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UNC basketball linked with 7th

If Hubert Davis is focusing on adding veteran experience to his 2025-26 roster for the North Carolina basketball team, then few people are more qualified than Texas Tech’s Devan Cambridge. Cambridge was recently granted an extra season of eligibility, meaning next campaign will be his seventh at the college level. Goodness. Now that Cambridge knows […]

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UNC basketball linked with 7th

If Hubert Davis is focusing on adding veteran experience to his 2025-26 roster for the North Carolina basketball team, then few people are more qualified than Texas Tech’s Devan Cambridge. Cambridge was recently granted an extra season of eligibility, meaning next campaign will be his seventh at the college level. Goodness.

Now that Cambridge knows he’s ready to rock for next season, he’s also focused on finding a new home. Could a move to Chapel Hill be in the cards for him? While a visit is yet to be set up, On3’s Joe Tipton is reporting that the Heels indeed have been in contact with the 6-6, 210-pounder:

UNC basketball is reportedly showing interest in Texas Tech transfer Devan Cambridge

Last season for the Red Raiders, Cambridge appeared in six games, averaging 5.5 points and 3.5 rebounds per contest before he left the program in order to seek a hardship waiver. There were whispers out of Lubbock too that Cambridge was not happy with his playing time as a senior.

He originally signed with Auburn in 2019, spending three seasons with the Tigers. He then transferred to Arizona State, spending one campaign with the Sun Devils. After his short stint with ASU, Cambridge signed with Texas Tech ahead of the 2023-24 season.

Unfortunately, a serious knee injury limited him to playing only eight games that first season with the Red Raiders, followed by the six contests in 2024-25. Him suiting up in only 14 total games for Tech was a disappointment, but the veteran forward is ready to put the past behind him and find his fourth squad to suit up for.

Might that end up being North Carolina? It’s no secret that Davis has been looking far and wide for some wing help, especially after missing out on Andrej Stojakovic, who has signed with Illinois. Cambridge wouldn’t be the flashiest of moves, but the Tar Heels don’t have a ton of options left out there. Ivan Kharchenkov continues to be mentioned as a possible target too. Soon enough, UNC will need to make some sort of a move as Davis puts the finishing touches on his roster.

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First Ever Fan-Driven NIL Platform Seeks to Even Playing Field in College Sports

While the NIL deals for top college football and basketball stars dominate the headlines, the majority of student athletes aren’t inking lucrative contracts. Naturally, that correlates with top Power Four schools dominating the resources needed to compete in the landscape while smaller programs struggle to have a seat at the table—particularly in the transfer portal. […]

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While the NIL deals for top college football and basketball stars dominate the headlines, the majority of student athletes aren’t inking lucrative contracts.

Naturally, that correlates with top Power Four schools dominating the resources needed to compete in the landscape while smaller programs struggle to have a seat at the table—particularly in the transfer portal.

Rather than accept that bleak outlook, FanStake, a fan-driven NIL platform, is offering fans a chance to change the game.

FanStake CEO Greg Glass spoke exclusively with NIL Daily On SI about the first-of-its-kind platform and how it highly resonates with fans of smaller college sports programs who are capitalizing on the chance to fight back.

FanStake’s mission is at the heart of many name, image, and likeness debates: how can the landscape be evened?

While it can’t achieve true parity, the fan-driven platform allows fans to participate in the recruiting process to make their favorite teams more competitive.

Fans can pledge money to a certain athlete in the transfer portal or allocate it to stars they want to retain. They have the flexibility to select a whole team or a specific player, including high school recruits.

“The bigger idea for us has always been, it’s not stake as a verb, as in, I’m going to put money on the athlete,” Glass said. “It’s stake as a noun in terms of, I have a stake in my team. I can participate in a way that will be impactful.”

What’s unique about FanStake is that fans contribute on a contingent basis.

Tennessee Volunteers men’s basketball recruit Nate Ament was one of the top prospects in the country. The star received $88,000 from the Louisville Cardinals fanbase and nearly $50,000 from the Kentucky Wildcats.

He declined those offers in favor of a smaller endorsement of $13,000 from Volunteers fans, which he will receive once he is enrolled and on the roster.

Cardinals and Wildcats fans will receive a full refund of their contributions.

“It’s low risk for the fans,” Glass explained. “You’re either getting a better team, or if it doesn’t convert, it gives you the opportunity to invest in someone else.”

