Wednesday, July 8, 2026

SoCon Summer Series 2026: Wofford Looks To Take Title Step In Year Two Under Kevin Giltner


Wofford sophomore guard Chace Whatley (Photo courtesy of Wofford athletics)

 Wofford (19-13, 11-7 SoCon/T-2ND IN sOcOn)    

Year two under Kevin Giltner figures to look a lot different in Spartanburg than it did in year one, but one thing that won't change is Wofford's winning standard, which it re-established in the first season under the leadership of former player and assistant coach Kevin Giltner.

It's weird to think that you'd have to re-establish a winning culture for a Wofford program that had just come off its own title run under the direction of head coach Dwight Perry. Perry, who was rather unceremoniously dispatched due to a minor violation a little over a month out from the season, and the former Wofford head coach has since resurfaced as an assistant on Brook Savage's staff at East Tennessee State.

In some strange world, the 2024-25 season for Wofford probably makes sense to some, however, whatever side of that fence you're on, you can't take away the achievement of winning the conference tournament no matter how lackluster and underwhelming the regular-season might have been. 

Except for the regular-season win at Saint Louis, the non-conference slate for the Terriers and really the conference regular-season slate, save maybe the 19-point win at Furman and a win at ETSU, the regular-season as a whole was forgettable. 

That didn't matter in the SoCon Tournament, as Perry's Terriers reeled off wins over ETSU (W, 79-67), VMI (W, 81-61) and Furman (W, 92-85) in the SoCon Tournament to become the first No. 6 seed to ever cut down the nets at the end of the historic tournament. Perry's Terriers would go on to a decent showing as a No. 15 seed in the NCAA Tournament, dropping a 77-62 decision to No. 2 Tennessee in Lexington, KY., to bow out of the tournament.  

It was a quiet off-season until it wasn't in mid-August, which was when the Perry and staff were suspended on paid leave pending an investigation into the allocation of NIL funds and on/off-campus living situations of both freshmen and incoming players from the transfer portal. There is apparently a rule that all first-year students at Wofford must have on-campus housing, and that includes student-athletes. The men's basketball program failed to honor this basic rule, and that ended up being more costly than most would have anticipated. 

At best, it was probably an offense that at worst, garnered a suspension and was definitely not fireable one. But that's just my opinion. 

Is there more to it? Was Director of Athletics Scott Kull looking for a reason to start anew? Those are questions that I can't answer, but what I can tell you is that given the situation, Kevin Giltner was absolutely the perfect hire. 

Giltner had to deal with being a first-time head coach, managing to keep a roster intact and install his vision and tactical schematics in a little over a month's time and Giltner's coaching ability and leadership were very apparent for all to see during the regular-season. The Terriers, who were picked ninth in the preseason, finished tied for second, with an 11-7 league mark, which included a 19-13 overall record. 

Unfortunately, the Terriers probably sputtered to the finish line more than Giltner and staff would have liked, but the flag had been planted and the new era of Wofford basketball under Mike Young's former right-hand man seemed more, positive than when Perry took the Terriers to the NCAA Tournament a year earlier if you can believe it. 

One thing that Giltner's team had last season was an offensive identity,  and that wasn't always apparent when Perry was in charge. With that, Wofford's toughness at times came up short where I think Perry's teams really excelled to a certain extent. Especially when it came to play on the defensive end of the floor, as well as having that desire to rebound. That was seemingly what Wofford did best under Perry. 

While Perry's team was tougher in 2024-25 to the naked eye in some ways, I think it's unfair on the same hand to judge Giltner's team in his first season on the job with such a short time to prepare for the season, and I would be willing to bet that is a much different story in 2026-27 than it was in 2025-26.

The 2026-27 season will involve rebuilding without the three top scorers from a year ago, however, Giltner has assembled quite a recruiting class to go with another talented crop of newcomers for the new season, which feels a little more like his first season in charge, having had a full off-season to recruit and install some of his team winning philosophy.

Wofford sophomore forward Brian Sumpter (photo courtesy of Wofford Athletics)

Portal Losses/Portal Adds and Returners

One thing is for sure; the Terriers will look a lot different offensively. Wofford loses its top three players to major programs, with Kahmare Holmes set to continue his career at DePaul, while both Nils Machowski and Cayden Vasko are set to join both UConn and Central Florida next season. 

