NIL
Jerome Tang, Kansas State Given Poor Grade Mostly Due To NIL Failures
Under normal circumstances, the Kansas State basketball season wasn’t all that bad. The Wildcats finished under .500 for the first time since 2021-22. It was the first losing record during coach Jerome Tang’s tenure. It led to ESPN giving the Wildcats a D grade for the season. But it wasn’t solely because of performance. The […]

Under normal circumstances, the Kansas State basketball season wasn’t all that bad. The Wildcats finished under .500 for the first time since 2021-22. It was the first losing record during coach Jerome Tang’s tenure. It led to ESPN giving the Wildcats a D grade for the season.
But it wasn’t solely because of performance. The Wildcats were among the most scrutinized programs in the country because the amount of money spent in NIL.
“The NIL era has altered the way a team’s potential is analyzed,” the ESPN article read. “The more a team spends, well, the more their fans expect. That’s what happened with Kansas State this past season.”
Big money was spent on transfers Coleman Hawkins, Dug McDaniel and Achor Achor. They were expected to build on the progress made by Tang.
“Coleman Hawkins, a transfer from Illinois, reportedly made $2 million after he picked the Wildcats over a list of other elite programs — and he wasn’t the only highly compensated transfer whom Jerome Tang added,” the ESPN article stated. “But the team missed the mark. Tang and Michigan transfer Dug McDaniel weren’t on the same page, and Samford transfer Achor Achor left the team for personal reasons after playing just seven games.”
Kansas State was among six teams in the Big 12 given D grades, joining Kansas, Arizona State, Utah, Cincinnati and Baylor. Colorado received the only F.
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NIL
Men's college basketball Top 25 reset
Now that the NBA Draft withdrawal deadline for college players has passed and only one unsigned player remains in our top 100 transfers list, most rosters are set for the 2025-26 men’s college basketball season. That means it’s time to hit refresh on my top 25. It’s no longer a dart-throwing exercise. Except for perhaps […]


Now that the NBA Draft withdrawal deadline for college players has passed and only one unsigned player remains in our top 100 transfers list, most rosters are set for the 2025-26 men’s college basketball season.
That means it’s time to hit refresh on my top 25. It’s no longer a dart-throwing exercise. Except for perhaps a few late international signings, this ranking may be nearly identical to the one I submit right before the season.
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In an effort to avoid groupthink, I did not look at any other human rankings, but once I had a top 25 set, I did browse Bart Torvik’s list, which is the one computerized data set that has already published rankings for next season. Out of my top 25 teams, 22 appear in Torvik’s top 25. That made me feel pretty good about this list.
So if you vehemently disagree with me, be prepared to also yell at the computers.
1. Purdue
Projected starters: Braden Smith, Omer Mayer (freshman), Fletcher Loyer, Trey Kaufman-Renn, Oscar Cluff (transfer)
Notable returners: C.J. Cox, Daniel Jacobsen, Gicarri Harris, Raleigh Burgess
Other newcomers: Liam Murphy (transfer), Antione West
One coach told me Omer Mayer was the steal of the international signings, and his performance at the Nike Hoops Summit backed that up. Mayer could start at point guard right now for any team in America. He just happens to be going to the one team that returns the best point guard in college basketball, but I’m convinced he and Braden Smith can coexist. Mayer will allow Smith to get some rest; Purdue’s best team of Smith’s first three years running point had Lance Jones as a secondary handler.
Oscar Cluff and Daniel Jacobsen should help address Purdue’s ’24-25 shortcomings: two-point defense and rebounding. The offense was already championship-level good; if the defense can be top-20ish, the Boilermakers will back up this preseason expectation.
2. Houston
Projected starters: Milos Uzan, Emanuel Sharp, Isiah Harwell (freshman), Chris Cenac Jr. (freshman), Joseph Tugler
Other returners: Mercy Miller, Ramon Walker, Cedric Lath
Other newcomers: Kingston Flemings, Bryce Jackson, Kalifa Sakho (transfer)
Kelvin Sampson has had a freshman in his regular starting lineup in only three of his 11 seasons as Houston’s head coach. He’s never had two. But this is arguably the best freshman class Sampson has ever landed: No. 2 in the country, per 247Sports, behind only Duke. It’s tough to bet against the Coogs because of the three veterans in the starting lineup. Joseph Tugler is a defensive player of the year frontrunner; Emanuel Sharp is one of the nation’s best shooters; Milos Uzan was one of the best point guards in the country down the stretch this spring.
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The Coogs will miss LJ Cryer’s shotmaking, but we say that every year about a departing Houston guard, and someone inevitably fills that void. Uzan’s decision to withdraw from the draft was a stabilizer. If Houston had to rely on a freshman at point guard or try to play Pop Isaacs (now at Texas A&M) away from his natural position, its outlook would be a lot less certain. If the freshmen can adjust quickly, the defensive possibilities for this group are pretty scary.
3. UConn
Projected starters: Silas Demary Jr. (transfer), Solo Ball, Jaylin Stewart, Alex Karaban, Tarris Reed
Notable returners: Jayden Ross
Other newcomers: Malachi Smith (transfer), Braylon Mullins, Darius Adams, Eric Reibe, Jacob Furphy (international), Jacob Ross
In 2022 the Huskies returned two starters and three of the top seven scorers from a team that won 23 games and lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, then landed a 6-foot-5 point guard out of the transfer portal and won a title. The 2025-26 Huskies return two starters and four of the top seven scorers from a team that won 24 games and made the second round of the NCAA Tournament. They landed a 6-foot-5 point guard out of the transfer portal. Will the end result be the same?
