Tipoff: Where the top transfers in
college basketball have landed
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[October 28, 2024]
By STEVE MEGARGEE
After Dusty May left Florida Atlantic to take over Michigan’s
program, plenty of the top remaining players from the Owls’ 2023
Final Four team departed as well.
But they didn’t all follow their former coach to Ann Arbor. They
scattered to various programs.
Florida Atlantic’s top four scorers from last season – all of whom
had vital roles during the Owls’ Final Four run a year earlier – are
now playing elsewhere. They’re among the most notable of the
hundreds of transfers on college basketball rosters across the
country.
In the era of the transfer portal, Florida Atlantic’s ability to
keep the nucleus of its Final Four team together for one more year
was remarkable. The team’s eventual breakup after its 2024 NCAA
Tournament first-round overtime loss to Northwestern seemed
inevitable.
May’s first Michigan team will include Vladislav Goldin, a 7-foot-1
center who made 106 starts at Florida Atlantic and posted
double-figure scoring averages each of the last two seasons. After
playing in the NCAA Tournament the last two years at FAU, Goldin
believes he’s capable of getting back there at Michigan.
“This team is probably the most talented I have ever played on, so
many talented guys,” Goldin told reporters this offseason. “It’s
insane talent. I’ve never seen it before.”
Some of Goldin’s other Florida Atlantic teammates opted to go on
their own.
Johnell Davis, who led Florida Atlantic in scoring each of the last
two seasons, will be playing for John Calipari at No. 16 Arkansas.
“He’s a Hall of Fame coach and he wins everywhere he goes,” Davis
told reporters. “I’m excited to play for him.”
Nick Boyd transferred to San Diego State, the team that ended
Florida Atlantic’s 2023 Cinderella national title hopes with a
Lamont Butler buzzer beater in the NCAA semifinals. Alijah Martin,
who scored 26 points in that Final Four loss to San Diego State,
transferred to Florida.
Here’s a look at some of the other most notable transfers in college
basketball this season. Their former schools are in parentheses.
Oumar Ballou, C, Indiana (Arizona)
The 7-footer arrives at No. 17 Indiana after playing four seasons at
Arizona. Ballou earned first-team all-Pac-12 honors each of the last
two seasons. He averaged 12.9 points and 10.1 rebounds last season
after collecting 14.2 points and 8.6 rebounds per game in 2022-23.
Ballou has averaged 1.3 blocks per game each of the last two
seasons.
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Duke guard Jeremy Roach drives to the basket past Baylor guard
Langston Love (13) during the first half of an NCAA college
basketball game, Dec. 20, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)
Tucker DeVries, G/F, West Virginia (Drake)
When West Virginia hired coach Darian DeVries away from Drake, his
son followed him to Morgantown. DeVries, who is 6-foot-7, was named
the Larry Bird Missouri Valley Conference player of the year and was
the league tournament’s most outstanding player each of the last two
seasons. He ranked 10th in Division I in scoring (21.6) last season
and was the only Division I player to average at least 20 points, 6
rebounds, 3 assists and 1.5 steals per game. That followed a 2022-23
season in which he had 18.6 points per game.
Coleman Hawkins, F, Kansas State (Illinois)
Hawkins was an Associated Press all-Big Ten second-team selection
last season in his fourth year at Illinois. He averaged 12.1 points,
6.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.5 steals and 1.1 blocks. Big 12 coaches
have selected him as the league’s preseason co-newcomer of the year.
Hawkins declared for the draft last spring and participated in the
NBA Draft Combine before deciding to play one more season of college
basketball.
Great Osobor, F, Washington (Utah State)
Osobor comes to Washington after playing two seasons at Montana
State and one at Utah State. He earned honorable mention on the AP
All-America team last season and was named the Mountain West
Conference’s player of the year and newcomer of the year. The 6-8
forward collected 17.7 points per game and 9 rebounds per game while
shooting 57.7% from the floor at Utah State.
Kadary Richmond, G, St. John’s (Seton Hall)
After earning first-team all-Big East honors from the league’s
coaches and second-team honors from the AP while playing for Seton
Hall last year, Richmond stayed in the conference but switched
schools. The 6-6 guard played one season at Syracuse before spending
three seasons at Seton Hall. Richmond had 15.7 points, 7 rebounds,
5.1 assists and 2.2 steals per game last season.
Jeremy Roach, G, Baylor (Duke)
This 6-2 fifth-year senior was selected as the Big 12’s preseason
co-newcomer of the year along with Hawkins. He joins No. 8 Baylor
after making 108 career starts at Duke. Roach was a Duke team
captain each of the last two seasons. Roach averaged 14 points per
game last season, 13.6 in 2022-23, 8.6 in 2021-22 and 8.7 in
2020-21.
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