That leaves just four core players that were part of the team last season, with only three of those seeing time on the floor, as Cannon Richards sat out the season with an injury, as he saw action in only two contests the entire season. 

The other two core players that return to the fold include both Chace Watley, who acclimated to the  incredibly well in his first season with the Terriers, and he'll be one of the go-to-scorers heading into the season. 

Watley is a player that will see much of what Wofford wants to do built around him next season. The 6-2 guard ended up appearing in all 32 games last season, logging a total of 15 starts and was the first man off the bench in the other 17 games of the season. Led Wofford's freshmen on the roster in scoring, averaging 9.7 PPG and is the leading returning scorer off of last year's team. 

Watley would end up enjoying one of his best games of the season on his Birthday, against ETSU which was Feb. 1, 2026, in a game that had to be moved back due to a snowstorm. Although tip-off time had to be moved back until 7 p.m. EST, and the no spectators were allowed outside of the students already on campus, it didn't phase Watley in the least, as the young guard went on to have one his best performances of the entire season despite the 86-72 setback.

The Minneapolis, MN., native went on to finish the contest with 19 points, as he knocked down 6-of-15 from the field, but was 5-for-9 from two-point range, but struggled overall from the perimeter, going just 1-for-6 from long range. Watley also finished that contest against the Bucs a perfect 6-for-6 from the free throw line.

Watley finsihed the season connecting on 39.8% (100-of-251) from the field and connected on 30.6% (30-of-98) from three-point range. He finished the season with 15 double-figure scoring performances and will be a candidate for all-conference accolades heading into the 2026-27 season.

Brian Sumpter will most obviously be another focal point of the 2026-27 Terriers, and I think he's going to make quite the jump from year one to year two in the lineup for Wofford. His athleticism is elite, and I look for him to develop into an impactful player this season on both ends of the floor. 

Sumpter is coming off a strong freshman season and should make a clear jump in year two. The rising sophomore from Columbia logged action in 31 games for the Terriers this past season, starting 21 of those contests, and finished the season averaging 6.6 PPG and 4.9 RPG. His best performance of the campaign came in a 21-point, 11-rebound contest in his second-career game against Milwaukee. He also record a career-high 14 rebounds to go along with 10 points in Wofford's big 74-70 win in Greenville.

All told, Sumpter finished out the season with eight games in which he scored in double figures, logging double-figure scoring outings against Furman, Samford, and Mercer during a key stretch of games. He also ended up posting 12 points and eight rebounds in the 86-72 home loss to East Tennessee State on Feb. 1.

For the season, Sumpter ended up connecting on an impressive 59.9% (85-of-142) of his shots from the field and his 39 blocks accounted for the fourth-most in school history. Sumpter wasn't a three-point threat in his first season for the Terriers, or at least not yet, as he finished the season connecting on just 16.7% (2-of-12) from long-range last season. Sumpter also finished the campaign connecting at a 61.5% (32-of-52) from the free throw line. 

Sumpter is one of the best athletes on the team, and he reminds me of a young Jalen Slawson at Furman. He has all the tools to go down as one of the greats in Terrier history, should he choose to remain in Spartanburg all four years, which seems less likely in this day and age than ever.

Luke Flynn returns as the most veteran performer on this roster heading into the 2026-27 campaign, and he will be the unquestioned glue guy for the Terriers this coming season, and there was a noticeable affect when Flynn suffered an injury that kept him out for the second half of Southern Conference play.
 
The 6-1, 185-lb guard is entering his junior season and his presence on this team might be the biggest piece to a hopeful championship winning puzzle. He comes off a 2025-26 campaign, which saw him average 5.6 PPG and 3.3 RPG, while shooting 33.8% (26-of-77) from three-point range, while shooting 33.0% (34-of-103) from the field. Flynn started 18 of 21 games for Wofford last season and has totaled 19 starts in 55 games over the course of two seasons in a Terriers uniform.

He finished his sophomore season with four double-figure scoring performances, highlighted by 16 points on 4-for-8 shooting from the field, including going 3-for-6 from three-point range in a 94-86 win over Bellarmine. The 16-point effort against the Knights marked a career-high scoring performance for Flynn. For the season, Flynn totaled 119 points, 81 rebounds, 25 assists, 14 steals and one block.

Rounding out the returning Terriers from a year ago, include rising senior guard Davis Miller and junior guard Grayson Collins, as both saw only limited time last season for the Terriers, with Collins logging action in eight games, while Miller finished the season having appeared in six contests.