It’s not hard to see who slots into each role on the ’22-23 champs. Solo Ball could be the Jordan Hawkins, a gifted shooter ready to become one of the nation’s best shooting guards. Tarris Reed is capable of carrying the offense like Adama Sanogo could. This year’s UConn has a gifted freshman backup center in Eric Reibe; the original model was Donovan Clingan. The ’22-23 champs had Alex Karaban; this team has (an older) Alex Karaban. And then Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr. seems like the ideal fit to play the Tristen Newton role. I’m not sure Jaylin Stewart can match Andre Jackson, and Reibe might be further along offensively but won’t have Clingan’s defensive impact, but you could argue the rest of the cast of characters are equals. Last year was a rebuilding season, but I’m betting this group is ready to win now that the core has had time to marinate.
4. Michigan
Projected starters: Elliot Cadeau (transfer), Nimari Burnett, Yaxel Lendeborg (transfer), Morez Johnson (transfer), Aday Mara (transfer)
Notable returners: LJ Cason, Roddy Gayle, Will Tschetter
Other newcomers: Trey McKenney, Winters Grady, Patrick Liburd
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Michigan was really good defensively last year and has a chance to be elite after the work Dusty May did in the portal. Per CBB Analytics, the former teams of the three bigs Michigan added were all significantly better with them on the floor last season: Aday Mara (UCLA was 7.6 points per 100 possessions better), Morez Johnson (Illinois, 11 points per 100 possessions better) and Yaxel Lendeborg (UAB, 6.2 points per 100 possessions better). Mara would have had the highest block percentage in the country had he played enough to qualify for the KenPom.com leaderboard. It’s going to be difficult to score in the paint with so much positional size and Mara protecting the basket.
The stat sheet-stuffing Lendeborg is versatile enough for Michigan to play the three bigs together. Shooting will be the biggest concern. The Wolverines shot just 33.2 percent from deep last season and replaced one of their best shooters (Tre Donaldson) with a point guard (Elliot Cadeau) whom opposing defenses mostly ignore beyond the arc, but freshman Trey McKenney should help. He’s one of the most game-ready freshman guards in the country. Cadeau’s passing should also help an offense that struggled with turnovers. May has depth at every spot, experience and lineup versatility that should allow the Wolverines to match up with anybody.
5. Florida
Projected starters: Boogie Fland (transfer), Xaivian Lee (transfer), Thomas Haugh, Alex Condon, Rueben Chinyelu
Notable returners: Micah Handlogten, Urban Klavzar
Other newcomers: Alex Lloyd, CJ Ingram, AJ Brown (transfer)
Big is back: Last season’s best teams had positional size and elite paint protection. Florida could play a giant lineup that features Thomas Haugh (6-9), Alex Condon (6-11) and Rueben Chinyelu (6-10) up front. Those three played together only three possessions last season, per CBB Analytics, but it’ll be hard to justify bringing one of them off the bench, considering Haugh’s performance in the NCAA Tournament and the inexperience of the other wing options. That big lineup could also help mask some defensive limitations of Boogie Fland and Xaivian Lee.
Florida’s up-tempo style should help Fland prove he can be a more efficient player than he was under John Calipari. The Gators will contend for another title if Fland and Lee are productive and if Haugh and Condon continue to gain confidence in their playmaking and scoring abilities. They’ll be expected to perform more like stars and take some of the heat off perimeter guys who cannot be expected to replicate the production of Walter Clayton.
6. Louisville
Projected starters: Mikel Brown Jr. (freshman), Ryan Conwell (transfer), Isaac McKneely (transfer), Sananda Fru (international), Kasean Pryor
Notable returners: J’Vonne Hadley, Khani Rooths
Other newcomers: Adrian Wooley (transfer), Mouhamed Camara (international), Vangelis Zougris (international)
Current projections have Aly Khalifa off the roster because the NCAA has ruled he’s run out his five-year eligibility clock, but I’m betting Khalifa is eventually allowed to play, whether it’s through appeal or a future lawsuit. He’s one of the best passing bigs in the country and would be the perfect hub in Pat Kelsey’s offense. Without him, Louisville still has some fun options up front with Kasean Pryor, who was looking like one of Louisville’s best players before his injury last year, and 21-year-old German big Sananda Fru, who should be ready to contribute right away.
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Ryan Conwell was one of the best guards in the Big East last season, Isaac McKneely is a knockdown shooter and capable of scoring some off the bounce, and Adrian Wooley is one of the highest-upside guards in the portal. The Cards also have a five-star point guard in Mikel Brown Jr. This is one of the most talented rosters on paper, and Kelsey proved last year that he can get a bunch of hired guns to blend quickly.
7. BYU
Projected starters: Rob Wright (transfer), Kennard Davis (transfer), Richie Saunders, AJ Dybantsa (freshman), Keba Keita
Notable returners: Dawson Baker, Mihailo Boskovic
Other newcomers: Dominique Diomande (transfer), Xavion Staton, Chamberlain Burgess, Tyler Mrus (transfer), Nate Pickens (transfer)
Not all top-five recruits are created equal. Some years it’s Kevin Durant and Greg Oden. Some years it’s Isaiah Collier and Justin Edwards. This 2025 class — headlined by Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa and Cameron Boozer — is expected to be one of those special classes. BYU is betting big on Dybantsa and has an elite big three with Dybantsa, Rob Wright (one of the best freshman point guards last season at Baylor) and first-team All-Big 12 honoree Richie Saunders. Center Keba Keita gives Wright a good pick-and-roll partner and elevates the defense. Mihailo Boskovic flashed high upside in his first season in the program. Dawson Baker is a solid sixth man who is good enough to start if Southern Illinois transfer guard Kennard Davis struggles with the level change. Anything else BYU gets from newcomers will be gravy.
Kevin Young seemed to find his groove as a college head coach about halfway through his first season. You never know how NBA guys will do at this level, but no one since Fred Hoiberg has made the move this seamlessly.
