NIL
Summer Big 12 Basketball Power Rankings for 2025


It’s been a pretty wild offseason of movement in the NCAA Transfer Portal and Big 12 basketball roster-building since this past spring. Some of the most expensive transfers in college hoops early this offseason ended up landing with Big 12 programs ahead of the 2025-26 season.
Despite not being the top conference in college basketball for the first time in a few years, the Big 12 remained one of the most competitive and deepest conferences in the nation during the 2024-25 season. The Big 12 sent seven teams to the postseason in the NCAA Tournament, including a Final Four berth with the No. 1 seed Houston Cougars.
After winning the Big 12 crown this past season in 2024-25, Houston will have a tough road ahead to repeat as conference champions this upcoming campaign in 2025-26.
1. Houston
Longtime head coach Kelvin Sampson has built one of the most consistent and nationally competitive programs in college hoops with the Cougars in the Big 12. Houston was one possession away from winning its first national title in over a few decades this past season in the National Championship Game against the Florida Gators.
Returning three out of the five starters from last season’s starting five, including standout guards Milos Uzan and Emanuel Sharp, will keep Houston nationally competitive again in the 2025-26 campaign and in the race for the Big 12 title crown.
2. Texas Tech
Despite falling just short of Florida in the Elite Eight this past spring in the Big Dance, head coach Grant McCasland and the Texas Tech Red Raiders are primed for a run at the Big 12 crown this upcoming season. Texas Tech returns one of the Big 12’s best star players in the frontcourt, senior big man JT Toppin, for the final season of his eligibility in college in 2025-26.
New transfer portal wing/forward additions to the lineup, LeJuan Watts and Donovan Atwell, will bolster Texas Tech’s starting five in the Big 12 in the 2025-26 campaign.
3. BYU
The BYU Cougars have some of the most talented players in the nation in all of college basketball, highlighting their key starting five, including freshman sensation AJ Dybantsa and returning star guard Richie Saunders. Dybantsa is a potential No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft lottery.
Saunders, the Big 12’s Most Improved Player this past season in 2024-25, returns as the team’s leading scorer going into the fall for 2025-26.
You could argue that BYU and head coach Kelvin Young boast the best and deepest roster among the top contenders in the Big 12 for this upcoming season.
4. Iowa State
Head coach TJ Otzelberger and the Iowa State Cyclones return many key and familiar faces for this upcoming season in the Big 12. Standout guard Tamin Lipsey and forward Milan Momcilovic have scored in double figures each in back-to-back seasons in Iowa State’s starting five.
Watch out for Iowa State to remain in Big 12 title contention and to be competitive on the national landscape as a potential AP Top 10 ranked team in the upcoming 2025-26 season.
5. Kansas
This upcoming season is a very crucial one in Lawrence for longtime head coach Bill Self and the Kansas Jayhawks in the Big 12. An early NCAA Tournament exit in the first round after a close loss to the Arkansas Razorbacks put the pressure on Self and the Jayhawks to build out a deep and talented roster via high school recruiting and the transfer portal early this offseason.
Depth concerns and frontcourt questions in the starting five keeps Kansas outside of the overall top tier of Big 12 teams in the early summer power rankings here.
6. Arizona
Coming off a Sweet 16 appearance in the Big Dance this past postseason in the East Region, the Arizona Wildcats and head coach Tommy Lloyd lost a key star piece in First-Team All-Big 12 senior guard Caleb Love early this offseason.
Arizona will rely on returning starters like Jaden Bradley and highly touted incoming freshmen from the 2025 signing class, including five-star big man Koa Peat, to power the core part of the rotation this campaign in 2025-26.
7. Baylor
The Baylor Bears roster has a vastly different look to the starting five this offseason after adding five new projected starters via the transfer portal and high school recruiting this past spring. Baylor and head coach Scott Drew brought in key projected starters like Cincinnati transfer Daniel Skillings and Wyoming transfer Obi Agbim to lead the starting five in the backcourt.