As fans, it can be demoralizing to continue donating to a school’s NIL funds without seeing any payoff. The money does not return to the fans, which can lead to bitterness and ultimately stop their contributions.

“It’s difficult today as a fan to just give money and not have any insight as to what the impact is and who it went to,” Glass said. “Fans have very strong opinions, and they feel like they have a sense for what their team needs and who they want to keep.”

While Ament posed an extreme example, Glass finds that the platform resonates best with Group of Five schools and smaller programs.

“They tend to be a little more desperate in seeking ways to be competitive,” Glass said. “While big school names and athletes do well on the platform, it’s the smaller fan bases who are just as passionate that are trying to figure out how to stay afloat. We’re seeing a lot of those schools figuring out, If we could tap into our 50,000 to 100,000 fans, this is a way for us to compete with some of the big dogs in the ecosystem.”

Fans of Duke Blue Devils men’s basketball star Cooper Flagg have pledged over $95,000 to retain him.

However, the better stories are the ones like Montana State football, whose fans raised over $60,000 for their athletes in just weeks.

“It’s hugely impactful because they know that they’re being poached by some of the bigger schools out there,” Glass said. “Everyone is trying to figure out the portal as well, but if you can keep the core squad together, it gives you an opportunity to see continued success.”



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2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament Bracket

It’s getting to be crunch time in the college baseball regular season. For the second time in as many weeks, an SEC team dropped from Baseball America’s latest Field of 64 projection, but the conference still produced its replacement, allowing it to maintain its nation-leading 13 bids. The ACC increased its total from nine to […]

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2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament Bracket

It’s getting to be crunch time in the college baseball regular season.

For the second time in as many weeks, an SEC team dropped from Baseball America’s latest Field of 64 projection, but the conference still produced its replacement, allowing it to maintain its nation-leading 13 bids.

The ACC increased its total from nine to 10 bids while the Big 12 (seven), Big Ten (four) and Sun Belt (three) also received three or more bids. The Big West and Conference USA received two bids in the latest projection, including their automatic qualifiers.

Additional Field of 64 notes:

  • Alabama, which was projected as a No. 2 seed last week, stepped into a hosting position while West Virginia moved behind the hosting line and into a two-seed position. 
  • Texas A&M and Xavier were the only at-large teams included in last week’s projected field to not make the cut after Week 13. Southeastern Louisiana, which was projected to win the Southland, was also removed from the field, making the conference a one-bid league with UTRGV the projected winner. 
  • Kentucky, Western Kentucky and Virginia joined the field.
  • Northeastern and Duke moved up from projected three-seeds to two-seeds while Southern California, Arizona and Troy shifted in the other direction to accommodate them.

Below you’ll find the complete Field of 64 partway through the final week of the regular season. Note that our projected hosts do not reflect the top 16 of the Top 25 rankings and are instead a blend of standings and metrics.

Austin, Texas   Knoxville, Tenn.
1. (1) Texas ^* (SEC)   1. (16) Tennessee ^ (SEC)
2. Dallas Baptist (CUSA)   2. UTSA* (American)
3. UTRGV (Southland)   3. East Tennessee State* (SoCon)
4. Bryant* (America East)   4. Tennessee Tech* (Ohio Valley)
     
Baton Rouge, La.   Fort Worth, Texas
1. (2) LSU^ (SEC)   1. (15) TCU^* (Big 12)
2. Louisville (ACC)   2. Oklahoma (SEC)
3. Arizona (Big 12)   3. Cal Poly (Big West)
4. Central Connecticut* (Northeast)   4. Sacramento State* (WAC)
     
Auburn, Ala.   Clemson, S.C.
1. (3) Auburn^* (SEC)   1. (14) Clemson^ (ACC)
2. Northeastern* (CAA)   2. Ole Miss (SEC)
3. Virginia (ACC)   3. Kansas (Big 12)
4. Holy Cross* (Patriot)   4. Rhode Island* (A10)
     
Athens, Ga.   Corvallis, Ore.
1. (4) Georgia^ (SEC)   1. (13) Oregon State^ (Independent)
2. Miami (ACC)   2. Kentucky (SEC)
3. Stetson* (ASUN)   3. Southern California (Big Ten)
4. Wright State* (Horizon)   4. San Diego* (WCC)
     
Fayetteville, Ark.   Tuscaloosa, Ala.
1. (5) Arkansas^ (SEC)   1. (12) Alabama^ (SEC)
2. Southern Miss (Sun Belt)   2. Wake Forest (ACC)
3. Western Kentucky (CUSA)   3. Connecticut* (Big East)
4. Kent State* (MAC)   4. Fairfield* (MAAC)
     