Black Hills State transfer guard Cameron Lowe 
 
One of the early additions head coach Kevin Giltner and staff were able to bring in from the transfer portal might also turn out to be the most significant addition as a part of what was a solid portal haul.

Cameron Lowe will help immediately offset the losses underneath in the backcourt, and the 6-6, 215-lb redshirt junior will add versatility and size heading into the upcoming campaign. Lowe transferred into the Terriers program from NCAA Division II Black Hills State in South Dakota. 

While at Black Hills State, Lowe was the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Player of the Year following a 2025-26 season, which saw him average 17 PPG, 6.4 RPG and 2.7 APG, as he helped the Yellow Jackets to a 30-5 overall record and an Elite Eight appearance in the NCAA Division II tournament. In addition to garnering his conference's Player of the Year honor, Lowe was also named an NABC Division II All-American.

He finished the 2025-26 season by scoring in double figures in 29 of 35 games, which included scoring a career-high 31 points in an 85-63 win over Colorado Mesa. In that particular contest, Lowe was able to finish the game a near-flawless 12-of-15 from the field, which included an 70% (7-of-10) shooting night from three-point land. 

Lowe finished the season with 14 games in which he scored 20 or more points this season, including that 31-point performance. He connected on 39.5% (92-of-233) of his three-point field goals in his final season at Black Hills State, while finishing the season with a 47.5% (209-of-440) from the field. 

His ability to score and his size and versatility will key for head coach Kevin Giltner in the coming season.  Lowe is especially in that he can score at all three levels and can post in the paint and score on the low block. He can also play multiple positions, allowing the Terrier coaching staff to have multiple lineup options. 

Lander transfer guard Jacob Daniels

Another potential difference-maker in the backcourt in the 2026-27 season could be 6-0 guard Jacob Daniels, who comes to Wofford from NCAA Division II member Lander, where he helped the Bearcats all the way to the championship game of the Division II NCAA Tournament.

The rising sophomore will have three years of eligibility remaining, and he was an impact player for the Bearcats in his rookie season of playing college basketball, starting 34 of 36 games for Lander and finished second on the team in scoring average, posting 13.6 PPG and 5.6 APG. He also finished the season with a season-high 201 assists, while also pulling down 3.3 RPG. Daniels was named the Peach Belt Freshman of the Year for the 2025-26 season.

He will likely challenge for a significant role at point guard but can also play off the ball and scored in double figures on 29 occasions last season, including scoring 20 or more points on six different times last season. His best performance came in a game against the quarterfinals of the Peach Belt Tournament, as he posted 23 points and 10 assists to register a double-double, while also grabbing six rebounds to flirt with a triple-double. 

Daniels was also outstanding on the defensive end of the floor in the 91-81 win, registering three steals. His 23-point performance came as the result of a 9-for-12 shooting outing. He shot an impressive 54.7% (185-of-338) for the season, but struggled as a perimeter shooter, finishing the season at just 28.9% (28-of-97). Daniels also connected at a 70.5% (93-of-132) clip from the free throw line in his only season at Lander, helping the program to its most wins in its history, as the Bearcats finished the 2025-26 season 30-6.
 
Jacksonville transfer guard Chris Arias

Rounding out the key additions made in the backcourt from the transfer portal is 6-6 wing guard Chris Arias, who arrives in Spartanburg following two seasons with the Jacksonville Dolphins in the Atlantic Sun.

The lanky, athletic wing saw action in 30 games in the most recent season for the Dolphins, averaging 7.3 PPG and 2.3 RPG, as well as shooting 36.1% from three-point range (43-of-119), and was a 41.0% (139-of-340) from the field. He was selected to the pre-season All Atlantic Sun team and will be most remembered for his game-winning three-pointer to beat VMI last season in Lexington, which made the SportsCenter Top 10 Plays. 

That three was part of a career afternoon for Arias, who finished with a career-best 24 points in the win. He will be another player that can reliably hit the outside shot for head coach Kevin Giltner's Terriers if called upon to do so in the upcoming season. 

The only addition via the transfer portal to the frontcourt is a pretty big one...literally. UVA-Wise transfer center Evan Ramsey has two seasons of eligibility remaining, and the 7-0, 250-lb native of Abingdon, VA., started all 31 games he logged action in last season for the Terriers, finishing out what was an impressive campaign by averaging 14.1 PPG and 7.8 RPG to go with 57 blocks. 

