, and depending on your draft positioning, some players stand to earn more in college than the NBA. 

For athletes who are certain to end up as first-round draft picks, it is likely wise to accept the opportunity to play in the NBA. Even pick number 30 in the NBA draft receives a fully guaranteed two-year contract with compensation roughly equal to or beyond the highest NIL compensation figures. 

In the 2025 NBA draft class, pick 14 will earn over $10 million in guaranteed salary over his first two seasons. For many, staying in college can also mean improving one’s future draft stock. The difference in salary between pick number 20 and pick number 4 in this year’s draft comes out to $13 million in guaranteed money over two years. 

With a lower opportunity cost of playing in the new landscape of NCAA basketball, this is a tempting offer even for some first-round picks who want to bet on themselves. Of course, regression and injury in college make this a risky proposition.

Leaving college without exhausting all NCAA eligibility also allows NBA players to earn extensions and get off the NBA rookie scale quicker, increasing their earning power in the league at a younger age. 

The decision to leave early for the draft looks very different for players projected in the second round. Unlike first-round picks, second-rounders are not entitled to guaranteed contracts, and the financial gap between what they’re likely to earn in the NBA and what they could command in college is substantial. For many, staying in school offers more security, more money, and a clearer path forward than navigating the uncertainty of a non-guaranteed NBA deal.

While the rookie minimum salary is $1.27 million, most second-rounders don’t receive fully guaranteed contracts, and many end up on two-way deals worth just $636,435.These figures likely short-change early entrants compared to what they could make on the open college market.

Last year, Coleman Hawkins (Kansas State) and Great Osobor (Washington) broke records by inking deals reported at $2,000,000 to compete for their respective institutions. Now, in light of presumptive institutional revenue sharing and a competitive transfer market, those numbers are becoming more and more common – most recently, reigning Mountain West player of the year Donovan Dent was reported to have signed a $3,000,000 deal as part of his transfer from New Mexico to UCLA. 

Early draft entrants are not steadfast in leaving college; many players are either committed to a school for next season or exploring opportunities in the transfer portal. Many of the 106 early entrants will likely withdraw before the NCAA’s May 28 deadline to retain collegiate eligibility. 

Two things are certain: the average NBA draft pick will keep getting older — and the talent in college basketball will only get better.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

How Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes sees transfer portal, NIL

Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes nearly shuddered. The question posed during the Volunteers’ annual Big Orange Caravan stop in Memphis on April 29 — this year at the Memphis Botanic Garden — was hypothetical in this case. How would you handle rebuilding a roster almost from scratch, given the current climate of college athletics, where […]

Published

on


Tennessee basketball coach Rick Barnes nearly shuddered.

The question posed during the Volunteers’ annual Big Orange Caravan stop in Memphis on April 29 — this year at the Memphis Botanic Garden — was hypothetical in this case.

How would you handle rebuilding a roster almost from scratch, given the current climate of college athletics, where the number of players in the transfer portal tops several thousand each year, and the amount of money being paid to many of those same players is several hundred thousand dollars — in some cases, millions?

The mere thought of having to do it, especially now at the height of the NIL era and at the dawn of the revenue-sharing era — nearly gave Barnes the chills.

“I don’t know what it would feel like to have to put together a 12-man roster right now with the numbers that are being thrown around,” he said.

But it is a stark reality for many people in his position, including Penny Hardaway. The eighth-year Memphis basketball coach might have just one player (Dante Harris) back from the 2024-25 season.

Part of that depends on what All-American guard PJ Haggerty decides to do. He entered the transfer portal recently and is reportedly seeking at least $4 million to play somewhere next season. Another part of it depends on whether the NCAA will grant all-conference big man Dain Dainja’s waiver request, which was recently submitted, multiple sources told The Commercial Appeal on April 29.

If neither Haggerty nor Dainja are back, though, Hardaway would be living what Barnes desperately hopes he’ll never have to. It’s a situation he and his program work hard to avoid. He credits his coaching staff for scouting the right players, not only from an athletic standpoint, but also a personal fit.

Barnes is also a firm believer in setting and sticking to a strict standard.

“We have a limit we’ll go to,” he said in reference to how much money Tennessee basketball will spend on a player.

Most often, Barnes never has to find out what would happen if his team and a prospective Volunteers player can’t come to an agreement. But it has happened, he admits. Recently, as a matter of fact.

“It’s happened this year,” he said. “We’ve been involved with guys that truly wanted to go to the University of Tennessee, but they were looking for more money than we were able to provide.