8. Duke
Projected starters: Caleb Foster, Isaiah Evans, Dame Sarr (international), Cameron Boozer (freshman), Patrick Ngongba
Notable returners: Darren Harris, Maliq Brown
Other newcomers: Cayden Boozer, Nikolas Khamenia, Sebastian Wilkins, Ifeanyl Ufochukwu (transfer)
Cameron Boozer is probably the surest bet of any incoming freshman. My worry for the Blue Devils is at point guard and on the defensive end. Duke was 19.3 points per 100 possessions worse with Caleb Foster on the floor last season, per CBB Analytics. Last year, guards Kon Knueppel and Sion James were so physical they could switch onto anyone. That won’t be the case with Isaiah Evans or Dame Sarr, although Sarr has the length and instincts to be a high-level defender. Cooper Flagg and Khaman Maluach could clean up a lot of mistakes inside. Boozer should be a solid defender, but he’s nowhere close to those two as a rim protector, and neither are Maliq Brown or Patrick Ngongba.
Jon Scheyer should be able to figure out how to make the offense work around Boozer. Sarr has lottery-level upside. Foster and Evans are the players who probably control the team’s floor and ceiling. Foster flopped in his first chance to be the starting point guard, and Cayden Boozer would be the backup plan.
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Evans had a de facto warmup season this past year, when anything he provided was gravy. Maybe he turns into a star. Maybe he’s just a streaky shooter and not much more. The inexperience across the board is worrisome, but Duke’s bet on talent usually works out.
9. Kentucky
Projected starters: Jaland Lowe (transfer) Denzel Aberdeen (transfer), Otega Oweh, Andrija Jelavic (international), Jayden Quaintance (transfer)
Notable returners: Brandon Garrison, Collin Chandler, Trent Noah
Other newcomers: Mouhamed Dioubate (transfer), Kam Williams (transfer), Jasper Johnson, Malachi Moreno, Reece Potter (transfer), Braydon Hawthorne
This roster does not have the shooting of Mark Pope’s first Kentucky team, but it should be better defensively and have more playmaking on the perimeter. Pope showed in Year 1 that he can microwave chemistry. He’s also giving himself a ton of lineup options. Not only will there be position battles for starting jobs, but also Kentucky will have some talented players who struggle to even make the rotation.
I’m most intrigued by the frontcourt. Pope likes his bigs to be the playmaking hubs of his offense, and Andrija Jelavic, Mouhamed Dioubate and Jayden Quaintance are all intriguing options, though I’m not sure any of them can fully replace Amari Williams. Jelavic was a double-digit scorer for his professional club overseas, and Quaintance is considered a lottery-level prospect. He’ll have to beat out Brandon Garrison after recovering from a torn ACL.
You know what you’re going to get out of Otega Oweh and Florida transfer Denzel Aberdeen, who would have been a starter on most SEC teams last year. Pitt transfer Jaland Lowe is more of a true point guard than Lamont Butler, but he goes through spurts of inefficiency. If Lowe can be an all-league-caliber guard and one or two of the bigs can produce consistently, this could be a title contender.
10. Auburn
Projected starters: Tahaad Pettiford, Elyjah Freeman (transfer), Keyshawn Hall (transfer), Filip Jovic (Auburn), KeShawn Murphy (transfer)
Other newcomers: Kevin Overton (transfer), Abdul Bashir (juco transfer), Emeka Opurum (juco transfer), Sebastian Williams-Adams, Kaden Magwood, Simon Walker
Pettiford performed so well at the NBA Draft combine that it’s a little surprising he’s returning to school. And I like what Bruce Pearl did in the portal. He got a proven scorer in Keyshawn Hall. He got the perfect energy/defensive big man in KeShawn Murphy, who has already shown he can be a winning player in the SEC. Serbian big man Filip Jovic comes from the same pro league that produced Tomislav Ivisic and put up better scoring numbers. Elyjah Freeman is a high upside swing who comes from Division II but was on the radar of NBA folks at Lincoln Memorial University. Texas Tech transfer Kevin Overton is also a starter-level player, and Abdul Bashir, one of the top juco recruits in the country, is another upside swing.
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Pettiford could be in for a usage increase that makes him a National Player of the Year candidate, and I’d bet on at least two of the other additions being consistent scorers. Defense is the concern, but Murphy should help solidify that end, and three of Pearl’s last four teams finished in the top 10 of adjusted defensive efficiency.
11. Illinois
Projected starters: Mihailo Petrovic (international), Kylan Boswell, Andrej Stojakovic (transfer), David Mirkovic (international), Tomislav Ivisic
Notable returners: Ben Humrichous, Ty Rodgers, Jake Davis
Other newcomers: Zvonimir Ivisic (transfer), Brandon Lee, Keaton Wagler
I cannot wait to see how the Balkan Illini come together. Head coach Brad Underwood decided a year ago to put most of his money toward international recruiting instead of top-line high schoolers or transfers, which gave him a head start with some of the top European prospects coming over this year. The headliner is Mihailo Petrovic, a 22-year-old point guard who was an MVP candidate in the Adriatic League, averaging 14.2 points and 7.3 assists playing against professionals. It’s the same league where the Ivisic brothers played before coming to the U.S., and Underwood went there to get likely starting power forward David Mirkovic as well. Andrej Stojakovic never played in the Adriatic League, but his dad, Peja, is from Croatia. Andrej averaged 17.9 points for a bad Cal team, but he’s meant to be the second or third or fourth option for the Illini.
Defense is a question mark, but this team is going to run beautiful offense. Next order of business: Nike needs to make this orange tracksuit for Underwood, and he must coach in it.
#NewProfilePic pic.twitter.com/AKlzzFrvRt
— Brad Underwood (@CoachUnderwood) April 28, 2025
12. St. John’s
Projected starters: Dylan Darling (transfer) Ian Jackson (transfer), Joson Sanon (transfer), Bryce Hopkins (transfer), Zuby Ejiofor
Notable returners: Ruben Prey, Lefteris Liotopoulos
Other newcomers: Dillon Mitchell (transfer), Oziyah Sellers (transfer), Handje Tamba (transfer), Kelvin Odih, Imran Suljanovic
I wrote this in the offseason’s first top 25: “If Rick Pitino lands a stud guard, I’ll probably be inclined to move St. John’s into the top 10 because it’s Pitino.” Since then he’s landed Ian Jackson (averaged 11.9 points as a freshman at North Carolina), Dylan Darling (the Big Sky MVP at Idaho State) and Oziyah Sellers (averaged 13.7 points on a middle-of-the-pack ACC team at Stanford). Arizona State transfer Joson Sanon, who was already committed at the time of April’s top 25, is also a nice upside addition from a crummy team. None of the three high-major guys have contributed much to winning outfits, and even Darling was on a fourth-place Big Sky team, so I’m hesitant to move the Johnnies all the way into the top 10.
