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Yolett McPhee-McCuin and the Ole Miss Rebels have dominated the NCAA Transfer Portal this offseason with near double-digit newcomers signed to the program. After a Sweet 16 run in the NCAA Tournament, the Rebels attacked the free agent market with multiple immediate impact pieces heading to Oxford. Now, the program has been labeled as an […]

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The Buzz

Yolett McPhee-McCuin and the Ole Miss Rebels have dominated the NCAA Transfer Portal this offseason with near double-digit newcomers signed to the program.

After a Sweet 16 run in the NCAA Tournament, the Rebels attacked the free agent market with multiple immediate impact pieces heading to Oxford.

Now, the program has been labeled as an offseason winner, according to ESPN, with Ole Miss bringing in one of the top portal hauls in the nation.

Who’s set to make their way to Oxford this offseason?

No. 1: Latasha Lattimore – Virginia

“Tash is a dynamic human being and talent,” said Coach Yo. “She committed to Coach Quentin Hillsman out of high school and it’s really cool to see them reunite! I’ve always loved her game and I’m excited to mentor her in the last stage of her collegiate career!”

As a redshirt senior at Virginia, Lattimore was a standout performer for the Cavaliers, averaging a near double-double with 14.3 points and a team-leading 8.2 rebounds per game. Additionally, Lattimore will be a vital defender in the paint for the Rebels, as she tallied an impressive 69 total blocks this season, which ranks 18th-best in the nation.

No. 2: Jayla Murray – Wichita State

The past two seasons, Murray has been a highly touted student-athlete at Wichita State, earning a spot on the 2024-25 AAC All Conference Second Team.

As a redshirt junior, Murray was the Shockers’ leading scorer and rebounder, averaging 12.4 points and 5.3 rebounds per game. The St. Louis, Missouri, native finished in double figures 22 times, notched two 20-point performances and two double-doubles.

Throughout her entire career at Wichita State, Murray saw minutes in 62 games, earning a starting spot in 49 of those contests.

No. 3: Kaitlin Peterson – UCF

The Rebels landed a commitment from UCF star Kaitlin Peterson last week after going public with a decision. The program is yet to announce the talented transfer as a signee.

The 5-foot-9 senior is coming off of a stellar 2024-25 campaign after averaging 21.4 points per game on the season.

No. 4: Tianna Thompson – Georgia Tech

Thompson comes to Ole Miss after spending a year at Georgia Tech, where she appeared in 21 games as a true freshman.

The Atlanta, Georgia, native provided a spark in multiple games for the Yellow Jackets, including their matchup against Florida State, scoring a career-high 19 points, going 8-of-11 from the field, including three 3-pointers. 

No. 5: Debrasha Powe – Mississippi State

“Debreasha represents all what’s right about the state of Mississippi,” said McPhee-McCuin. “She’s a leader, a person of great faith, and has phenomenal support from her family and people in the state.

Starting in all but one of the 99 career games she has appeared in, Powe averages 8.51 points.

No. 6: Desrae Kyles – Central Michigan

“Desrae’s addition will be an important piece to this puzzle,” said McPhee-McCuin. “Her size, length and personality are incredible. There are truly no ceilings to her potential and I am excited and grateful that she is apart of our family here at Ole Miss!”

Appearing in 13 games as a true freshman, Kyles averaged 3.3 points and 3.1 rebounds per game, while shooting 52.8% from the field.

The 6-5 center notched multiple notable games for Chippewas, scoring a season-high seven points against Cleveland State and a season-high seven rebounds against Buffalo. Kyles did not compete as a sophomore, electing to redshirt the 2024-25 season.

No. 7: Denim DeShields – Mississippi State

It’s another impactful addition for the Rebels heading into the 2025-26 season after DeShields started in all 34 games played for the Bulldogs last year.

The talented 5-foot-5 guard averaged 27.1 minutes per game for Mississippi State during the 2025-26 season with averages of 5.7 points, 3.2 assists, 1.7 rebounds and 1.2 steals per game.

Before making her way to the Southeastern Conference, DeShields spent two seasons with the UAB Blazers.

The 2025 NFL Draft Recap: Ole Miss Sees Multiple Rebels Selected

Ole Miss Lands Commitment From Sought-After Transfer Safety

Super Bowl Champion, Ole Miss Star Wide Receiver AJ Brown Earns Prestigious Honor

Follow Zack Nagy on Twitter: @znagy20 and Ole Miss Rebels On SI: @OleMissOnSI for all coverage surrounding the Ole Miss program.

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Mack Brown opens up about Bill Belichick at North Carolina: ‘No reason they shouldn’t be successful’

North Carolina is making major changes to ensure that new coach Bill Belichick succeeds in his role with the football program — according to his predecessor, Mack Brown, at least.  Brown said during a recent interview on SiriusXM Sports Radio that North Carolina has overhauled its approach to name, image and likeness (NIL) deals and […]

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North Carolina is making major changes to ensure that new coach Bill Belichick succeeds in his role with the football program — according to his predecessor, Mack Brown, at least. 

Brown said during a recent interview on SiriusXM Sports Radio that North Carolina has overhauled its approach to name, image and likeness (NIL) deals and its rigorous academic standards to aid Belichick in his transition. 

“As far as North Carolina and Bill Belichick, he’s arguably the best coach ever,” Brown said. “They’ve committed money to it, they’ve helped him with academics, they’ve lowered those standards some. So there’s absolutely no reason they shouldn’t be successful.”   

Brown claims that he did not have the same resources. His second stint with the Tar Heels began in 2019 on the cusp of the NCAA’s sweeping NIL and transfer portal reforms. He went 15-10, with consecutive bowl appearances, in 2019 and 2020. 

But in 2021, the first season after the NCAA allowed athletes to profit off of their NIL, Brown’s Tar Heels fell to 6-7. 

“We always built programs on fit, and in our last couple years there, we were having to get parents with money,” Brown said. “We were trying to get kids over a 3.0 (GPA) because that’s who we could get. We signed 26 players at North Carolina our next-to-last year — high school players — and didn’t pay them a penny. I felt guilty.” 

In spite of North Carolina’s financial woes, the Tar Heels rebounded with a nine-win season and an appearance in the ACC Championship Game — the high watermark of Brown’s second tenure — and produced a respectable eight wins in 2023. 

Through it all, the Tar Heels still struggled to pay their top stars. Brown said that running back Omarion Hampton, a two-time CBS Sports All-American and a first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, turned down offers over $1 million to transfer and stayed with UNC through 2024 for $300,000. 

“I told him he should leave because it was just crazy as you were looking at those things.” Brown said.    

North Carolina gradually lost ground in the ACC, and in 2024 fell back to 6-6 with a paltry 3-5 showing in conference play. As a result, North Carolina decided to move on from Brown. 

“It was time for me — North Carolina didn’t have NIL money,” Brown said. “I said we’re kind of a slow bleed. We weren’t able to recruit the top kids like we were when we first got there. So it was time for them and it was time for me, so it was kind of like a divorce. Everybody was ready.” 

North Carolina’s administration replaced the 73-year-old Brown with 73-year-old Belichick, who comes to Chapel Hill with eight Super Bowl rings as an assistant and head coach at the NFL level. Though this is Belichick’s first go around as an on-field collegiate coach, it hasn’t taken him long to adjust to recruiting. 

He quickly went about overhauling North Carolina’s roster in his image with a robust 40-transfer signing class during the 2025 cycle. The Tar Heels also inked 29 high school prospects that will be freshmen this season. 

“You’ve got a chance to succeed at the highest level and I expect them to do that and I’m proud for them.” Brown said. 





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Clemson’s Brad Brownell confirms he had discussion with Indiana about job opening – The Daily Hoosier

Clemson basketball coach Brad Brownell’s name generated considerable buzz during the recent IU basketball job search. As it turns out, there was at least a conversation involving the Indiana native and IU. But Brownell does not appear to be interested in remaining in coaching long term, and sought an arrangement that he might have only […]

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Clemson basketball coach Brad Brownell’s name generated considerable buzz during the recent IU basketball job search.

As it turns out, there was at least a conversation involving the Indiana native and IU.

But Brownell does not appear to be interested in remaining in coaching long term, and sought an arrangement that he might have only been able to find at Clemson.

Clemson Insider is reporting Brownell negotiated a special provision in his new six-year contract signed last month with Clemson that provides him a new role at the school should he decide to step down from his current head coaching position.

“Should Brownell terminate employment as head coach prior to the end of the agreement he has the option to step down as head coach and become “Special Assistant/Advisor to the Athletic Director” for the remainder of the term of this agreement for a period not to exceed four years at an annual salary of $250,000,” Clemson Insider reports of the contract language.

Brownell told Clemson Insider he informed the AD Graham Neff he wasn’t sure if he’d be into coaching another seven to ten years, citing the “crazy new world” of college basketball in the NIL and transfer portal era.

The report doesn’t suggest whether Indiana’s conversation with Brownell was anything more than a preliminary discussion like others the school probably had with multiple prospects is it sought to replace Mike Woodson.  But Indiana was the only school Brownell mentioned in the report — possibly because it is the only job he would have considered beyond Clemson.

The 56-year-old Evansville, Ind. product grew up an IU fan.  He was a high school teammate of IU legend Calbert Cheaney and spent a few years coaching at various Indiana schools.

Although he is just six years older than the man IU ultimately hired — Darian DeVries — Brownell has been a head coach for 16 more years and appears to be at a different stage in his career.

Brownell says he realized Indiana was looking for a longer-term solution at head coach and someone who fully embraced the new era of the sport, rather than a soft landing in the relatively near future.

“When I had a discussion with Indiana, I knew that was something that would be different,” Brownell told Clemson Insider.  “I knew Indiana would not offer me anything like that, it would just be coaching.”

For complete coverage of IU basketball, GO HERE.    


The Daily Hoosier –“Where Indiana fans assemble when they’re not at Assembly”



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Mack Brown says Bill Belichick has ‘no reason’ he shouldn’t be successful at UNC

Mack Brown didn’t leave North Carolina in the best shape when the program dismissed him as its head coach in November, going 6-6 in his final regular season with the team. However, he has high expectations for his successor, Bill Belichick.  In fact, the former UNC head coach seems to think that Belichick might have […]

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Mack Brown didn’t leave North Carolina in the best shape when the program dismissed him as its head coach in November, going 6-6 in his final regular season with the team. However, he has high expectations for his successor, Bill Belichick. 

In fact, the former UNC head coach seems to think that Belichick might have an easier job at succeeding in Chapel Hill than he did over the last couple of years. In an interview with SiriusXM College Sports Radio’s “Dusty and Danny In the Morning,” Brown shared that the school has loosened up the academic requirements and has made more investments into the football program ever since Belichick’s hiring in December.

“As far as North Carolina and Bill Belichick now, he’s arguably the best coach ever,” Brown said. “They’ve committed money to it. They’ve helped him with academics. They’ve lowered those standards some. So, there’s absolutely no reason they shouldn’t be successful … and they’ve changed the roster. I think they’ve signed maybe 60-something new transfers. 

“So, you’ve got a chance to succeed at the highest level, and I expect him to do that and I’m proud for him.”

There were rumors and reports at the time of Belichick’s hiring that UNC had promised to raise the name, image and likeness (NIL) budget for its football program in order to secure the six-time Super Bowl-winning head coach. There was an expectation that the NIL for UNC would be upwards of $20 million, CBS Sports reported in December.

While NIL collectives aren’t publicly available, Belichick signed a five-year, $50 million contract to become UNC’s head coach. That’s twice as much as what Brown made by the time his tenure at UNC ended, as he had three years and $15 million remaining on his contract following the 2024 season, according to ESPN. 

So, UNC is making a richer investment with Belichick than it did with Brown, at least in terms of salary. But Brown continued to insist that UNC was behind other programs in terms of NIL money by the time his tenure ended, adding that the high academic standards made it difficult to recruit and retain players.

“North Carolina didn’t have NIL money and I said we were kind of a slow bleed,” Brown said Tuesday afternoon on the program. “We weren’t able to recruit the top kids like we were when we first got there. It was time for them and it was time for me, kind of like a divorce. Everybody was ready. It’s just who and how and how you split at the end. It was best for me to get out.”

“We always built programs on fit, and our last couple years there we were having to get parents with money, we were trying to get kids over a 3.0 because that’s who we could get. We signed 26 players at North Carolina our next-to-last year — high school players — and didn’t pay them a penny. So those kids, we even had Omarion Hampton, he got offered $1 million-plus to leave and he stayed for $300,000. I told him he should leave, because it was just crazy as you were looking at those things.”

UNC denies banning Bill Belichick’s girlfriend from facility, Is Belichick rebranding?

UNC denies banning Bill Belichick’s girlfriend from facility, Is Belichick rebranding?

Brown’s claim that UNC has loosened its academic standards for the football program also isn’t easily verifiable. However, Belichick had a lot more success landing talent in the transfer portal this offseason than Brown ever did. Belichick’s transfer portal class for the 2025 offseason ranked ninth on 247 Sports. Brown, meanwhile, never had a transfer class ranked higher than 30th, including a 58th-place ranking in 2024.

In terms of high school recruiting, Belichick helped UNC land the 36th-best recruiting class in 2025 while its 2026 recruiting class currently ranks 17th on 247 Sports. After landing three straight top-15 recruiting classes from 2020-22, Brown’s recruiting classes at UNC took a bit of a dip in the years of his tenure. It brought in the No. 31 recruiting class in 2023 and the No. 26 recruiting class in 2024, via 247 Sports.

Brown’s claim that UNC has loosened academic restrictions and made more investments in the football program for Belichick came as his successor has been dealing with some off-field drama. Belichick’s relationship with his girlfriend, Jordon Hudson, has become a national storyline in recent weeks, with some questioning her involvement in his life and UNC’s football program. After a report emerged earlier in May that Hudson was banned from UNC’s football facilities, the school denied that was the case. 

Belichick’s arrival to Chapel Hill has certainly brought more buzz to the football program than it has received in recent years. UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham recently told Axios that the team sold out its season tickets for the 2025 season despite a 25% increase, something it failed to accomplish last year.

The expectations for UNC don’t seem to be as high for the 2025 season, though. Its projected win total is 7.5 at DraftKings Sportsbook as of Wednesday. That’s just a slight increase from the number of games it won in 2024 and is lower than the number of games UNC won under Brown three times between 2020-23. 

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CBS Sports rankings after landing Boogie Fland

Florida basketball scored big-time by signing former Arkansas Razorbacks guard Boogie Fland to the team via the NCAA transfer portal after he withdrew his name from the NBA draft. Unsurprisingly, the Gators got a huge boost in the preseason rankings as a result, as demonstrated by CBS Sports writer Gary Parrish’s latest college basketball top […]

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Florida basketball scored big-time by signing former Arkansas Razorbacks guard Boogie Fland to the team via the NCAA transfer portal after he withdrew his name from the NBA draft.

Unsurprisingly, the Gators got a huge boost in the preseason rankings as a result, as demonstrated by CBS Sports writer Gary Parrish’s latest college basketball top 25-and-1 rankings. In it, he lifted the Orange and Blue nine spots to No. 6 in the nation, now nestled between the fifth-ranked UConn Huskies and seventh-ranked Texas Tech Red Raiders — both are programs that Todd Golden and Co. beat on their way to the NCAA Tournament title.

“This is the era of college basketball dominated by transfer waivers and big NIL deals that, when combined, allows programs with strong financial support to replace departing student-athletes with established college standouts as opposed to high school prospects and/or role players,” Parrish begins.

“On Tuesday, Florida made another such move by securing a commitment from Arkansas transfer Boogie Fland, a 6-foot-2 guard who was a McDonald’s All-American in 2024 before averaging 13.5 points and 5.1 assists in one season with the Razorbacks.

“Fland is the second notable transfer to pick Florida. The other is Princeton’s Xaivian Lee, a 6-4 guard who averaged 16.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 5.5 assists this past season. Their additions mean the Gators could use a starting lineup that looks like this:”

“That’s three experienced forwards, each of whom played a meaningful role in Florida’s run through the 2025 NCAA Tournament, and two experienced guards who have already averaged more than 13 points and five assists at the Division I level,” Parrish continues. “It’s a projected starting lineup talented enough to get the Gators up to No. 6 in Version 12 of the 2025-26 CBS Sports Top 25 And 1 preseason college basketball rankings, where Houston remains No. 1.”

CBS Sports’ Top 25 And 1 rankings

  1. Houston
  2. St. John’s
  3. BYU
  4. Purdue
  5. UConn
  6. Florida
  7. Texas Tech
  8. Michigan
  9. Duke
  10. UCLA
  11. Arizona
  12. Kentucky
  13. Iowa State
  14. Louisville
  15. Michigan State
  16. Oregon
  17. Kansas
  18. Auburn
  19. Arkansas
  20. Tennessee
  21. Gonzaga
  22. Texas
  23. Illinois
  24. Alabama
  25. Wisconsin
  26. Ohio State

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.





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College basketball transfer portal’s top eight available players before 2025 NBA Draft deadline

Eight of the 2025 college basketball transfer portal‘s top 150 players are still available after a hectic two-month period that saw more than 2,000 entrants. Three of the biggest names are actively in the 2025 NBA Draft process and have until June 15 to withdraw their names and return to college basketball. The others are hot […]

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Eight of the 2025 college basketball transfer portal‘s top 150 players are still available after a hectic two-month period that saw more than 2,000 entrants. Three of the biggest names are actively in the 2025 NBA Draft process and have until June 15 to withdraw their names and return to college basketball. The others are hot commodities for a handful of the nation’s most prestigious programs.

The draft will potentially rob several of the transfer portal’s biggest names. Former UAB star Yaxel Lendeborg earned the top spot in the transfer portal rankings ahead of his April 5 commitment to Michigan. He’s since had his name jump up draft boards following a strong showing at the 2025 NBA Draft Combine and is a threat to keep his name in the process.

Duke transfer commitment Cedric Coward is another name to watch. The portal’s No. 13 overall prospect pledged April 28 to the Blue Devils but is leaning towards staying in the NBA Draft. Jon Scheyer and company developed a backup plan.

RELATED (VIP): Leaders emerge for Texas Tech transfer Darrion Williams

Below is a closer look at the eight uncommitted top 150 transfers.



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NIL Series

RunnerSpace presents a four-part documentary series showcasing the 2025 Brooks NIL Program and the eight exceptional athletes who make up the inaugural class. Get to know Joe Barrett, Ben Crane, Juan Gonzalez, Clemmie Lilley, Alexa Matora, Sidi Njie, Vincent Recupero, and Victoria Rodriguez, as they experience what it means to be a Brooks NIL athlete […]

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NIL Series

RunnerSpace presents a four-part documentary series showcasing the 2025 Brooks NIL Program and the eight exceptional athletes who make up the inaugural class.

Get to know Joe Barrett, Ben Crane, Juan Gonzalez, Clemmie Lilley, Alexa Matora, Sidi Njie, Vincent Recupero, and Victoria Rodriguez, as they experience what it means to be a Brooks NIL athlete and eye big PR performances at the Brooks PR Invitational on Sunday, June 8.

Watch the Brooks NIL team compete live at the Brooks PR Invitational on Sunday, June 8 on RunnerSpace HERE >>

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