“We know how far we’re willing to go with each prospect and that’s the cutoff. If someone else offers them more, we would say, ‘Hey, good luck. We just can’t get there.’ I’d like to think we’d never put ourselves in a desperate situation, to where we feel we have to overspend in areas that we shouldn’t.”

What Rick Barnes said about UT-Memphis basketball series

The Tigers and Vols have not met in men’s basketball since December 2020.

It was the second game of a three-game agreement. The first was played at FedExForum in 2019, while the second was in Knoxville. Tennessee won the first game, Memphis the second.

The rubber match was set for 2021 in Nashville, but it was called off prior to tip-off because of positive COVID-19 tests within the Memphis program.

Barnes has not minced words when he has said he does not plan to schedule Memphis in the foreseeable future, and he maintained that stance April 29.

“We haven’t talked about that in a couple years. It’s nowhere being talked about now,” he said. “With the changes, new teams coming into our league (the SEC) — we just came out of playing historically the hardest, best conference ever. So everything we do will be based on where we feel our league is and what we need to do.”

Reach sports writer Jason Munz at jason.munz@commercialappeal.com, follow him @munzly on X, and sign up for the Memphis Basketball Insider text group.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Kansas State basketball lands Andrej Kostic with reported $1M NIL deal

Kansas State basketball coach Jerome Tang on the end of the season Kansas State basketball coach Jerome Tang talks about his team after the season ended with a Big 12 Tournament loss to Baylor. Big 12 Conference MANHATTAN — Kansas State basketball coach Jerome Tang has passed up the transfer portal and gone overseas to […]

Published

on


play

MANHATTAN — Kansas State basketball coach Jerome Tang has passed up the transfer portal and gone overseas to land his latest recruit.

Tang, who had said he intended to go international in recruiting this cycle, delivered by picking up Andrej Kostic, a 6-foot-6 combo guard from Serbia with a reported $1 million NIL deal.

Kostic, 18, currently plays for Dynamic Balkan Bet in the Serbian professional league and leads his team in scoring with 16.4 points per game while shooting 43.2%, including 35.2% from 3-point range while making 75.7% of his free throws. He also averages 3.1 rebounds and 2.9 assists.

Kostic also helped lead the Serbian under-18 team to a silver medal in the 2024 European championship.

Kostic is the fifth player added by the Wildcats during the 2025 recruiting cycle. He joins transfer guards Nate Johnson from Akron, Abdi Bashir from Monmouth, forward Khamari McGriff from North Carolina-Wilmington, and high school recruit Exavier Wilson from Columbia, Missouri.

The Wildcats also added a mid-year transfer forward in Tyreek Smith from Memphis, but he needs a waiver from the NCAA to be eligible next season.

Tang still has work to do to fill his 2025-26 roster after losing starting forwards David N’Guessan and Coleman Hawkins to graduation, along with guards Dug McDaniel, Brendan, and CJ Jones, forwards Macaleab Rich and Baye Falle, and center Ugonna Onyenso to the transfer portal. McDaniel and Hausen both were starters.

Starting guard Max Jones also exhausted his eligibility but is seeking an extra year of eligibility after starting his career at the NCAA Division II level. The Wildcats return only three reserves — forward Taj Manning and guards David Castillo and Mobi Ikegwuruka.

The current roster is very guard-heavy with McGriff, the seldom-used Manning, and possibly Smith as the only frontcourt players. Tang still has at least three spots available, depending on the status of Jones and Smith.

Kansas State basketball roster breakdown

Outgoing transfers

  • Macacleab Rich, sophomore forward
  • Brendan Hausen, junior guard (Iowa)
  • Dug McDaniel, junior guard (Memphis)
  • Ugonna Onyenso, junior center
  • Baye Fall, sophomore forward (Rutgers)
  • CJ Jones, junior guard

Incoming transfers

  • Abdi Bashir, sophomore guard (Monmouth)
  • Khamari McGriff, junior forward (UNC-Wilmington)
  • Nate Johnson, junior guard (Akron)

Incoming freshmen

  • Exavier Wilson, guard, Columbia, Mo.

International recruits

  • Andrej Kostic, guard, Serbia (age 18)

Returning players

  • Taj Manning, sophomore forward
  • Mobi Ikegwuruka, sophomore guard
  • David Castillo, freshman guard

*Starting guard Max Jones and midyear transfer forward Tyreek Smith are seeking waivers from the NCAA for another year of eligibility

Arne Green is based in Salina and covers Kansas State University sports for the Gannett network. He can be reached at agreen@gannett.com or on X (formerly Twitter) at @arnegreen.