It’s also hard to assume Bryce Hopkins is going to be the Bryce Hopkins of his sophomore season at Providence. Hopkins has played four games since the beginning of 2024. Pitino did get some insurance by landing former Texas/Cincinnati forward Dillon Mitchell, who I think is a great fit for his defense. If Hopkins is healthy, it’s a top-10 frontcourt. It’s possible I’m underestimating Pitino, but I think I’d take the 2024-25 roster over this one.
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13. Texas Tech
Projected starters: Christian Anderson, LeJuan Watts (transfer), Tyeree Bryan (transfer), JT Toppin, Luke Bamgboye (transfer)
Other newcomers: Donovan Atwell (transfer), Josiah Moseley (transfer), Nolan Groves
Christian Anderson played with the presence of a veteran as a freshman. JT Toppin will be a preseason All-American. Head coach Grant McCasland once again prioritized shooting, landing three wings who shot 39-plus percent from 3 last season — Tyeree Bryan and Donovan Atwell are proven specialists, while LeJuan Watts is more of an all-around guard. Luke Bamgboye is an elite rim protector, ranking second nationally in block rate as a freshman at VCU.
For an offense that tries to capitalize on mismatches, it was a blow to lose Darrion Williams to NC State, but Anderson-Toppin should be one of the best point guard-big combos in the country, and the shooters should give them space to work.
14. Gonzaga
Projected starters: Braeden Smith,Tyon Grant-Foster, Adam Miller, Braden Huff, Graham Ike
Notable returners: Steele Venters, Emmanuel Innocenti, Ismaila Diagne
Other newcomers: Jalen Warley (transfer), Davis Fogle, Parker Jefferson
Apologies to Gonzaga, which I mistakenly omitted on my last rankings because I overlooked fifth-year senior Graham Ike’s ability to come back for a sixth year. Ike played two years at Wyoming, sat out 2022-23 with an injury, then played the last two years. So four in five and done, right? Nope. He’s one of those rare players with an extra season left because his freshman season was the 2020-21 COVID-19 waiver year.
This roster is old. Adam Miller, who will play a fifth season in six years, will be a floor spacer. The Zags hope to welcome back 24-year-old sharpshooter Steele Venters, the 2023 Big Sky MVP who has missed the last two seasons — first with a torn ACL, then an Achilles tendon tear. Gonzaga brought in well-traveled 25-year-old Tyon Grant-Foster (Indiana Hills Community College to Kansas to DePaul to Grand Canyon and now to Gonzaga), who fits neatly in the bucket-getting role Khalif Battle held last season. Replacing Ryan Nembhard at point guard is Braeden Smith, the 2024 Patriot League Player of the Year who was the rare transfer willing to actually sit out a year, learning the Gonzaga way as Nembhard’s understudy.
So the Zags have a table setter, an elite wing scorer, a couple of old knockdown shooters and two elite post-up guys in Ike and Braden Huff, who will inevitably end up an All-American by the time he’s finished in Spokane. It’s possible I haven’t overcorrected enough on my previous mistake.
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15. Kansas
Projected starters: Darryn Peterson (freshman), Elmarko Jackson, Jayden Dawson (transfer), Tre White (transfer), Flory Bidunga
Notable returners: Bryson Tiller, Jamari McDowell
Other newcomers: Melvin Council (transfer), Samis Calderon
Bill Self told me recently that Kansas was one 14-15-point scorer away from having what he felt was a complete team. The Jayhawks missed on two targets for that spot in Darrion Williams (NC State) and Dame Sarr (Duke). There isn’t much left in the transfer portal, so Self could either go shopping overseas or just go with what he has and try to find at least one more big body for depth up front.
Self built this roster with “fit rather than talent” in mind, but he has a surefire pro in Darryn Peterson, who is expected to be one of the top picks in the 2026 draft. Self says Peterson is the “most prepared high school kid” he’s signed at Kansas — high praise considering Self has coached Andrew Wiggins, Joel Embiid and multiple other one-and-done lottery picks.
Self wisely signed transfers who can either stretch the floor (Jayden Dawson) or put pressure on the rim with their speed (Melvin Council). Freshman forward Bryson Tiller will need to be ready to play right away. But this team is built to be disruptive defensively, and if Peterson lives up to the hype and guys like Flory Bidunga and Elmarko Jackson develop, KU has enough talent to be a Big 12 contender again.
16. Iowa State
Projected starters: Tamin Lipsey, Dominick Nelson (transfer), Milan Momcilovic, Joshua Jefferson, Blake Buchanan (transfer)
Notable returners: Nate Heise
Other newcomers: Eric Mulder (transfer), Mason Williams (transfer), Jamarion Batemon, Killyan Toure, Xzavion Mitchell, Dominykas Pleta
The Clones struggled down the stretch when Keshon Gilbert was out, and Curtis Jones had to go nuclear for the offense to thrive. The good news is that T.J. Otzelberger has nailed the up-transfer market, and Utah Valley’s Dominick Nelson and Eastern Washington’s Mason Williams are the next guys who really need to hit. Even if they aren’t go-to scorers, the offense could be really good if Joshua Jefferson and Milan Momcilovic continue to improve.