He is a legitimate rim protector and finished out the 2025-26 season with a pair of six-block games for the Cavaliers. Ramsey was a big reason why the Cavaliers finished with its most wins (20) since making the jump to the NCAA Division II level. Ramsey was a All-SAC First Team selection in 2025-26. 

He will also be an impact player in the paint on both ends for Wofford, as he will contend for a starting spot. 

Ramsey posted his best game of the 2025-26 season in a 91-83 loss to the Trojans, as he posted 24 points and 13 rebounds, as he finished 8-of-13 from the field and was 8-for-9 from the charity stripe. 

All told, Ramsey finished his redshirt sophomore season by posting double-figure scoring efforts in 27 of 31 outings and posted seven double-doubles last season. Ramsey also finished the 2026-27 season connecting on 58.1% (162-of-279) and was a 73% (192-of-264) from the free throw line.

In his redshirt freshman campaign for the Cavaliers, Ramsey averaged a double-double, as he posted 14.5 PPG and 10 RPG en route to garnering All-SAC Second Team plaudits. Like the 2025-26 season, Ramsey proved to be an impact player on the defensive end of the floor in his redshirt freshman campaign, as he blocked 50 shots as a rookie.

Freshman Additions

True freshman big man Cutter Sisk
Much like the 2025-26 signing class for Wofford, the 2026-27 class is one that appears to be, at least on paper, one of the top freshman signing classes in the SoCon once again this season.

Headlining the list of five newcomers is 6-9, 270-lb freshman big man Cutter Sisk out of Hendersonville, Tenn. 

Sisk was the first signee of the current 2026-27 class, as he inked his official letter of intent last November, having already reached the 1,000-pt and 500-rebound plateau before his senior season at Beech High School in Hendersonville, Tenn. 

Sisk was a Class 4A "Mr. Basketball" finalist and a district/region MVP. He led Beech High School to its first state title since 2009, hitting a buzzer-beater against Lebanon in the state title game as a junior, finishing off his junior campaign in dream fashion. 

Because of his high basketball IQ and tremendous skill as a power forward, Sisk garnered the nickname "Baby Jokic", which is reference to Denver Nuggets star power forward Nikola Jokic of course. After averaging a double-double as a junior, Sisk finished out his final season as a prep averaging 23 PPG and 10 RPG, as he led the Buccaneers to the brink of a second-straight state title, which came up just short in the state quarterfinals, scoring 33 of his team's 52 points in what was a 55-52 loss to Bearden. 

Bearden will offer the perfect complement in the paint to guys like Sumpter and Ramsey, and I think and expect to see Sisk to get some pretty significant playing time in his rookie campaign for the Terriers because of his size and overall strength in the paint.

The other four freshman additions came in the backcourt, with some impressive signees highlighting the newcomers in the backcourt, with Jhett Carter and Jyi Dawkins among those that could join Sisk in making an immediate impact for the Terriers this coming season.

Dawkins had originally committed to play for Western Carolina in the fall, but then decommitted and found his way to Wofford, where he could make an impact with his ability to score at all three levels on the floor.

Dawkins was one of the nation's top scorers in his final two seasons with Ben L. Smith High School in Greensboro, choosing Wofford over other offers from Campbell, North Carolina A&T, UNC Greensboro, and Cleveland State, and he is a three-star recruit. 

He will give the Terriers an athletic combo guard that can score in a variety of different ways, and it sets up for him to be one of the top freshmen in the SoCon next season. His 32.6 PPG last season ranked him 14th nationally in scoring in his final season as a prep. He added 13.1 RPG and 5.2 APG as a senior. He is unequivocally a player that has a chance to be a game-changer for Wofford as soon as the 2026-27 season.

Set to join up alongside Dawkins will be Jhett Carter, who is another 6-5 combo guard that will have a chance to come in and be a difference-maker as well in the backcourt for the Terriers. During his high school career at Hargrave Military Academy, the Titusville, FL., native finished his career with 1,790 points, 814 rebounds, and 238 steals, showing his all-around game. 

Carter is versatile enough to play either a third guard spot, or at small forward. He chose Wofford over offers from East Carolina, Georgia State, Ohio, Albany, Hampton and Holy Cross.  Carter is known for his defensive capabilities and was named All Elite Prep League Defensive Team in each of his final two seasons, as well as being a First-Team All-EPL selection following the 2025-26 campaign.