Link

Continue Reading

NIL

Why so few college basketball players declared for the 2025 NBA Draft

The National Basketball Association (NBA) announced today that 106 players have filed as early entry candidates for NBA Draft 2025 presented by State Farm, which will be held Wednesday, June 25 (First Round) and Thursday June 26 (Second Round) at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New… pic.twitter.com/e4mr12UrBa — NBA Communications (@NBAPR) April 29, 2025 The 2025 […]

Published

on


The 2025 NBA Draft may look a little bit different than previous years because the college basketball landscape is changing rapidly and dramatically.

Collegiate prospects who fully exhausts their college eligibility and international prospect who turns 22 years old in the calendar year of the draft are considered automatically eligible. But all other prospects had until April 26 at 11:59 p.m. ET to declare as early entry candidates.

There were only 106 names that appeared on this list, which is actually a shockingly low number. For comparison, per ESPN’s Jonathan Givony, that is the lowest total number of initial early entry candidates since 2015. The NBA received as many as 363 candidates just four years ago in 2021.

Among those 106 names, meanwhile, only 73 played college basketball last season.

Then, from that group, those players have until May 28 at 11:59 p.m. ET to withdraw from the draft if they wish to play in the NCAA next season. After the 2025 NBA Draft Combine in Chicago, many of them will ultimately take that opportunity.

From the 73 collegiate players who will at least test the waters of the 2025 NBA Draft, 29 of them (e.g. Darrion Williams, Boogie Fland, RJ Luis, PJ Haggerty) are also in the transfer portal. Even within that group, 19 of those players (e.g. Yaxel Lendeborg, Chad Baker-Mazara, Tayton Conerway, and Silas Demary Jr.) have already made commitments to new schools.

The reality is that many of the best players in college basketball can earn more money on name, image, and likeness deals as collegiate stars than they would have in the first year of their rookie contracts or two-way deals in the pros.

For example, Texas Tech’s J.T. Toppin will reportedly receive more than $4 million from NIL to return to Texas Tech. That is more than whoever becomes the No. 19 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft will receive on his rookie scale deal, and that is higher than where Toppin was projected in most mocks.

Some other notable names who did not appear on the early entry list include Alex Karaban (who will return to UConn) and Ian Jackson (who will transfer from North Carolina to St. John’s).

This is good news for talent evaluators, good news for college basketball fans, good news for NBA pro teams, and good news for college basketball players.

While it might mean a longer journey to the NBA unless you are a bona fide top pick like Cooper Flagg, the current system allows for more development time while still receiving a big paycheck.

Meanwhile, for more prospect coverage, here is our latest NBA mock draft at For The Win.

The best takes and the sharpest bets on all the hoops storylines you need to know. Sign up for our Layup Lines newsletter, hitting your inbox on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.





Link

Continue Reading

NIL

NBA Draft participation down in college NIL, rev sharing era

While Arizona’s Carter Bryant and Jaden Bradley have officially entered the NBA Draft, fewer players are doing so every year. The NBA’s official list of early entrants released Tuesday named just 106 players including Bryant, a projected first-round pick who could leave the Wildcats for good, and Bradley, who is testing the draft for a […]

Published

on


While Arizona’s Carter Bryant and Jaden Bradley have officially entered the NBA Draft, fewer players are doing so every year.

The NBA’s official list of early entrants released Tuesday named just 106 players including Bryant, a projected first-round pick who could leave the Wildcats for good, and Bradley, who is testing the draft for a second straight spring but is expected to return.






Arizona forward Carter Bryant, right, forces his way past Akron forward Amani Lyles and picks up a foul during the second half of their round of 64 game of the men’s NCAA Tournament in Seattle on Friday, March 21, 2025.




In a clear sign that NIL and expected revenue-sharing payments are encouraging college players to stick around, the NBA’s list of early entrants is down from 195 players last spring and 242 in 2023. In 2022, the NBA had 283 early entrants and 353 in 2021, just before NIL became legal in college sports.

This spring, the trend is accelerating as colleges are scrambling to offer players up to seven-figure amounts of combined NIL and revenue-sharing funds before the House settlement is approved, after which the NIL portions may be subject to scrutiny.

People are also reading…

Bryant would receive a guaranteed two-year contract worth at least $5.5 million if he lands in the first round as expected, but the NBA Draft might be less appealing for top players who might slip into the second round or go undrafted.