The defense did slip slightly last year — from first to 13th in adjusted efficiency — and that’s in part because Iowa State wasn’t as physical and deep up front. But the Clones are never going to slip far with Tamin Lipsey at the head of the attack. Otzelberger has a formula that seems to keep working, and returning three starters from a NCAA Tournament team is a great foundation.
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17. Arkansas
Projected starters: Darius Acuff Jr. (freshman), DJ Wagner, Karter Knox, Trevon Brazile, Malique Ewin (transfer)
Notable returners: Billy Richmond
Other newcomers: Karim Rtail (international), Nick Pringle (transfer), Meleek Thomas, Isaiah Sealy
This core should enter the season with some confidence after a surprise Sweet 16 run. John Calipari has a good mix of size, speed and guards who can get their own buckets. The concern is that this group leans into that last category too much and the offense looks disjointed, a common flaw of Calipari’s worst teams. Hope for a more cohesive approach comes with the addition of Malique Ewin, assuming the Florida State transfer gets used correctly. Ewin is a perfect fit for an SEC in which the best teams all have playmaking centers.
The defense could be elite with so much positional size. Arkansas played its best after Calipari made Trevon Brazile a starter late in the year, and pairing him with Ewin allows Arkansas to play five-out and take advantage of its team speed. It could be another up-and-down season, but as we saw this past year, once the talent figures out how to coexist, the ceiling is pretty high.
18. UCLA
Projected starters: Donovan Dent (transfer), Skyy Clark, Eric Dailey, Tyler Bilodeau, Xavier Booker (transfer)
Notable returners: Trent Perry
Other newcomers: Steven Jamerson (transfer), Jamar Brown (transfer)
The Bruins haven’t had a true point guard since Tyger Campbell. He was the last UCLA player to post an assist rate higher than 30 percent, in 2021; that’s also the last time UCLA made the Final Four. Top-shelf transfer Donovan Dent has had a plus-30 assist rate in each of his last two seasons at New Mexico.
Head coach Mick Cronin’s best teams usually play elite defense and execute his sets, and it feels like Dent should help in both areas. The Bruins welcome back three starters (Eric Dailey, Tyler Bilodeau and Skyy Clark) who transferred in a year ago and were efficient in Cronin’s system. The wild card is Michigan State transfer Xavier Booker, a former five-star recruit who never seemed to live up to the hype. He seems like an odd fit for Cronin, but maybe a change of scenery will unlock his potential.
19. Arizona
Projected starters: Jaden Bradley, Brayden Burries (freshman), Anthony Dell’Orso, Koa Peat (freshman), Motiejus Krivas
Other returners: Tobe Awaka
Other newcomers: Evan Nelson (transfer), Dwayne Aristode, Bryce James
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Arizona brings in 247Sports’ No. 3 high school signing class and will likely throw its two five-stars (Brayden Burries and Koa Peat) into the starting lineup. Peat brings playmaking and athleticism to the frontcourt, and Burries’ ability to score is going to be critical with the graduation of Caleb Love. The Cats also need a breakout season from Motiejus Krivas, who played only eight games in 2024-25 because of a foot injury. The Wildcats lost Henri Veesaar to North Carolina after a breakout season, but when healthy, Krivas has always beaten Veesaar out. He and Tobe Awaka could make Arizona one of the best offensive rebounding teams in the country.
The Wildcats showed flashes of elite defense last year but never really leaned into that strength. For this team to hit its ceiling, defense will need to be a calling card, helping the offense get out in transition, where Jaden Bradley and Peat excel. Like Sampson at Houston, head coach Tommy Lloyd prioritized his high school class rather than loading up in the portal. With the COVID-19 waiver year mostly phased out of college basketball, it’ll be interesting to see whether more top-tier programs start to prioritize freshmen again. It worked out well for Duke this spring.
20. North Carolina
Projected starters: Kyan Evans (transfer), Seth Trimble, Luka Bogavac (international), Caleb Wilson (freshman), Henri Veesaar (transfer)
Other newcomers: Jarin Stevenson (transfer), Jonathan Powell (transfer), Jaydon Young (transfer), Derek Dixon, Isaiah Denis
Head coach Hubert Davis whiffed on his front line a year ago, and that’s where most of UNC’s offseason budget went. Caleb Wilson and Veesaar bring a little more scoring but a lot more defensive skill to the front line. Wilson is long, quick-twitch and switchable — not quite a young Anthony Davis, but in that mold. Veesaar is also an elite rim protector; Arizona’s defense was 10.5 points per 100 possessions better with him on the floor last season, per CBB Analytics. The Tar Heels have the positional size to start 6-foot-11 Jarin Stevenson at the three. Worst-case scenario, he’s a backup to Wilson as a stretch four; best case, he continues to emerge as an NBA prospect.
With RJ Davis graduating, UNC also addressed the need for shooting in the portal by adding Colorado State point guard Kyan Evans (44.6 percent from 3) and West Virginia guard Jonathan Powell (35.2 percent). Freshman guard Derek Dixon, a good shooter who always plays under control, was one of my favorite players on the EYBL circuit. The Tar Heels are missing a dynamic scorer on the perimeter and will need to score more through execution, but the pieces fit.
21. Michigan State
Projected starters: Jeremy Fears, Trey Fort (transfer), Coen Carr, Jaxon Kohler, Carson Cooper
Notable returners: Jesse McCulloch
Other newcomers: Cam Ward, Jordan Scott, Kaleb Glenn (transfer), Divine Ugochukwu (transfer)
Coen Carr as the starting small forward could cause some spacing issues and make a crummy 3-point shooting team even crummier, but head coach Tom Izzo does not give a damn about your analytics. The Spartans are going to guard and play fast, and we all need more chances to see Carr punishing rims.
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But yeah … the shooting. It’s a worry. Izzo at least addressed it in the portal by grabbing Trey Fort (37.9 percent from 3 at Samford) and Kaleb Glenn (41 percent at Florida Atlantic). I’m not sure I buy Glenn as a 40 percent 3-point shooter, but he deserves credit for drastically improving in that area after going 1 of 9 from deep as a freshman at Louisville. Ideally, this team would have been a preseason top-10 outfit led by a sophomore Jase Richardson, but Richardson was too good too fast. Now the Spartans will need to win by guarding, running and playing through the bigs. Old-school Izzo.