With more size and proven starters in the backcourt and wing rotations compared to last season, can Baylor return to the heights of national prominence in the Big 12 in 2026?
One thing I’ve learned from watching Big 12 hoops for the past decade as a fan of this conference is to not underestimate Drew after a roster rebuild and overhaul.
8. West Virginia
Coaching staff turnover hasn’t kept the West Virginia Mountaineers and first-year head coach Ross Hodge from assembling a deep and competitive roster in the Big 12 going into the 2025-26 season. West Virginia has brought in five immediate impact transfers from the spring portal window, including North Texas transfers Jasper Floyd and Brenen Lorient, to lead the starting five in Morgantown for the Mountaineers this season.
9. Cincinnati
Head coach Wes Miller and the Cincinnati Bearcats are looking for a big improvement in the Big 12 in the conference standings going into the 2025-26 season. After finishing 12th out of 16 teams in the Big 12 standings this past season in 2024-25, Cincinnati has revamped the offense and added more size on the defensive end in the core part of the rotation this offseason.
10. Kansas State
The projected starting five for the Kansas State Wildcats in the Big 12 got a gigantic boost this offseason by landing star transfer guard from Memphis, PJ Haggerty. The ability to spark this offense and spread the ball around to key guard teammates in the starting five, like international guard/wing signee Andrej Kostic, makes Kansas State’s ceiling in this conference intriguing.
11. TCU
Led by a group of experienced transfers from the spring portal window early this offseason and a large group of returning rotation contributors, the TCU Horned Frogs are a sleeper team to watch in the Big 12 this upcoming season in 2025-26. TCU has a proven and experienced backcourt duo it brought in from the spring transfer portal, including Iowa’s Brock Harding and Providence’s Jayden Pierre.
12. Oklahoma State
There is a good chance that the Oklahoma State Cowboys are one of the Big 12’s most improved teams in the conference standings in the 2025-26 season. Second-year head coach Steve Lutz has assembled a much more formidable roster in the Big 12 this offseason, including Seton Hall wing transfer Isaiah Coleman and Oregon State big man transfer Parsa Fallah.
13. Arizona State
Going into his 10th season as the Arizona State Sun Devils program head coach, Bobby Hurley had to essentially completely rebuild the roster in Tempe via the spring portal window early this offseason. Arizona State has a completely new starting five projected top-to-bottom, led by CSU-Northridge guard transfer Marcus Adams in the backcourt.
14. Utah
Under first-year head coach Alex Jensen, the Utah Utes have a very green roster of new additions from the transfer portal in the Big 12 for this upcoming season. Jensen and the Utes are relying on their lone returning starter, big man Keanu Dawes, along with a cast of new transfer additions to jolt the starting five in the Big 12.
15. UCF
Led by Milwaukee guard and forward transfers Jamichael Stillwell and Themus Fulks, the UCF Knights are looking for some movement in the Big 12 standings this upcoming season for 2025-26. UCF ranked as the bottom team in defensive rating, which the Knights hope will be improved with the additions of more length and proven two-way players in the wing and forward rotations this season.
16. Colorado
The Colorado Buffaloes rely on a couple of key returning starters, including big man Bangot Dak and wing Sebastian Rancik, to improve offensively and putting the ball in the basket in the Big 12. A lack of true depth and experience in the rotation beyond a handful of key starters is a prime issue for Colorado in the 2025-26 season.
NIL
Transferring To A Rival School Is The Sick New Norm Of College Football
Transferring from Texas to Oklahoma should be considered a war crime.
I’ve been bemoaning the slow death of college football as we all know it for a long time now, certainly longer than I have been at OutKick.
Every time I think we have hit rock bottom, something else happens that makes me reevaluate just how much further the sport I love so dearly has yet to fall.
With the insanity of an unregulated transfer system and NIL in place, college football looks unrecognizable to what it used to be even a decade ago.