Tallahassee, Fla.   Los Angeles, Calif.
1. (6) Florida State^* (ACC)   1. (11) UCLA^* (Big Ten)
2. West Virginia (Big 12)   2. UC Irvine* (Big West)
3. Troy (Sun Belt)   3. Arizona State (Big 12)
4. Bethune-Cookman* (SWAC)   4. Nevada* (Mountain West)
     
Nashville, Tenn.   Eugene, Ore.
1. (7) Vanderbilt^ (SEC)   1. (10) Oregon^ (Big Ten)
2. Georgia Tech (ACC)   2. Duke (ACC)
3. Iowa (Big Ten)   3. Kansas State (Big 12)
4. Oral Roberts* (Summit)   4. Missouri State* (Missouri Valley)
     
Chapel Hill, N.C.   Conway, S.C.
1. (8) North Carolina^ (ACC)   1. (9) Coastal Carolina^* (Sun Belt)
2. Florida (SEC)   2. NC State (ACC)
3. Cincinnati (Big 12)   3. Mississippi State (SEC)
4. Yale* (Ivy)   4. High Point* (Big South)

* denotes automatic bid
^ denotes regional host

Last Four In

Cincinnati (Big 12)
Iowa (Big Ten)
Western Kentucky (CUSA)
Virginia (ACC)

First Four Out

Notre Dame (ACC)
Xavier (Big East)
Michigan (Big Ten)
Southeastern Louisiana (Southland)

Next Four Out

Texas A&M (SEC)
Virginia Tech (ACC)
Creighton (Big East)
UC Santa Barbara (Big West)

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Nick Saban ‘not sure we really need’ President Donald Trump’s commission on college sports

Nick Saban was formally tabbed to be help solve all that’s ailing college athletics in the day and age of NIL and the transfer portal as co-chair of President Donald Trump‘s commission on college sports. But it appears the former Alabama coach isn’t exactly sold on need for the presidentially-mandated working group. “First of all, […]

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Nick Saban was formally tabbed to be help solve all that’s ailing college athletics in the day and age of NIL and the transfer portal as co-chair of President Donald Trump‘s commission on college sports. But it appears the former Alabama coach isn’t exactly sold on need for the presidentially-mandated working group.

“First of all, I don’t know a lot about the commission. Secondly, I’m not sure we really need a commission,” Saban said Wednesday afternoon on The Paul Finebaum Show on SEC Network. “I think that a lot of people know exactly what  the issues are in college football and exactly what we need to do to fix them. The key to the drill is getting people together so we can move it forward.

“I’m not opposed to players making money, I don’t want anybody to think that. I just think the system that we (are using), the way it’s going right now is not sustainable, and probably not in the best interest of the student-athletes across the board or the game itself,” Saban continued. “I think we need to protect the brand, and the competitive advantages and disadvantages that are being created right now, and I think we can fix all that. But I think we know how to do it, and not just me but a lot of people, we just have to get everybody together to do it.”

Saban then revealed how the idea for a presidential commission even came about, originating during President Trump’s trip to Tuscaloosa for a special commencement ceremony late last month.

“I think first of all, the way all this started when President Trump spoke at the commencement at Alabama, he said: ‘All my friends are saying college football is really messed up. Let’s get together so we can figure out how to fix it.’ So that’s how all this got started,” Saban added. “But I really don’t want to get into the implementation of what I would do. I think the first thing is everybody’s got a different state law, which creates advantages and disadvantages. And everybody is trying to create advantages. So we probably need an interstate commerce type something that gets it all there. I don’t think it’s in the best interest of the players to necessarily be employees. And I think authentic name, image and likeness is good for players, but I don’t think pay-for-play is necessarily what we want.”

Nick Saban to co-chair President Donald Trump commission on college sports

Yahoo! Sports insider Ross Dellenger first reported Trump’s plans to form a commission focused on college sports. The Athletic also added the president will be “very engaged” because of the national importance he sees in college athletics.

The commission on college sports is expected to “deeply examine the unwieldy landscape of college sports, including the frequency of player movement in the transfer portal, the unregulated booster compensation paid to athletes, the debate of college athlete employment, the application of Title IX to school revenue-share payments and, even, conference membership makeup and conference television contracts,” according to Yahoo! Sports. It is expected to be a months-long endeavor.

News of Trump’s plan to consider an executive order and form a commission come with the backdrop of the House v. NCAA settlement, which continues to go through the final approval process. Attorneys filed an updated brief last Wednesday that sought to address Judge Claudia Wilken’s concerns about roster limits, and the plan would create a grandfather provision for athletes who lost their spots. A decision on final approval is expected in the coming weeks.

However, plaintiffs’ attorney Steve Berman called out Nick Saban and President Donald Trump’s discussions as the settlement seeks final approval. Legal experts say an executive order could create more problems, and Berman called for the conversations to cease while both sides work toward final approval for the House v. NCAA settlement.

“While he was a coach, [Nick] Saban initially opposed NIL payments to athletes, pushing to add restrictions and red tape through national legislation to add ‘some sort of control,’” Berman said in a statement. “During his time scrutinizing the athlete pay structure, he made tens of millions of dollars and was previously the highest-paid coach in college football.

“Coach Saban and Trump’s eleventh-hour talks of executive orders and other meddling are just more unneeded self-involvement. College athletes are spearheading historic changes and benefitting massively from NIL deals. They don’t need this unmerited interference from a coach only seeking to protect the system that made him tens of millions.”

— On3’s Nick Schultz contributed to this report.



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Has PJ Haggerty ruled out a return to Memphis? Draft hopeful says no

PJ Haggerty came to the NBA Draft Combine with a singular focus. The 6-3 guard, who earned consensus All-American honors as Memphis basketball’s leading scorer in 2024-25, is hoping to make a name for himself. So far, it’s working out for him. During individual drills on May 13, Haggerty was one of the top five […]

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PJ Haggerty came to the NBA Draft Combine with a singular focus.

The 6-3 guard, who earned consensus All-American honors as Memphis basketball’s leading scorer in 2024-25, is hoping to make a name for himself. So far, it’s working out for him. During individual drills on May 13, Haggerty was one of the top five shooters at the combine, hitting 73% of all shots. Only Mark Sears and Chaz Lanier were better.

Then, during a scrimmage on May 14, Haggerty put up 18 points and seven rebounds in a win for his team at Wintrust Arena in Chicago.

But what does it all mean for Haggerty’s future? Will he keep his name in the NBA Draft and forego his remaining collegiate eligibility? Or, will he come back to college? If so, who will he play for − Memphis, NC State or somewhere else altogether?

PJ Haggerty: ‘I’m just focused on the (NBA) draft’

Following the scrimmage, Haggerty, who entered the transfer portal in April, made it clear his goal is to be drafted by an NBA team in June.

“Yeah, that’s what I’m trying to do,” he said during an interview on ESPN2.

Haggerty reiterated his stance with reporters shortly afterward. But he was also careful to not completely close the door on another season at the collegiate level.

“If I have to (go back to college), then I have to,” he said. “But right now, I’m just focused on the draft. I feel like it only takes one team to love you. Just seeing which team will take a chance on me. Which one will give me an opportunity to get drafted.”

Haggerty, who does not appear on ESPN’s most recent mock draft, has until May 28 to decide whether to take his chances and stay in the draft or return for another season in college. He said intends to use the remaining time to continue evaluating every option. Haggerty has multiple workouts planned upon the conclusion of the combine.

Once those are complete, he said he will huddle up with his family and agents to figure out what’s next.

PJ Haggerty on transfer portal, NIL reports

In the event Haggerty plays another season of college basketball, which team he will suit up for has been a hot topic.

Widespread reporting suggests his landing spot is most likely NC State. In April, college basketball insider Jeff Goodman reported Haggerty is seeking at least $4 million in NIL money to play the 2025-26 season, adding he also wants to play primarily point guard.

Haggerty downplayed much of what has been reported.

“You can’t believe the media,” he said. “I mean, I haven’t really talked to any schools. I’ve just been trying to focus on the combine and workouts. Just letting the media do what they do.”

If he decides to go back to school in 2025-26, Haggerty added a return to Memphis is still very much in play. He said he received a text message from Tigers coach Penny Hardaway not long after the scrimmage on May 14, which read “‘Good game, killa.'”

“But, yeah, we’ve talked. He’s just encouraging me to chase my dreams,” said Haggerty. “If I have to come back then he’ll take me with open arms, things like that. But he’s just 100% wanting me to chase my dreams and do what’s best for me.

“If that’s the best fit for me, that’s the best fit for me.”

USA TODAY Sports reporter Mark Giannotto contributed to this report.

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



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Nick Saban pumps brakes on NIL commission, reveals talk with Donald Trump

Former Alabama coach Nick Saban on Wednesday questioned the need for a national commission on college sports that he is expected to co-chair. Last week, CBS Sports confirmed Saban and Texas Tech’s NIL collective founder Cody Campbell were jointly expected to lead the commission that would be created by President Donald Trump to influence the […]

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Former Alabama coach Nick Saban on Wednesday questioned the need for a national commission on college sports that he is expected to co-chair.

Last week, CBS Sports confirmed Saban and Texas Tech’s NIL collective founder Cody Campbell were jointly expected to lead the commission that would be created by President Donald Trump to influence the future structure of college athletics.

“I don’t know a lot about the commission, first of all,” Saban told The Paul Finebaum Show. “Secondly, I’m not sure we need a commission. I think a lot of people know exactly what the issues are in college football and exactly what we need to do to fix them. I think the key to the drill is getting people together to move it forward.”

But Saban later told Finebaum that, “I don’t think I should be at the tip [of the spear]. I think I’m someone that has lots of experience and certainly would like to help anyone who would seek our help to try to help fix it. Because I spent my whole life — 50 years — trying to help players be more successful in life. I want to see us continue to be able to do that, not just in football but in all sports across the board.”

Saban met with Trump after the President visited Tuscaloosa on May 1 to give a commencement speech for Alabama graduates. The meeting also involved Alabama Senator and former SEC coach Tommy Tuberville, who told Tide 100.9 radio last month that “Trump wants to help on this NIL,” but added, “I don’t know how he can do it through an executive order.”

Saban told Finebaum that Trump told him, “all my friends are saying college football is really messed up. Let’s get together so we can figure out how to fix it.”

After the meeting, the Wall Street Journal reported Trump was considering an executive order involving NIL in college sports.

As for the commission, which was also reported in the days following the meeting, Saban told reporters Wednesday morning, “To be honest with you, I don’t really know much about this commission. I don’t really know what this commission would do. I think we know what needs to be done, I just think we’ve got to figure out who’s got the will to do it. I learned one thing about coaching for all these years that when you get into a subject like this that’s very complex, it’s probably good not to talk about it off the cuff.

“I’ll find out more about it, and if there’s something I can do to help college football be better, I’m always going to be committed to do that. I was committed to do that as a coach, to help players be more successful in life and I would continue to do the same thing now.”

Saban told Finebaum the meeting with Trump was “how this all started,” but, “I really don’t want to get into the whole implementation of what I would do.”

He then provided a few ideas of what he would propose.

“The first thing is everybody’s got a different state law, which creates advantages and disadvantages,” Saban said. “Everybody is trying to create advantages. Probably need an interstate commerce type something that gets it all there.

“I don’t think it’s in the best interest of the players to necessarily be employees. And I think authentic name, image and likeness is good for players, but I don’t think pay-for-play is necessarily what we want. What is college? We all went to college to create value for our future. I think we want to keep some semblance of that in terms of guys becoming and developing as people and students, and developing a career off the field, as well as having an ability to play at the next level. We’ve got to have a system that enhances all three of those.”

Saban, Tuberville and SEC commissioner Greg Sankey were among the golfers at Wednesday’s Regions Tradition Pro-Am in Hoover, Alabama.

Said Sankey to Finebaum on the commission: “I think what’s important to remember is that’s a lot of ‘sources say.’ I deal with reality. There’s plenty of commentary about this possible commission. I’ll go back to the work we’ve been doing educate House and Senate members. I know the President of the United States is an enormous sports fan. He’s been at our games. Last year the Georgia game in Tuscaloosa for the University of Alabama. He’s been at national championship games in January 2018 and January 2020 involving our teams. He’s been back then at a regular-season game.

“So I know he’s aware. I’m not gonna overreact or react to what’s reported about commissions. I think there are a lot of wise people who can provide input. Hopefully people come to me for counsel from time to time. But what I do focus on is our realities, which is we’ll continue to work through Congress because that’s an opportunity to set national standards. We need Democrats and Republicans to do the really hard work they do every day, but also to come together around college sports — our Olympic movement, our non-revenue sports, around supporting a structure of regulatory common sense for college athletics that provides economic opportunities for young people. We also don’t have any real consumer protection around what young people may be signing, who’s representing — their agents or NIL negotiators or NIL entities.”

Sankey, Saban and other coaches and athletics directors have spent time on Capitol Hill in recent years lobbying for legislation around college athletics. Saban has cited issues such as protecting the NCAA from litigation about antitrust violations that have underpinned recent court victories against the organization, as well as future structure concerns such as employment status, unionization and Title IX that are not specifically addressed in the ongoing House vs. NCAA class-action settlement.

“There’s a lot of good work that can be done,” Sankey told Finebaum. “We’ll continue to focus on that and we’ll adapt to more than just ‘sources say’ and respect that there’s a lot of people in Washington that have an interest. What we need is a focus on participating in collaboration and problem solving.”

The House settlement, which could be approved by a federal judge within days, would create a system of revenue sharing that allows schools to directly pay athletes. That alone has led to concern about non-revenue sports being cut by schools to divert financial resources to paying players in revenue-generating sports led by football and men’s basketball.

“We got to protect Olympic sports, whether they produce revenue or not because it’s opportunities for young people to get an education,” Saban told Finebaum. “It trains a lot of people for the Olympics. There’s a lot of things about college football that I think is worth trying to make sure we can keep intact so that people can continue to have opportunities and be successful.”

Saban, who visited Tuberville in Washington earlier this year, told Finebaum he felt college sports’ perceived problems were fixable.

“I’m not opposed to players making money,” Saban said. “I don’t want anybody to think that. I just think the system — the way it’s going right now, it’s not sustainable and probably not in the best interest of the student-athletes across the board, or the game itself.

“I think we need to protect the brand and the competitive advantages and disadvantages that are being created right now, and I think we can fix all that. But I think we know how to do it, and I think — not just me but a lot of people — but we just got to get everybody together to do it.”

Repeated Saban: “I just think we got to have some people get together and push it forward. I think there’s a lot of people out there that know how to fix it. I just think we’ve got to push it forward and get everybody together. Some of it may need to be done on the federal level, and that’s where we’re gonna have to get people together.”

Saban also reiterated his assertion that his retirement last year was unrelated to the state of college sports.

“I didn’t get out of coaching because the system in college football right now,” he told Finebaum. “I got out because of my age. I thought it was affecting the program. I didn’t want to ride the program down. I think the people at Alabama now will do a great job there.”



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Boogie Fland Withdraws from 2025 NBA Draft, Enters CBB Transfer Portal from Arkansas

Former Arkansas guard Boogie Fland has reportedly withdrawn his name from consideration at the 2025 NBA draft, as his agent told ESPN’s Jonathan Givony. He entered the transfer portal following his freshman season with the Razorbacks and is currently the fifth-best player remaining in the portal (No. 8 overall), per 247Sports. Fland, 18, averaged 13.5 […]

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Former Arkansas guard Boogie Fland has reportedly withdrawn his name from consideration at the 2025 NBA draft, as his agent told ESPN’s Jonathan Givony.

He entered the transfer portal following his freshman season with the Razorbacks and is currently the fifth-best player remaining in the portal (No. 8 overall), per 247Sports.

Fland, 18, averaged 13.5 points, 5.1 assists and 1.5 steals in his lone season at Arkansas, shooting just 37.9 percent from the field and 34 percent from three. He helped lead the Razorbacks to a 22-14 record and a berth in the Sweet 16, where they fell short against Texas Tech in overtime.

He struggled in the tournament, averaging just four points per game in a role off the bench after returning from a long layoff due to a hand injury suffered in mid-January. His tourney struggles likely came from being rusty after being sidelined for two months, as he was fantastic in the first half of the season for Arkansas.

In April, head coach John Calipari wished Fland well at his next destination, noting that he believed Fland was a first-round talent:

But it’s fairly clear, based on Fland’s withdrawal from the draft, that NBA scouts potentially didn’t see him as a first-round talent, at least this year. B/R’s Jonathan Wasserman projected Fland to be a second-round pick in his latest mock draft, tabbing the Toronto Raptors to select him at No. 39.

He wrote that Fland “wasn’t convincing enough this year to sell teams on a starting NBA point guard. The size and athleticism questions popped up too much whenever he was driving or trying to finish. But his ball-handling and shiftiness for creation and playmaking, and his reliable shotmaking, do paint him as an attractive scoring/playmaking spark for NBA teams to think of for instant offense off the bench.”

Perhaps they’ll do so next year. For now, Fland is staying in college and likely will secure an NIL deal more valuable than what he would have made in the NBA next season.



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