22. Creighton
Projected starters: Nik Graves (transfer), Josh Dix (transfer), Blake Harper (transfer), Jackson McAndrew, Owen Freeman (transfer)
Notable returners: Jasen Green, Isaac Traudt
Other newcomers: Hudson Greer, Austin Swartz (transfer)
Josh Dix and Owen Freeman should be the best two players on this team, and it is worth pointing out both spent last year on an Iowa team that won only seven games in the Big Ten. (The Hawkeyes were 4-6 in conference play before Freeman was lost for the year. Not great, but not awful!) So why am I high on Creighton? One, I think Dix can be one of the best wings in the country. Two, in Gregg McDermott I trust.
McDermott landed another talented wing in Blake Harper, who averaged 19.5 points per game as a freshman at Howard. Jackson McAndrew made 69 3s as a freshman, and Nik Graves made 61 last season at Charlotte. Hudson Greer is one of the better shooting wings in the 2025 class. The “let it fly” Bluejays will be back, which should give Freeman, an elite back-to-the-basket scorer, plenty of room to operate. The Jays are going to really miss Ryan Kalkbrenner, especially on defense, but give McDermott this much offensive talent, and he’s going to figure it out.
23. Alabama
Projected starters: Labaron Philon, Aden Holloway, Latrell Wrightsell, Taylor Bol Bowen (transfer), Aiden Sherrell
Notable returners: Houston Mallette
Other newcomers: Jalil Bethea (transfer), London Jemison, Davion Hannah, Amari Allen, Noah Williamson (transfer), Keitenn Bristow (transfer)
I had Alabama out of the first version of these rankings, under the assumption Labaron Philon was going to stay in the NBA Draft — he’d previously said he was “all in.” I was underwhelmed by Alabama’s transfer haul, and Nate Oats lost a ton of production off last year’s roster, though he still had shooting. And I might have been onto something, considering Bart Torvik’s ratings have Bama at 38. But I love, love, love Philon, and his reentry into the lineup changes the equation.
Philon’s presence takes some pressure off Aden Holloway, and his ability to live in the paint should help set up the shooters. Aiden Sherrell needs to make a leap, but he could be dangerous if he makes enough shots to stretch defenses. The other option at the five is Patriot League Player of the Year Noah Williamson, but I think he’s going to have a tough time matching high-major speed and athleticism. Maybe one of Alabama’s freshmen is way better than expected, as Philon was a year ago. Oats probably deserves the benefit of the doubt, but this appears to be a drop-off in talent from his last two rosters.
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24. Missouri
Projected starters: Anthony Robinson, Sebastian Mack (transfer), Trent Pierce, Mark Mitchell, Jevon Porter (transfer)
Notable returners: Jacob Crews, Trent Burns, TO Barrett, Annor Boateng
Other newcomers: Shawn Phillips (transfer), Jayden Stone (transfer), Luke Northweather (transfer), Aaron Rowe, Nicholas Randall
Missouri returns three starters from a Top 25 team. I was a big fan of Sebastian Mack a few years ago on the EYBL circuit, and while he was solid at UCLA, it feels like he has the potential to be more productive in a high-tempo system like Mizzou’s. He should fit nicely in the Tony Perkins role. Jacob Crews should elevate from the second shooter off the bench to take Caleb Grill’s sixth-man spot.
The Tigers’ ceiling could be determined by the productivity of Jevon Porter and Trent Burns at center. Porter, the little brother of former Tigers Michael and Jontay, averaged double figures for three seasons in the West Coast Conference. The 7-foot-5 Burns, who redshirted as a freshman, can step out and hit a 3. To borrow an old Fran Fraschilla line, he could be a year away from being a year away, but he’s a fascinating prospect.
Dennis Gates got frontcourt reinforcements from Arizona State transfer Shawn Phillips (a rim protector who was a part-time starter last year) and Oklahoma transfer Luke Northweather (another big who can slide out and make a 3). Outside shooting could be a concern with the graduation of Grill and Tamar Bates, but Mitchell-Mack-Robinson could end up being one of the better trios in the SEC.
25. Ohio State
Projected starters: Bruce Thornton, John Mobley, Devin Royal, Brandon Noel (transfer), Christoph Tilly (transfer)
Notable returners: None
Other newcomers: Joshua Ojianwuna (transfer), Gabe Cupps (transfer), A’mare Bynum, Dorian Jones
This is the only team on this list that didn’t make the 2025 NCAA Tournament, but there’s a lot to like. Ohio State returns three of its top four scorers from a group that showed flashes a year ago, beating Kentucky by 20 at the CBS Sports Classic and winning at Purdue. What the Buckeyes were missing was consistency from the frontcourt, and coach Jake Diebler tried to address that with the additions of Christoph Tilly and Brandon Noel.
Tilly was a second-team All-WCC performer at Santa Clara and one of my favorite bigs in the portal. He’s an efficient scorer who can get buckets both inside and out. Noel averaged 19 points at Wright State and is a career 37.5 percent 3-point shooter. Diebler also got a solid backup center in former Baylor big Joshua Ojianwuna. This feels like the right mix of roster continuity and inbound veteran productivity.
Others under consideration: Tennessee, Iowa, Indiana, NC State, Texas, Ole Miss, Oregon, Wisconsin, Oklahoma.
(Top illustration photos: Elsa, Alex Slitz / Getty Images)
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Red Raiders advance to WCWS semifinals
Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series OKLAHOMA CITY — The Texas Tech softball team scored another victory in the 2025 Women’s College World Series today by downing UCLA 3-1 at Devon Park. The […]


Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series
Texas Tech softball coach Gerry Glasco on facing UCLA in Women’s College World Series
OKLAHOMA CITY — The Texas Tech softball team scored another victory in the 2025 Women’s College World Series today by downing UCLA 3-1 at Devon Park.
The Red Raiders got another stellar pitching performance from NiJaree Canady and timely offense from Hailey Toney (solo home run) and Raegan Jennings (pinch-hit RBI single).
Texas Tech now advances to the semifinals and will play either Oregon or Oklahoma on Monday.
Texas Tech softball vs. UCLA Women’s College World Series live updates
7:46 p.m.: NiJaree Canady has retired the last six batter since giving up the home run. Texas Tech softball leads 2-1 going to the 7th.
7:40 p.m.: Hailey Toney muscles a home run to right center and Texas Tech goes up 2-1 heading to the bottom of the 6th.
7:28 p.m.: Texas Tech softball takes a 1-0 lead after Makayla Garcia steals home plate. UCLA has tied it back up with a solo home run from Kaniya Bragg. Red Raiders and Bruins tied 1-1 through 5 innings.
7:04 p.m.: 1-2-3 innings for both pitchers as we head to the 5th looking for some offense.
6:52 p.m.: Texas Tech softball and UCLA remain scoreless through 3 innings. Red Raiders still looking for their first hit.
6:39 p.m.: Gerry Glasco disagreed with the ump’s strike zone and was issued a warning for arguing. NiJaree Canady issued two walks and UCLA loaded the bases before Canady got a strikeout and force out at home to end the inning. Still scoreless through 2 full.
6:26 p.m.: Lauren Allred gets hit by a pitch but then gets doubled off at first on a popout from Canady in the top of the 2nd.
6:20 p.m.: NiJaree Canady sends the Bruins down in order in response. No score after the 1st.
6:13 p.m.: Texas Tech softball goes down in order in the top of the first. UCLA coming up to bat.
5:22 p.m.: About 45 minutes out from first pitch. Texas Tech will be the visitors tonight wearing their white uniforms. UCLA wearing their blues as the home team.
What TV channel is Texas Tech vs. UCLA softball on today?
- TV channel: ESPN
- Streaming: Fubo
Texas Tech’s game against UCLA will air on ESPN and can be streamed on Fubo, which requires a subscription.
Watch Texas Tech softball vs UCLA in Women’s College World Series
Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss softball start time
- Date: Saturday, May 31
- Time: 6 p.m. CT
First pitch for Texas Tech and UCLA’s Women’s College World Series game is set for 6 p.m.
Texas Tech softball schedule 2025
Below is Texas Tech’s postseason schedule:
Big 12 Tournament
- May 8: Texas Tech 4, Baylor 0
- May 9: Texas Tech 18, Arizona State 0 (5)
- May 10: Texas Tech 4, Arizona 0
Lubbock Regional
- May 16: Texas Tech 6, Brown 0
- May 17: Texas Tech 10, Mississippi State 1 (6)
- May 18: Texas Tech 9, Mississippi State 6
Tallahassee Super Regional
- May 22: Texas Tech 3, Florida State 0
- May 23: Texas Tech 2, Florida State 1
Women’s College World Series schedule
Here’s the full schedule for the 2025 Women’s College World Series at Devon Park in Oklahoma City:
All times Central
Thursday, May 29
- Game 1: No. 6 Texas vs. No. 3 Florida 0
- Game 2: No. 2 Oklahoma 4, No. 7 Tennessee 3
- Game 3: No. 12 Texas Tech 1, Ole Miss 0
- Game 4: No. 9 UCLA 4, No. 16 Oregon 2
Friday, May 30
- Game 5: Florida vs. Tennessee 6 p.m., ESPN2 (Fubo)
- Game 6: Ole Miss vs. Oregon, 8:30 p.m., ESPN2 (Fubo)
Saturday, May 31
- Game 7: Texas vs. Oklahoma, 2 p.m., ABC (Fubo)
- Game 8: Texas Tech vs. UCLA, 6 p.m., ESPN (Fubo)
Sunday, June 1
- Game 9: Game 5 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 2 p.m., ABC (Fubo)
- Game 10: Game 6 winner vs. Game 7 loser, 6 p.m., ESPNU (Fubo)
Monday, June 2
- Game 11: Game 7 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 11 a.m., ESPN (Fubo)
- Game 12 (if necessary): Game 7 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 1:30 p.m., ESPN (Fubo)
- Game 13: Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 6 p.m., ESPN2 (Fubo)
- Game 14 (if necessary): Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 8:30 p.m., ESPN2 (Fubo)
Tuesday, June 3
Wednesday, June 4
- WCWS finals Game 1: TBD vs. TBD, 7 p.m., ESPN (Fubo)
Thursday, June 5
- WCWS finals Game 2: TBD vs. TBD, 7 p.m., ESPN (Fubo)
Friday, June 6 (if necessary)
WCWS finals Game 3: TBD vs. TBD, 7 p.m., ESPN (Fubo)
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Morning Buzz
Start your morning with Buzzcast with Abe Madkour: The Mets’ new biz leader; U.S. Soccer seeks city interest in Women’s World Cup and MI State’s new AD. J Batt will leave Georgia Tech after leading the Yellow Jackets’ athletics since October 2022. Getty Images Michigan State Univ. has “found its new athletic director,” with Jason […]

Start your morning with Buzzcast with Abe Madkour: The Mets’ new biz leader; U.S. Soccer seeks city interest in Women’s World Cup and MI State’s new AD.

Michigan State Univ. has “found its new athletic director,” with Jason “J” Batt “expected to be announced as the new AD” today, according to a source. Batt, currently the Georgia Tech AD, will “receive around” $1.8M per year in base salary. MSU will also pay Georgia Tech “a little over” $2M to “buy out the remainder of the contract,” which runs through 2029 and that he signed in December. Batt helped generate nearly $300M toward a $500M “Full Steam Ahead” fundraising effort that “began after he was hired” in October 2022. MSU’s previous AD, Alan Haller, was “forced out” after more than three years in the role (DETROIT FREE PRESS, 6/1).