Second-round contracts are not required to be guaranteed, and the NBA rookie minimum will be about $1.27 million in 2025-26, less than what many top college players are reportedly receiving out of the transfer portal this spring.

Also, players who sign two-year contracts between the NBA and G League will receive just $578,000, while those undrafted players on standard G League or international deals will likely earn even less.

Texas Tech forward JT Toppin, a possible first-round NBA Draft pick, even skipped the draft process entirely to return to the Red Raiders and earn a reported $4 million next season.

NBA Draft analyst Matt Babcock, a former UA walk-on player, wrote that NIL is changing “everything” for top college players with uncertain NBA futures.

“The risks and financial downside of leaving school too early are greater than ever,” he said.

Bradley isn’t expected to leave Arizona because he isn’t a projected draft pick and has signed a revenue-sharing agreement to play for UA next season. As the Wildcats’ starting point guard in 2024-25, Bradley led the Wildcats in assists (3.7) and minutes (34.1) while averaging 12.1 points a game.






Arizona guard Jaden Bradley (0), top, and guard Will Kuykendall (12) hop aboard forward Carter Bryant (9), mugging for the cameras as the team leaves the court after their open practice the day before the face Akron in the round of 64 of the men’s NCAA Tournament in Seattle on March 20, 2025.




Bryant averaged 6.5 points and 4.1 rebounds off the bench, but still attracted considerable NBA attention because of his versatility, potential and a 6-8 frame that is prototypical for an NBA wing player.

“He’s gonna test the NBA Draft, and he’s going to make the best decision for himself,” Lloyd said of Bryant earlier this month.

Martinez heading to High Point

Former Arizona guard Conrad Martinez will continue his college basketball career at High Point.

Both Martinez and High Point posted the news to Instagram last week after Martinez spent three weeks in the transfer portal following his departure from the Wildcats.

“Yessir,” Bradley posted in response.

Martinez played only sparingly in 41 games over two seasons with the Wildcats but will likely receive a much bigger opportunity at High Point, which went 29-6 and reached the NCAA Tournament in 2024-25 while winning the Big South regular-season and tournament titles. Of High Point’s two point guards, Kezza Giffa transferred to USC and Bobby Pettiford ran out of eligibility.






Arizona guard Conrad Martinez drives around Old Dominion forward Caden Diggs during the second half, Nov. 9, 2024, in Tucson.




In 2024-25, Martinez averaged 1.3 points and 0.8 assists for the Wildcats while averaging 5.0 minutes in 22 games. He mostly played in UA’s big wins or when Bradley was in foul trouble, but held his own in an 11-minute appearance at Iowa State on March 1 and during a six-minute stretch of UA’s season-ending loss to Duke in the Sweet 16 on March 27.

Martinez was the fourth international UA recruit to enter the portal after failing to break into the Wildcats’ playing rotation as freshmen or sophomores.

Adama Bal (Santa Clara), Filip Borovicanin (New Mexico and now Xavier) and Martinez all spent two seasons of limited playing time with the Wildcats, while Lithuanian forward Paulius Murauskas left after a one-season audition in Arizona and became the WCC’s Newcomer of the Year in 2024-25 at Saint Mary’s.

Liam Lloyd ties knot

Bryant, Martinez and Bradley were among the many UA players and staffers on hand for the wedding of former UA guard Liam Lloyd on Saturday at the downtown Stillwell House.

Liam, the son of UA coach Tommy Lloyd and likely a Wildcat graduate assistant next season, married Halle Jenkins. The couple had a baby boy, Luka, in June 2024.






Liam Lloyd put Carter Bryant’s post in his Instagram story. 




Other players attending the wedding included Tobe Awaka, Trey Townsend, Anthony Dell’Orso, Emmanuel Stephen, Jackson Cook, Jackson Francois, Grant Weitman, Luke Champion, Will Menaugh and Will Kuykendall.

Lloyd hitting SoCal tour stop

Tommy Lloyd, UA football coach Brent Brennan, AD Desireé Reed-Francois and volleyball coach Rita Stubbs are all scheduled to attend a “Bear Down Takeover” fan event Thursday in Anaheim, Calif., during an Angels-Tigers baseball game.

The UA contingent is expected to gather at Brewery X, on the Angel Stadium Club Level, starting at 5:30 p.m., with first pitch set for 6:38 p.m.

Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @brucepascoe



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending