Today, I provide another weekly update to my Never-Too-Early Preseason Top-25. The players in bold are the changes that have been made since my last rankings.

When it comes to projecting rosters, I’ve tried to take out some of the guesswork by establishing some clear rules:

Besides seniors who have exhausted their eligibility, I am including among the lost players those who are projected by Hoops HQ NBA Draft expert Krysten Peek to be a first- or second-round pick, unless they have announced their intentions to come back to school. If a player is testing the waters but is not among those projected draftees, he is projected to return to school until he announces otherwise.

For recruiting rankings, I am using the 247Sports Composite, both for where the school’s class ranks as a group as well as the rankings for the individual players. Those ranks are in parentheses below.

Here, then, is the (correct) order of the Top 25 teams in men’s college basketball as of today. Keep checking back to Hoops HQ for more updates.


1. Duke

Last week: 1

Losing: Cameron Boozer, Isaiah Evans, Maliq Brown, Nikolas Khamenia, Darren Harris

Retaining: Cayden Boozer, Caleb Foster, Dame Sarr, Patrick Ngongba, Sebastian Wilkins

Incoming (3): Cameron Williams (3), Bryson Howard (15), Maxime Meyer (84), Deron Rippey, Jr. (10), John Blackwell (Wisconsin), Drew Scharnowski (Belmont), Joaquim Boumtje-Boumtje (Spain), Jacob Theodosiou (Loyola Md.)

Evans affirmed his intentions last week to remain in the draft as expected, but Jon Scheyer will still take a championship-caliber roster into next season. Ngongba’s decision to turn down a chance to be a first-round pick, combined with the arrival of Blackwell, who has been a consensus top-10 player in the portal, leaves the Blue Devils loaded. Blackwell was also at the combine, but he is projected to go undrafted and thus expected to return. The Blue Devils even have another five-star freshman named Cameron who has a chance to be an All-American. Scheyer also went the international route with Boumtje-Boumtje, a dynamic 7-foot center who plays on a development team for FC Barcelona, averaging 16.2 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 1.8 assists in 23 minutes. He’s originally from Florida (his father Ruben played for the Portland Trail Blazers) and moved to Spain a few years ago. Boumtje-Boumtje is only 16, which means he can’t declare for the NBA Draft for another two years.

2. Michigan

Last week: 2

Losing: Yaxel Lendeborg, Aday Mara, Morez Johnson, Roddy Gayle, Nimari Burnett, Will Tschetter

Retaining: Elliot Cadeau, L.J. Cason, Trey McKenney

Incoming (4): Brandon McCoy (14), Quinn Costello (44), Joseph Hartman (95), Malachi Brown (169), Marcus Moller (Spain), Lincoln Cosby (45), J.P. Estrella (Tennessee), Jalen Reed (LSU), Moustapha Thiam (Cincinnati)

Cadeau made the expected move last week and announced he was withdrawing from the NBA Draft. He has a great chance to lead the Wolverines to another national championship. Dusty May has had enormous success signing big men out of the transfer portal, and he got another great one in Thiam, a 7-foot-2 junior center from Senegal who averaged 12.8 points, 7.1 rebounds and 1.6 blocks for the Bearcats. Reed is a 6-foot-10 senior forward who saw limited action the last two seasons due to ACL and Achilles injuries. Throw in Estrella, and the Wolverines will once again be dominant in the paint. Mara and Johnson were both invited to the combine and are not expected to return.

Moustapha Thiam's move from Cincinnati to Michigan gives Wolverines coach Dusty May another great big man
Moustapha Thiam’s move from Cincinnati to Michigan gives Wolverines coach Dusty May another great big man
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3. Arizona

Last week: 3

Losing: Brayden Burries, Koa Peat, Jaden Bradley, Tobe Awaka, Anthony Dell’Orso, Dwayne Aristode

Retaining: Ivan Kharchenkov, Sid Gueye, Bryce James, Montiejus Krivas

Incoming: (26): Caleb Holt (4), Cameron Holmes (29), Derek Dixon (North Carolina), J.J. Mandaquit (Washington), Endurance Aiyamenkhue (The Netherlands), Ugnius Jarusevicius (Nebraska), Evan Otten (Idaho State)

Tommy Lloyd added another couple of big pieces in Otten, a 6-foot-11 junior who was on the Big Sky All-Defensive team last year, and Jarusevicius, a 6-foot-10 senior forward from Lithuania who averaged 7.0 points and 2.0 rebounds for the Cornhuskers. But the big question the next few weeks will be whether Peat will return for his sophomore season. His poor performance in shooting drills at the combine has added steam to the possibility that he will return to Tucson for his sophomore season. If that’s the case, Arizona could be a juggernaut. Krivas’ decision to bypass the draft was a game changer. Dixon was a terrific pickup after showing much promise as a freshman in Chapel Hill.

4. Michigan State

Last week: 4

Losing: Jaxon Kohler, Trey Fort, Carson Cooper, Denham Wojcik, Divine Ugochukwu

Retaining: Jeremy Fears, Kur Teng, Coen Carr, Cam Ward, Jordan Scott, Jesse McCulloch, Kaleb Glenn

Incoming (5): Ethan Taylor (28), Jasiah Jervis (33), Carlos Medlock Jr. (46), Julius Avent (86), Anton Bonke (Charlotte)

Fears played well at the combine, but he is still projected to go undrafted and is thus expected to return. Tom Izzo finally got active in the transfer portal with the addition of Bonke, a 7-foot-2 junior center from the South Pacific island of Vanuatu who averaged 10.6 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.5 blocks last season for the 49ers. Otherwise, continuity will once again be a major feature for this program, putting the Spartans in contention to pursue a Big Ten championship.

5. Illinois

Last week: 5

Losing: Keaton Wagler, Kylan Boswell, Ben Humrichous, Mihailo Petrovic, Toni Bilic, Ty Rodgers, Brandon Lee

Retaining: Andrej Stojakovic, Tomislav Ivisic, Zvonimir Ivisic, Jake Davis, David Mirkovic

Incoming (8): Quentin Coleman (34), Lucas Morillo (59), Ethan Brown (164), Landon Davis (243), Zavier Zens (210), Stefan Vaaks (Providence)

Stojakovic attended the draft combine but did not play in the five-on-five scrimmages. He is projected as a second-round pick, but he has indicated he is likely to return. If he stays in the draft the Illini will drop in the rankings, but if he comes back it would mean that Brad Underwood will return five of the top eight scorers from his Final Four squad. Vaaks could be an All-Big Ten guard after a terrific freshman season at Providence.

The Illini’s 2026-27 outlook could change dramatically depending on whether Andrej Stojakovic decides to return to Champaign or enters the NBA Draft
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6. Florida

Last week: 6

Losing: Rueben Chinyelu, Xaivian Lee, Micah Handlogten, Olivier Rioux

Retaining: Boogie Fland, Urban Klavzar, Isaiah Brown, C.J. Ingram, Alex Lloyd, Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh

Incoming (144): Jones Lay (NA), Denzel Aberdeen (Kentucky), Arturas Butajevas (Lithuania), Domen Petrovic (Slovenia)

Florida is still waiting on a final decision from Chinyelu, but even if he stays in the draft the Gators will be Final Four good. Haugh and Condon’s decisions to return will once again give Florida one of the nation’s top frontcourts. Todd Golden recently added another experienced, highly-skilled big man in Petrovic, a 6-foot-9 forward who is 22 years old. He averaged 16.4 points, 6.8 rebounds and 3.3 assists while making 39 percent from three-point range for his pro team in Slovenia. Another question is Aberdeen, who is applying to the NCAA for a waiver to grant him an extra season. If that gets denied, the Gators are going to be precariously thin in the backcourt.

7. Louisville

Last week: 7

Losing: Mikel Brown Jr., Ryan Conwell, Kasean Pryor, J’Vonne Hadley, Ally Khalifa, Isaac McKneely, Kobe Rodgers, Sananda Fru, Khani Rooths, Vangelis Zougris

Retaining: Adrian Wooley

Incoming: Obinna Ekezie Jr. (4), Boyuan Zhang (49), Isaac Ellis (NA), London Johnson (NBA G League), Flory Bidunga (Kansas), Jackson Shelstead (Oregon), Karter Knox (Arkansas), Alvaro Folgueiras (Iowa), De’Shayne Montgomery (Dayton), Gabe Dynes (USC)

Pat Kelsey’s seemingly unlimited NIL budget landed him yet another quality player in Zhang, a native of China who plays for a prep school in California. Ekezie was another big-time late pickup. He is an uber-talented 7-foot center who was ranked No. 4 in the 247Sports Composite for the Class of 2027 he reclassified into the Class of 2026. He will make for an imposing duo alongside Bidunga. In addition, Knox was a two-year starter (mostly) at Arkansas who will bring wing athleticism. Folgueris is a 6-foot-9 senior forward who was one of the stars of Iowa’s run to the Elite Eight.

Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year Flory Bidunga
Boyuan Zhang will fit nicely alongside Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year Flory Bidunga
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8. Tennessee

Last week: 8

Losing: Ja’Kobi Gillespie, Nate Ament, Felix Okpara, Cade Phillips, Jaylen Carey, J.P. Estrella, Bishop Boswell, Amari Evans,

Retaining: DeWayne Brown, Ethan Burg, Troy Henderson

Incoming (15): Chris Washington (49), Ralph Scott (54), Manny Green (100), Marquis Clark (212), Tyler Lundblade (Belmont), Dai Dai Ames (Cal), Miles Rubin (Loyola Chicago), Jalen Haralson (Notre Dame), Terrence Hill Jr. (VCU), Braedan Lue (Kennesaw State), Juke Harris (Wake Forest), Christian Fermin (VCU)

This roster was already loaded before Fermin joined it last week. The 6-foot-10 senior forward redshirted last season at VCU. The previous season at Loyola Chicago he averaged 4.6 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.4 blocks. The gemstone of the portal haul is Harris, who averaged 21.4 points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.9 assists for the Demon Deacons. Lue is a 6-foot-8 junior forward who averaged 10.9 points, 5.3 rebounds and 1.2 assists, and Lundblade is one of the nation’s best three-point shooters. This is shaping up to be one of the best offensive teams Barnes has coached.

Juke Harris' transfer from Wake Forest to Tennessee was the biggest portal move of the week
Juke Harris’ transfer from Wake Forest to Tennessee was the biggest portal move of the week
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9. UConn

Last week: 9

Losing: Tarris Reed, Alex Karaban, Malachi Smith, Eric Reibe, Jacob Furphy, Jaylin Stewart, Solo Ball

Retaining: Silas Demary, Jayden Ross, Jacob Ross, Braylon Mullins

Incoming (30): Colben Landrew (22), Junior County (36), Najai Hines (Seton Hall), Nik Khamenia (Duke), Oskar Giltay (Stanford), Nils Machowski (Wofford), Jaye Nash (Jacksonville State)

The best thing that happened for UConn this spring was Mullins’ decision to forego the NBA Draft. He and Demary will form one of the nation’s top backcourt tandems. Khamenia was also a huge addition from Duke. Nash is a 6-foot-3 junior guard who averaged 5.1 points, 4.0 assists and 2.8 rebounds for the Gamecocks. He and Machowski will give UConn some needed perimeter depth in the wake of Ball’s announcement that he is taking a medical redshirt next season following wrist surgery.

10. Gonzaga

Last week: 10

Losing: Graham Ike, Tyon Grant-Foster, Jalen Warley, Adam Miller, Steele Venters, Emmanuel Innocenti, Braeden Smith

Retaining: Braden Huff, Davis Fogle, Mario Saint-Supery, Parker Jefferson

Incoming (21): Luca Foster (39), Sam Funches (89), Isiah Harwell (Houston), Massamba Diop (Arizona State), Izan Almansa (Spain)

It was a mixed week for Gonzaga. Mark Few added frontcourt depth in Almansa, a 6-foot-10 forward who has played professionally in Australia for the Perth Wildcats and at Real Madrid last season. He has also played for the NBA G League’s Ignite and Overtime Elite. Almansa also spent some time in the NBA Summer League playing for the 76ers, which could cause some eligibility questions. On the flip side, Gonzaga got some unexpectedly bad news when Jack Kayil, a 6-foot-5 point guard from France, said he intends to remain in the NBA Draft. Few previously landed a vital addition in Diop, a 7-foot-1 sophomore center from Senegal who averaged 13.6 points and 2.1 blocks in his freshman season. He will make a perfect complement to Huff, who needs to get back to health after missing the last three months of the season with a knee injury. Fogle is poised for a breakout sophomore season.

Star forward Braden Huff missed the final three months of the 2025-26 season with a knee injury
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11. Iowa State

Last week: 11

Losing: Joshua Jefferson, Dominick Nelson, Tamin Lipsey, Nate Heise, Eric Mulder, Cade Kelderman, Milan Momcilovic, Mason Williams

Retaining: Killyan Toure, Blake Buchanan, Jamarion Batemon, Dominykas Pleta, Xzavion Mitchell

Incoming (20): Donovan Davis (38), Dorian Rinaldo-Komian (103), Jackson Kiss (106), Christian Wiggins (120), Yusef Gray Jr. (188), Taj Manning (Kansas State), Leon Bond (Northern Iowa), Jaquan Johnson (Bradley), Tre Singleton (Northwestern)

T.J. Otzelberger recently landed a big-time high school recruit in Davis. The 6-foot-7 forward from Wisconsin chose the Cyclones over local schools Wisconsin and Marquette, among others. Otzelberger bagged five guys from the transfer portal over the first weekend. Momcilovic’s decision to enter both the draft and the portal (he says he is committed to staying in the draft but wants to keep his options open) was a significant blow, but it was not unexpected based on his draft projections. If he comes back to school, it almost certainly won’t be at Iowa State.

12. Texas

Last week: 12

Losing: Dailyn Swain, Jordan Pope, Tramon Mark, Chendall Weaver, Lassina Traore, Nic Codie, Declan Duru, Cam Heide, Simeon Wilcher

Retaining: Matas Vokietaitis

Incoming (14): Austin Goosby (19), Bo Ogden (38), Joe Sterling (101), Isaiah Johnson (Colorado), David Punch (TCU), Amari Evans (Tennessee), Elyjah Freeman (Auburn), Mikey Lewis (Saint Mary’s), Mantas Laurencikas (Lithuania)

The hits keep coming for Sean Miller, who got some more perimeter depth in Laurencikas, who played for AS Monaco Basket, a EuroLeague team in France. Laurencikas will be 20 next season and have four years of eligibility remaining. He’ll be a more than capable backup at the point to Johnson, who had an outstanding freshman season at Colorado. Swain said during the combine he intends to stay in the draft, as projected. Punch has the potential to be an All-SEC forward after he averaged 14.1 points and 6.8 rebounds for the Horned Frogs. He and Vokietaitis will comprise one of the top frontcourt tandems in the country. Lewis and Johnson are playing scorers who have proven themselves against top competition.

Former TCU forward David Punch is part of a top-five transfer class for Sean Miller's Longhorns
Former TCU forward David Punch is part of a top-five transfer class for Sean Miller’s Longhorns
ISI Photos via Getty Images

13. Virginia

Last week: 13

Losing: Malik Thomas, Jacari White, Dallin Hall, Ugonna Onyenso, Devin Tillis

Retaining: Thijs De Ridder, Chance Mallory, Sam Lewis, Johann Grunloh, Elijah Gertrude, Martin Carrere, Silas Barksdale

Incoming: Fabour Ibe (139), Jurian Dixon (UC Irvine), Christian Harmon (Arkansas State), Kalu Anya (Saint Louis)

Ryan Odom was quiet for a while, but he has now brought in three transfers with the addition of Anya, a 6-foot-8 junior forward who averaged 6.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists for the Billikens. Ibe is a 7-foot-1 center from Maryland who also considered Tennessee, Alabama and Villanova. Dixon is a 6-foot-5 junior guard who averaged 15.7 points and 2.4 assists per game for the Anteaters. The Cavs will return four of the top six scorers from the team that finished second in the ACC.

14. Arkansas

Last week: 14

Losing: Darius Acuff, Meleek Thomas, Trevon Brazile, Nick Pringle, Karter Knox, D.J. Wagner, Malique Ewin

Retaining: Billy Richmond, Isaiah Sealy

Incoming (1): Jordan Smith (2), J.J. Andrews (12), Abdou Toure (26), Miika Muurinen (55), Jeremiah Wilkinson (Georgia), Cooper Bowser (Furman)

Based on both their performance and comments during the combine, the projections of Thomas to remain in the NBA Draft and Richmond to return to school remain intact. That would leave John Calipari with a strong roster. He recently added Muurinen, a native of Finland who played at two different American high schools before heading overseas to play in Serbia. He has played on the Finnish senior national team the last few years. That gave Arkansas the No. 1 recruiting class in the 247 Sports Composite. Wilkinson, who averaged 17.4 points for the Bulldogs as a sophomore, was another huge pickup, but Arkansas’ fortunes next season will depend heavily on whether Smith can live up to his considerable hype.

Jeremiah Wilkinson
Jeremiah Wilkinson transferred from Cal to Georgia, where he averaged 17.4 points as a true sophomore
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15. Houston

Last week: 15

Losing: Kingston Flemings, Milos Uzan, Chris Cenac Jr., Emanuel Sharp, Isiah Harwell, Ramon Walker, Kalifa Sakho

Retaining: Joseph Tugler, Mercy Miller, Chase McCarty, Cedric Lath, Bryce Jackson, Kordel Jefferson

Incoming (28): Arafan Diane (16), Ikenna Alozie (55), Dedan Thomas (LSU), Delrecco Gillespie (Kent State), Corey Hadnot II (Fort Wayne), Braden East (Lamar)

The Cougars are loaded up for another run at a Big 12 title. Tugler’s decision to return instead of going to the NBA Draft was huge. He and Diane will make for an imposing tandem in the paint. Thomas is going to need to carry a heavy load to offset the losses of Uzan, Flemings and Sharp.

16. USC

Last week: 16

Losing: Chad Baker-Mazara, Ezra Ausar, Jaden Brownell, Kam Woods, Ryan Cornish, Terrance Williams, Jordan Marsh, Jerry Easter, Gabe Dynes

Retaining: Rodney Rice, Jacob Cofie, Alijah Arenas

Incoming (7): Christian Collins (9), Adonis Ratliff (17), Darius Ratliff (23), KJ Lewis (Georgetown), Eric Reibe (UConn), Jalen Cox (Colgate), Joshua Hughes (Evansville), Aaron Hunkin-Claytor (Hawaii), Jadis Jones (Lindenwood), Isaac Bruns (South Dakota)

Eric Musselman’s third team at USC should be his best. The big news was Arenas’ decision to withdraw from the NBA Draft and return to school. The 6-foot-8 wing only played 14 games due to a knee injury, but he showed great promise while averaging 14.1 points, 2.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists. The best incoming transfer is Reibe, a 7-foot-1 sophomore forward who is a former McDonald’s All-American who is poised for a breakout season after averaging 5.9 points and 3.3 rebounds in 13.8 minutes as a freshman at UConn. If Rice returns to form after missing most of last season due to a knee injury and the Trojans stay healthy otherwise, they can contend for a Big Ten title. Collins and the Ratliff twins are high-impact freshmen.

Alijah Arenas' decision to withdraw from NBA Draft and return to USC is huge news for the Trojans
Alijah Arenas’ decision to withdraw from NBA Draft and return to USC is huge news for the Trojans
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

17. Kansas

Last week: 17

Losing: Darryn Peterson, Melvin Council, Tre White, Flory Bidunga, Bryson Tiller, Elmarko Jackson, Jamari McDowell

Retaining: Kohl Rosario, Paul Mbiya, Samis Calderon

Incoming (2): Tyran Stokes (1), Taylor Kinney (13), Davion Adkins (70), Trent Perry (94), Luke Barnett (140), Grant Mordini (N/A), Keanu Dawes (Utah), Leroy Blyden (Toledo), Christian Reeves (Charleston), Dennis Parker Jr. (Radford)

The biggest news for Kansas this spring came when Stokes announced his commitment. He is a potential No. 1 pick in the NBA Draft and will have an immediate impact in Lawrence. Kinney will also likely be a day-one starter. Reeves, a 7-foot-2 center who averaged 11.1 points, 7.8 rebounds and 1.4 blocks, should help make up for the loss of Bidunga. Blyden was the MAC freshman of the year after averaging 16.4 points, 4.5 assists and 4.0 rebounds while shooting 40 percent from three-point range.

Tyran Stokes
Tyran Stokes, the top player in the 2026 recruiting class, is headed to Kansas this fall
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18. Alabama

Last week: 18

Losing: Labaron Philon, Amari Allen, Latrell Wrightsell, Houston Mallette, Noah Williamson, Taylor Bol Bowen, Jalil Bethea, Aiden Sherrell, Davion Hannah

Retaining: Aden Holloway, London Jemison, Keitenn Bristow, Collins Onyejiaka

Incoming (12): Qayden Samuels (18), Jaxon Richardson (21), Tarris Bouie (40), Cole Cloer (NC State), Jamarion Davis-Fleming (Mississippi State), Brandon Garrison (Kentucky), Drew Fielder (Boise State)

Allen said at the draft combine that if he is not a first-rounder he will probably return to school. Peek projects him as the No. 24 overall pick. Nate Oats shored up his frontcourt with the recent addition of Fielder, a 6-foot-10 senior forward who averaged 14.7 points and 5.7 rebounds for the Broncos last season. Garrison is a talented big man who should help offset the loss of Sherrell. The big question moving forward is Holloway, whose season ended early after he was arrested on drug charges but recently announced his intentions to return.

19. Ohio State

Last week: 19

Losing: Bruce Thonrton, Devin Royal, Christoph Tilly, Brandon Noel, Puff Johnson, Colin White, Gabe Cupps, Taison Chatman

Retaining: John Mobley, Amare Bynum, Ivan Njegovan, Josh Ojianwuna

Incoming (34): Anthony Thompson (7), Alex Smith (122), Andrija Jelavic (Kentucky), Justin Pippen (Cal), Jimmie Williams (Duquesne), Curtis Givens (Memphis), Vuk Lazarevic (Serbia)

Losing Thornton won’t be easy, but Jake Diebler has an impressive roster that can play its way into the top tier of the Big Ten. Mobley will have to carry the load as the team’s alpha male. Bynum should be headed for a breakout sophomore season, and Ojianwuna could be a major defensive presence as he comes off a knee injury that sidelined him last season following his transfer from Baylor. Williams averaged 15.1 points per game as a sophomore for the Dukes. Expectations are sky high for Thompson’s freshman season in Columbus.

20. UCLA

Last week: 20

Losing: Donovan Dent, Tyler Bilodeau, Skyy Clark, Jamar Brown, Steven Jamerson

Retaining: Trent Perry, Eric Dailey, Xavier Booker, Brandon Williams, Eric Freeny

Incoming (44): Joe Philon (71), Javonte Floyd (193), Sergej Macura (Mississippi State), Filip Jovic (Auburn), Jaylen Petty (Texas Tech), Azavier “Stink” Robinson (Butler)

Once again, Mick Cronin is relying heavily on the transfer portal instead of recruiting freshmen. His strategy appears to be paying off as the Bruins have landed several top players. Robinson will slide into the starting point guard role as a replacement for Dent. Petty averaged 9.9 points, 3.9 rebounds and 2.2 assists as a freshman at Texas Tech. But UCLA’s success will hinge on whether the returning veterans can take another step forward.

Sophomore Azavier “Stink” Robinson will step into the Bruins starting point guard role after transferring from Butler
Sophomore Azavier “Stink” Robinson will step into the Bruins starting point guard role after transferring from Butler
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

21. Indiana

Last week: 21

Losing: Lamar Wilkerson, Tayton Conerway, Tucker DeVries, Reed Bailey, Sam Alexis, Conor Enright, Nick Dorn, Aleksa Ristic, Jasai Miles

Retaining: Trent Sisley

Incoming (16): Vaughn Karvala (51), Trevor Menhertz (65), Prince-Alexander Moody (80), Bryce Lindsay (Villanova), Aiden Sherrell (Alabama), Samet Yigitoglu (SMU), Markus Burton (Notre Dame), Darren Harris (Duke), Jaeden Mustaf (Georgia Tech), Clemens Sokolov (Germany), Justin Monden (Maryland Eastern Shore)

Monden is a 6-foot guard who averaged 6.0 points in 20.8 minutes as a freshman with the Hawks. He will add depth to a roster that has been heavily replenished through the transfer portal. Lindsay and Burton are high-scoring guards, and Harris would have had more impact at Duke if he weren’t playing alongside so much talent. Yigitoglu is an experienced big who can finish at the rim and protect it on defense. Sokolov is a 7-foot center who averaged 6.4 points and 5.0 rebounds in a German pro league. He is 18 years old and considered a developmental prospect. The Hoosiers are one of six finalists to land, a three-star forward from Virginia.

22. Miami

Last week: 22

Losing: Malik Reneau, Tre Donaldson, Ernest Udeh, Tru Washington, Noam Dovrat, Timo Malovec, Salih Altuntas, John Laboy

Retaining: Shelton Henderson, Dante Allen, Marcus Allen

Incoming (67): Caleb Gaskins (20), Acaden Lewis (Villanova), Somto Cyril (Georgia), DeSean Goode (Robert Morris), Quin Berger (Bucknell), Nick Dorn (Indiana), Brent Bland (St. Peter’s)

Jai Lucas has done a great job rebuilding a roster that lost seven players to the portal. Lewis was one of the top freshmen in the country last season and should be a top-three ACC point guard. Henderson has the potential to play his way into the lottery as a sophomore. The 6-foot-11 Cyril was a starter last season for Georgia, where he averaged 9.3 points and 5.4 rebounds in 21.2 minutes. Bland is a three-point specialist who averaged 13.9 points per game for the Peacocks, while Dorn is a 6-foot-7 senior forward who averaged 8.1 points on 38 percent three-point shooting for the Hoosiers. 

23. Purdue

Last week: 23

Losing: Braden Smith, Trey Kaufman-Renn, Fletcher Loyer, Oscar Cluff

Retaining: Omer Mayer, Daniel Jacobsen, C.J. Cox, Gicarri Harris, Jack Benter, Antoine West Jr., Raleigh Burgess

Incoming (9): Luke Ertel (41), Jacob Webber (64), Sinan Huan (83), Jemyn Sondrup (134), Rivers Knight (211), Caden Pierce (Princeton)

Purdue is one of the few high-major programs that did not lose any significant players to the portal. Matt Painter made a run at Kansas forward Flory Bidunga and Saint Mary’s center Paulius Murauskas, but both landed elsewhere. The Boilermakers’ fortunes in the Big Ten will depend heavily on whether Pierce can make an immediate impact and whether Mayer takes a big leap forward.

Highly-touted guard Omer Mayer has been a non-factor for the Boilermakers in his freshman season
Purdue did not lose any significant players to the portal, and retained rotation pieces like Omer Mayer and C.J. Cox
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24. Nebraska

Last week: 24

Losing: Rienk Mast, Jamarques Lawrence, Sam Hoiberg, Jared Garcia, Berke Buyuktuncel, Ugnius Jarusevicius

Retaining: Connor Essegian, Pryce Sandfort, Braden Frager, Cale Jacobsen, Leo Curtis

Incoming (34): Collin Rice (81), Jacob Lanier (96), Sam Orme (Belmont), Kadyn Betts (Montana), Trevan Leonhardt (Utah Valley), Boden Kapke (Boston College), Taj DeGourville (San Diego State), Damon Wilkinson (South Dakota State)

The heart of this team will be its returning core. Essegian is a sharp shooter who is returning from a season-ending ankle injury he sustained in November. Wilkinson is a 6-foot-10 junior forward who averaged 13.9 points and 6.4 rebounds for the Jackrabbits. Nebraska was one of the finalists for 6-foot-7 forward Donovan Davis, who is ranked No. 39 in the 247Sports Composite, but he committed to Iowa State.

25.  BYU

Last week: 25

Losing: A.J. Dybantsa, Richie Saunders, Keba Keita, Mihailo Boskovic, Kennard Davis, Abullah Ahmed

Retaining: Aleksej Kostic, Dominique Diomande, Khadim Mboup, Tyler Mrus, Brooks Bahr, Robert Wright, K.J. Perry

Incoming (29): Bruce Branch (6), Dean Rusckert (77), Abdullah Ahmed (NBA G League), Will Openshaw (NA), Jake Wahlin (Clemson), Tyler Betsey (Syracuse), Collin Chandler (Kentucky), Adam Stewart (TCU)

No one should expect Branch to match what Dybantsa did as a freshman, but he will have an immediate impact. Wright’s decision to return after entering the portal and considering Kentucky was huge. Wahlin is a 6-foot-10 senior forward who was a starter at Clemson last season.


Notable Omissions

Missouri: The Tigers added South Dakota guard Jordan Crawford last week. They are bringing in arguably the best recruiting class in program history, and they have added former BYU guard Kennard Davis and former Kansas forward Bryson Tiller.

St. John’s: Rick Pitino continues to mine the international market with the addition of Babacar Sane, 6-foot-7 forward from Senegal who has spent time in the NBA G League and most recently played professionally in Germany. He will be 23 years old when the season begins. Pitino’s top domestic transfer is former Syracuse forward Donnie Freeman.

Neoklis Avdalas could have a breakout season in Chapel Hill after averaging 12.1 points and 4.6 assists per game last season for the Hokies
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North Carolina: Michael Malone added a pair of high school seniors last week in Kevin Thomas (No. 94 in the 247Sports Composite) and Malloy Smith. Malone has also brought in Mali big man Sayon Keita, but his best player next season might be Virginia Tech transfer Neoklis Avdalas.

Vanderbilt: The Commodores are waiting to see what Tyler Tanner is going to decide. He indicated at the combine that he wants to stay in the draft. Peek projects him as the No. 25 overall pick.

Kentucky: It has been an uphill climb this spring for Mark Pope, but things will get easier if Malachi Moreno pulls out of the NBA Draft. Peek projects him as undrafted.

Meet your guide

Seth Davis

Seth Davis

Seth Davis, Hoops HQ's Editor-in-Chief, is an award-winning college basketball writer and broadcaster. Since 2004, Seth has been a host of CBS Sports and Turner Sports's March Madness NCAA basketball tournament. A writer at Sports Illustrated for 22 years and at The Athletic for six, he is the author of nine books, including the New York Times best sellers Wooden: A Coach’s Life and When March Went Mad: The Game Transformed Basketball.
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