A source said that Batt will “sign a six-year contract.” Batt marks MSU’s “first outside hire for athletic director in 30 years.” He is “scheduled to be introduced in an on-campus press conference this week, possibly Wednesday.” His hiring and contract terms will become official at MSU’s June 13 Board of Trustees meeting (DETROIT NEWS, 6/1).

Seattle Sounders players “wore white T-shirts” with the “phrase ‘Club World Ca$h Grab’ emblazoned on the front” during pregame warmups and player walkouts before Sunday’s game against Minnesota United FC. The shirts also featured Mr. Monopoly “centered, wearing a hat with ‘MLS’ on it and ‘FIFA $’ on the money pouch.” The backs of the shirts read “Fair Share Now.” Fans “chanted ‘Fair Share Now’ in support of the players.” The protest aimed to “call attention to owners and MLS’s unwillingness to have a formal negotiation to decide how money for the upcoming FIFA men’s Club World Cup will be distributed.” Minnesota didn’t wear the shirts Sunday, but the MLSPA “stated it is united in its frustration with the league and owners” (SEATTLE TIMES, 6/1).
Seattle will earn “at least” $9.55M for competing in the Club World Cup, but under the MLS CBA, the players’ share “is capped” at $1M per club. The MLSPA said in a statement on Sunday that players “had ‘privately and respectfully invited the league to discuss bonus terms, yet MLS has failed to bring forward a reasonable proposal’” (REUTERS, 6/2). MLS “declined to comment because negotiations with MLSPA are ongoing” (AP, 6/1).

Another legislative session “came and went” without the Bears seeing legislation passed in Springfield to help the team build a new stadium. Three bills surfaced in the Illinois General Assembly, but “none made any headway by the time lawmakers gaveled out early Sunday.” Nor were “funds set aside for any stadium projects” in the $55.2B budget bill headed to Gov. JB Pritzker. The Bears had “eyed so-called ‘megadevelopment’ legislation” that would freeze property tax assessments for massive projects and allow them to negotiate payments with local taxing bodies. That would give the team the property tax certainty “they say they need to break ground” on a $5B suburban development (CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, 6/1). State Rep. Mary Beth Canty said that the legislature “got close to a deal on property tax legislation,” a measure widely seen as a way to “ease a team move to Arlington Heights.” Legislators will “likely get another chance to pass legislation” in the fall (CHICAGO TRIBUNE, 6/1).

Monumental Sports & Entertainment is rolling out a series of memorabilia products related to Capitals LW Alex Ovechkin’s record-breaking 895th career NHL goal under the banner of a new collectibles platform it is launching in collaboration with Cllct, the memorabilia media company launched last year by former ESPN sports business reporter Darren Rovell. The new venture, known as Monumental Sports Authentics, will be an official platform for fans to purchase game-used and team-issued memorabilia from the Capitals, Wizards and WNBA Mystics.
The first offering of Ovechkin-related memorabilia includes four products, each of which features either a sample of ice from the rink at UBS Arena when Ovechkin scored his record-breaking 895th goal against the Islanders on April 6 or a piece of netting from a goal used in warmups that day. The pieces range in price from $895 to $1,499, and Capitals season-ticket members, corporate partners and suite-holders will receive a $200 discount off each item.

Seeing the opportunity that comes from Olympic inclusion on the horizon, World Lacrosse has signed an agreement with sports marketing agency 54 to develop an event property for lacrosse sixes.
The deal will see 54 create a concept plan for a series of global events, with this phase slated to be complete by the end of the summer. World Lacrosse, the sport’s international governing body, is targeting a 2026 launch of the series.
“We’ve been looking for a way to kind of elevate that property,” World Lacrosse CEO Jim Scherr said. “I just think we’re very excited about sixes. We think this is the logical next growth step and major initiative that will also help secure lacrosse as a permanent fixture in the Olympic program and continue to grow the sport around the world.”
Scherr said World Lacrosse chose 54 — best known for its work in staging and promoting LIV Golf — from among a handful of agencies because it’s known as being aggressive and innovative. World Lacrosse and 54 signed a low six-figure deal for the first phase of work, which includes creating an event concept, commercial and broadcast strategy and identifying markets for the sixes series.

The Detroit Grand Prix “signed a three-year contract” with the Detroit City Council with an “option for three more years.” That extension should keep the race in downtown Detroit “through 2028 (and possibly 2031) on the current deal.” One potential issue over the future of the race is the “uncertain fate of the Renaissance Center, which currently has plans to have two of its buildings demolished.” Detroit Grand Prix President Bud Denker said that the RenCen’s potential deconstruction “creates a situation that is still ‘TBD’ for the Grand Prix.” Denker also “poured cold water on the possibility of extending the track, currently the shortest street course on the IndyCar circuit” at under 1.7 miles. The 2025 Grand Prix, which was won by Kyle Kirkwood, “outsold its total 2024 ticket volume by Friday, May 30 — two days before the race” (DETROIT FREE PRESS, 6/1).

Fanatics announced that merchandise sales in the 12 hours following Paris Saint-Germain’s UEFA Champions League victory were the company’s highest for an individual team outside the U.S. More PSG merchandise was sold in the 12 hours after the win than the previous three months combined. Fans from 70 countries went to the official PSG online store to buy merchandise. Sales between 11pm and midnight CET on June 1 spiked more than 4,200% compared to total sales from May 30 (Fanatics).John Brenkus has passed away at the age of 54. Getty Images “Sports Science” founder and host John Brenkus died Saturday, his family announced on social media last night. Brenkus “had been battling depression for years.” “Sports Science” debuted on Fox Sports Net in 2007, though it moved to ESPN a few years later. The network eventually “purchased the brand from Brenkus,” who hosted more than 1,800 segments of the show. Brenkus “brought back his show in recent years on his own platform” (YAHOO SPORTS, 6/1).