RELATED: Transfer Portal A Circus Before It Even Opened
Something else that’s really stuck in my craw lately is the rapidly diminishing importance of rivalry games.
We all know about USC and Notre Dame canceling their annual series, or the Big Ten implementing a nonsensical “rivalry” series between a bunch of schools that have next to no historical or geographical basis of hatred, but the transfer portal has offered a new way to make rivalries nearly meaningless.
With this year’s transfer portal less than two days old, players are already lining up their visits to their next potential school, and a few visits have raised my (and several others’) eybrow.
What are we even doing here, folks?
Look, I can reluctantly admit that kids should be allowed to transfer wherever they want, although I still think, barring extenuating circumstances, they should have to sit for a year, but this is insane.
DJ Lagway was smoking a celebratory cigar in the FSU locker room after blowing them out in Doak Campbell a little over a year ago, and now he’s viewing them as a potential landing spot?
Meanwhile, you have a guy like Longhorns wide receiver Parker Livingstone transferring to Texas’ most hated rival, the Oklahoma Sooners?
Florida and Florida State hate each other, as do Texas and Oklahoma, so all of this just feels gross.
It’s nothing new, either.
Another Florida player, running back Trevor Etienne, famously transferred to Georgia before the start of the 2024 season, but it just feels like it’s becoming more frequent.
I remember how big of a deal it was when Brock Berlin transferred from the Gators to the Miami Hurricanes and then beat his former team the following year.
Berlin was seen as Judas in Gainesville, but now he is considered just another casualty of the portal era of college football.
I miss when rivalries used to mean something to the players, not just the fans.
It makes college football feel less personal, which was one of the things that distinguished it from the NFL.
I want my rivalries to mean something. I want my college football back.
NIL
No. 1 transfer QB now linked to three major college football programs
The NCAA transfer portal is officially open for all college football players seeking new schools next season. The portal is open for two weeks, officially closing on Jan. 16.
In the weeks following the conclusion of the 2025 college football regular season, thousands of players from all levels of the sport made the decision to enter the transfer portal. Some of the more marquee names in this cycle involve quarterbacks shifting the Power Four level.
One of these quarterbacks on the move is former Cincinnati signal-caller Brendan Sorsby. He will have one season of eligibility remaining at his third school.
The 6-foot-3, 235-pounder began his college football career under Tom Allen in 2022. He completed three of six passes for eight yards and an interception in a blowout loss to Penn State in his lone appearance that season.
Sorsby was featured in 10 of Indiana’s 12 games in the 2023 season. He finished the year with 1,587 passing yards, 15 touchdowns and five interceptions while rushing for another 286 yards and four touchdowns. Allen was fired that offseason, and Sorsby transferred to Cincinnati.
The Bearcats started Sorsby in all 12 games in 2024. He passed for 2,813 yards, 18 touchdowns, and 7 interceptions, while rushing for 447 yards and 9 touchdowns. Cincinnati finished that season 5-7, dropping each of its last five games.
Sorsby logged 2,800 pass yards, 27 touchdown passes and five interceptions to go along with 580 yards and nine touchdowns on the ground in 2025. He was named All-Big 12 Second Team by the Big 12 coaches. He opted out of the Liberty Bowl after deciding to transfer.
Schools searching for quarterbacks in the transfer portal are considering Sorsby a hot commodity. Pete Thamel of ESPN has reported that three schools have separated themselves in the hunt for Sorsby.
Texas Tech

One potential destination for Sorsby lies within the same conference as Cincinnati. The Red Raiders have been linked with Sorsby since he first announced his intention to enter the transfer portal.
Tyler Shough (Oregon) is the only starting quarterback for the Red Raiders to come from the portal in Joey McGuire’s tenure. With Behren Morton’s eligibility expiring and backup Mitch Griffis entering the portal, Sorsby could be the bridge Texas Tech needs between Morton in 2025 and Will Hammond in 2027.
LSU
Lane Kiffin has earned the “portal king” moniker for his work in acquiring players from the transfer portal during his time at Ole Miss. Quarterback is no exception, as Matt Corral and Austin Simmons were the only signal callers recruited by the Rebels from high school to start for Kiffin in six seasons at Ole Miss.
As a program, LSU has been very successful with transfer quarterbacks in the last decade. Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels both won Heisman Trophies a year after transferring to LSU. Sorsby could be a strong fit in Kiffin’s high-octane offense.
Miami

Mario Cristobal has finished with no fewer than 10 wins when acquiring a quarterback from the transfer portal at Miami. The Hurricanes produced the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NFL draft with Cam Ward (Washington State).
The Hurricanes are one win away from appearing in their first national championship since the end of the 2002 season with Carson Beck (Georgia) at quarterback. Sorsby figures to be an option given Miami’s track record with portal quarterbacks.
NIL
Why This Year’s College Football Playoff Is The Most Exciting Yet
After an exciting quarterfinal round filled with upsets and thrilling finishes, the College Football Playoff Semifinals are officially set, and the No. 5 Oregon Ducks are one of the four remaining teams with a shot at winning the national championship.
Following their dominating 23-0 win over the No. 4 Texas Tech Red Raiders in the CFP Quarterfinal at the Orange Bowl, Oregon will face the No. 1 Indiana Hoosiers in the Semifinal at the Peach Bowl in a rematch of the Ducks’ one loss of the season. The Hoosiers defeated the Ducks 30-20 at Autzen Stadium on Oct. 11.

The Hoosiers advanced to the CFP Semifinal with a dominating 38-3 win over the No. 9 Alabama Crimson Tide in the Rose Bowl. The No. 6 Miami Hurricanes and the No. 10 Ole Miss Rebels will match up in the CFP Semifinal at the Fiesta Bowl, after their stunning upsets in the quarterfinals.
Oregon Not Only Program Seeking First National Championship

Entering the Peach Bowl matchup against the Hoosiers, Oregon is two games away from securing its first national championship in school history, a milestone that generations of Ducks fans have been dreaming of after falling short on several occasions in the past.
The Ducks aren’t the only semifinal team that is looking to secure their first national championship. The Hoosiers are looking to complete one of the greatest turnarounds in college football history by becoming the first national champion to finish the season 16-0.
MORE: Dan Lanning Doesn’t Hold Back On Oregon Ducks’ Orange Bowl Performance
MORE: Betting Odds Released for Indiana vs. Oregon Playoff Semifinal
MORE: Oregon Ducks Make College Football Playoff History in Orange Bowl
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Before coach Curt Cignetti took over as coach of the Hoosiers, Indiana had the most losses in college football history before Northwestern surpassed them this season. The Hoosiers are one of three programs, along with Rutgers and Northwestern, that have 700-plus losses.

Ole Miss is also aiming to earn their first outright national championship in program history. The Rebels earned a share of the national championship in 1960 with the Minnesota Golden Gophers. Miami is the only CFP Semifinal team with multiple national championships, holding five titles, and is seeking its first since 2001.
Early Peach Bowl Preview Matchup vs. Indiana

Oregon enters the Peach Bowl matchup against Indiana currently as a four-point underdog, according to DraftKings Sportsbook. The Peach Bowl matchup between the Ducks and the Hoosiers has the potential to be an instant classic, as both teams are playing their best football of the season.
The quarterback duel between two of the top 2026 NFL Draft prospects, Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Oregon’s Dante Moore, will be a tremendous matchup and play a major role in which team advances to the national championship game on Jan. 19.
The defensive performance of both teams will also be critical in the Peach Bowl. In the Oct. 11 game at Autzen Stadium, Oregon and Indiana’s defense recorded a combined three interceptions in the game, with the Hoosiers forcing two takeaways compared to the one the Ducks recorded.
Coming away with takeaways could have a major impact on the Peach Bowl result, as one turnover may decide what many expect to be a close game. Oregon and Indiana will face off in the Peach Bowl on Jan. 9 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia. The kickoff of the Peach Bowl is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. PT with the game broadcast on ESPN.
- Game odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.
- If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.
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NIL
Alabama basketball surges vs Kentucky as football embarrassed by Indiana
Jan. 3, 2026, 2:51 p.m. CT
- The transfer portal and NIL deals are disrupting the traditional power structures in college sports.
- Historically dominant programs are no longer attracting recruits and transfers as they once did.
- Recent upsets, like Indiana beating Alabama in football, highlight a new era of parity.
- The concepts of “football schools” and “basketball schools” are becoming less relevant.
Evidence that college sports has been turned on its ear is everywhere. From schools boasting on social media that they’ve retained a player with a record-high salary (huh?) to Iowa State’s football roster being reduced to just a few dozen players in the wake of a coaching change, the center has not held. Basketball coaches are now recruiting international pros, football teams are declining bowl bids. From the lyrical genius of the Drive-By Truckers’ Mike Cooley, “What ought to be ought not be so hard.”
In a span of 48 hours, Alabama fans have gotten quite a taste of how things have changed.
Two days ago, one of the historical doormats of college football − Indiana − thrashed tradition-rich Alabama 38-3 in the Rose Bowl to reach the College Football Playoff semifinals. Then on Saturday, the Crimson Tide basketball team destroyed one of college basketball’s most storied programs, Kentucky, by an 89-74 score in front of a raucous Coleman Coliseum crowd.
Add this among the many impacts of NIL and the NCAA transfer portal: they’re fracturing the power of tradition in college sports. The historical greatness that schools have spent decades building in a given sport isn’t attracting recruits like it once did. It’s not attracting transfers like it once did, either.
More often, its the blueblood programs bleeding transfers. The entire notion of “football schools” and “basketball schools” is being undermined by a burgeoning parity that doesn’t care how many championship flags fly in your school’s stadium or how many banners hang from its arena rafters.

So here is Indiana, where football season, until two years ago, has rarely ever been anything but a distraction to pass the time before basketball starts. Generations of Hoosiers fans were more than happy to turn their backs on bad IU football in November to focus on the start of hoops season. Meanwhile, IU basketball finished ninth in the Big Ten last year, missed the NCAA Tournament and changed coaches. The football team in Bloomington? Two steps from immortality.
Here is Alabama, learning the hard way that helmets don’t matter in football like they once did. Learning the hard way that mystique isn’t worth five yards any more, despite an impressive 11-4 season that went two playoff rounds deep. And before the shoulder pads could even be stacked for the offseason, UA basketball drove home the very same lesson to Kentucky. Nate Oats’ squad beat UK for a program-record fourth time in a row, and it wasn’t close.
At one point, the lead swelled to 21 points as Aden Holloway piled up 26 points, most of it on six 3-pointers. After waves of mediocrity under previous coaches, Oats now has UA hoops basking in its glory years.
Nothing is what it was.
That’s a stark reality for Alabama football, but UA basketball is taking full advantage.
Tuscaloosa News columnist Chase Goodbread is also the weekly co-host of Crimson Cover TV on WVUA-23. Reach him at cgoodbread@gannett.com. Follow on X.com @chasegoodbread.
NIL
Why Rutgers football retaining K.J. Duff and Antwan Raymond is a significant win for Greg Schiano
Let’s give Greg Schiano some credit (and a bit to Keli Zinn as well): This is a tremendous job so far in the transfer portal for Rutgers football. Simply retaining star wide receiver K.J Duff and running back Antwan Raymond shows that this isn’t the same old Rutgers.
Not by a long shot. Rutgers is all-in, something that Zinn has made clear in her five months on the job as athletic director. And the ability to keep Duff and Raymond means that Rutgers is finally a player in the Big Ten.
Retaining this duo shows that the Scarlet Knights have made tremendous strides on the NIL front. Simply keeping both players while some top-tier programs had wanted to sway Duff and Raymond away in the transfer portal – well, it is a clear indicator of how far this program has come.
NIL
No. 1 transfer portal QB strongly linked to four college football programs
The NCAA transfer portal is officially open for any college football players seeking different destinations for the 2026 season. The portal is open for a two-week period, closing on Jan. 16.
Thousands of players chose to enter the transfer portal in the weeks after the 2025 regular season ended. At the Power Four level, these announcements have led to a realignment of starting quarterbacks.
The first quarterback that decided to search for a new school was former Arizona State starter Sam Leavitt. He will have two seasons of eligibility at his third school.
The 6-foot-2, 205-pounder began his college football journey at Michigan State under Mel Tucker in 2023. He appeared in the four games needed to keep a redshirt, completing 15 of 23 passes for 139 yards, two touchdowns and two interceptions.
Tucker was let go for cause in the middle of the season, and Leavitt entered the transfer portal the following offseason.
Leavitt started all 14 games for Arizona State in 2024. He passed for 2,885 yards, 24 touchdowns and six interceptions while rushing for 443 yards and five touchdowns. He guided the Sun Devils to a 12-2 overall record, Big 12 Championship victory and College Football Playoff appearance.
Leavitt was recognized as the Big 12 Offensive Freshman of the Year and received All-Big 12 Second Team distinction. His 2,885 yards are the most by a freshman quarterback in Arizona State history.
A foot injury limited Leavitt’s 2025 season to just seven games. He passed for 1,628 yards, 10 touchdowns and three interceptions and accumulated another 306 yards and five touchdowns on the ground.
While Leavitt is sure to draw plenty of interest in the coming weeks, he has entered the portal with a “do not contact” tag, meaning he likely has a destination in mind. Pete Nakos of On3 reported that four different schools were in the mix for Leavitt on Saturday.
Kentucky
The Wildcats are a team that has found itself in the mix for Leavitt since the portal opened. Kentucky figures to be a more quarterback-friendly offense now that it has hired Oregon offensive coordinator Will Stein.
Kentucky will have to address its quarterback depth in the transfer portal since Cutter Boley departed for the portal. The Wildcats are confident in incoming freshman Matt Ponatoski, but Leavitt could be the bridge they need to a potential multi-year starter.
Oregon

In the years between the end of Mario Cristobal’s tenure and the beginning of the Dan Lanning era, the Ducks have turned portal-heavy at quarterback. Anthony Brown (Boston College), Bo Nix (Auburn), Dillon Gabriel (UCF and Oklahoma) and Dante Moore (UCLA) have all started for Oregon from the transfer portal.
The other draw for Leavitt to Oregon is its proximity to his hometown. He is from West Linn, Oregon, a suburb just south of Portland and about an hour and a half north of Eugene.
Miami

Mario Cristobal’s approach at quarterback has featured a turn to portal acquisitions in his last two seasons with the Hurricanes. Miami has produced a No. 1 overall pick in the NFL draft with Cam Ward (Washington State) and is in the midst of a College Football Playoff run with Carson Beck (Georgia).
It would not be a surprise if the Hurricanes once again decided to take a look at the transfer portal in the 2026 offseason. Leavitt has been a target for Miami since before the portal opened.
LSU
Lane Kiffin has a reputation with successful transfer portal quarterbacks. Jaxson Dart (USC) was a first-round draft choice in the 2025 NFL draft, and Trinidad Chambliss (Ferris State) is in the midst of leading Ole Miss on a College Football Playoff run.
As a program, each of the last two quarterbacks to transfer in and start for LSU have Heisman Trophies to their names. Jayden Daniels transferred from Arizona State to LSU in 2022, a path Leavitt would take should he choose the Tigers.
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