Jemon Price and Misho Kalinov round out the talented freshman signing class for the Terriers. Price is a 6-2 guard out of Westfield High School in Virginia, garnering 6A State Player of the Year honors as a senior following a 2025-26 season, which saw him average 18.1 PPG, 3.3 RPG and 2.5 APG and in his senior season, scored 20 or more points nine times on the season, which included a season-high 32-point outing. 

The 6-2 point guard turned in a brilliant high school career at Westfield HS, scoring over 1,200 points in his four-year career, and was named to the Washington D.C. Area Coaches All-Met First Team. Price is a three-star guard and will offer depth at the point guard spot for the Terriers this season, but is versatile enough to play on the wing.

Kalinov will the Terriers an Eastern European Bloc influence, as he comes to Spartanburg all the way from Silistra, Bulgaria, and averaged 16 PPG, 3.6 PPG, and 5.5 APG, starring for BC Botev 2012 in the Bulgarian NBL this past year. He enjoyed his best performance against Balkan Botevgrad, posting a season-high 26 points to go with six assists. Kalinov brings with him to Wofford some major international experience, having competed in the 2025 FIBA U18 EuroBasket League, averaging 8.6 PPG and had a +8.6 efficiency rating. 

Overall, this is an outstanding class of five signees, and if you include the three additions from the transfer portal, the eight overall additions in total marks one of the top signing classes in the SoCon heading into the 2026-27. I had the Terriers ranked fourth out of the 11 teams in the league in my recruiting rankings coming into the summer.

One of the more exciting things announced earlier this week is that Virginia Tech and head coach Mike Young will be returning to Spartanburg and the Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium for an exhibition matchup in conjunction with Wofford's homecoming weekend festivities, as the game will take place on Friday, Oct. 16, which is a day before Wofford hosts VMI in football for homecoming. 

Wofford Terriers Early outlook for 2026-27                              

Wofford comes off a season that saw the Terriers surprise everyone by finishing the campaign by finishing second after being picked ninth.  The reality of the 2025-26 season we learned is that despite the coaching change, the talent will always translate. 

Plus it was also a huge advantage that Kevin Giltner had with the program, as he is not only an alum, but was also an assistant for Mike Young as assistant for six seasons, while spending six more as Young's assistant at Virginia Tech.

With a year under his belt and having had a full off-season to implement schemes both offensively, as well as on the defensive end, expect the Terriers to once again be among the handful of teams that could contend for a conference title once again this season.

 Terriers Breakdown:                                                                                       

Starters Experience Lost: (6)--G-Kahmare Holmes (26 starts, 19.5 PPG, 5.7 RPG/transferred to Depaul); Nils Machowski (32 starts, 17.2 PPG, 5.7 RPG, 91 made three-pointers/transferred to UConn); G-Cayden Vasko (32 starts, 10.4 PPG, 4.5 RPG, 54 made three-pointers/transferred to Central Florida); F/C Rex Stirling (9 starts, 5.1 PPG, 3.1 RPG/transferred to Jacksonville); G--Brendan Rigsbee (5 starts, 4.2 PPG, 1.7 RPG)

Others Lost: (2)-G-Jayden Tyler (5.4 PPG, 1.0 RPG/transferred to Youngstown State); G-Maximo Ortega (3.3 PPG, 1.0 RPG)

Best Returning Player: G-Chace Watley (9.7 PPG, 3.3 RPG)

Potential Breakout Player in 2026-27: F-Brian Sumpter (6.6 PPG, 4.9 RPG)

Best Transfer Portal Get: G/F-Cam Lowe (Black Hills State) or G-Jacob Daniels (Lander)

Potential Glue Guy: G-Luke Flynn (5.7 PPG, 3.9 RPG)

Best Freshman Addition: G-Jyi Dawkins (Ben L. Smith HS/Greensboro, N.C.)

Overall Portal/Recruiting Synopsis and Grade: A-


Tuesday, June 30, 2026

SoCon Hoops Summer Series 2026: ETSU Focused and Reloaded for Another Championship Run


ETSU (23-12, 13-5 SoCon/2025-26 SoCon Regular-Season Champions)

Brooks Savage has begun to mould ETSU basketball back into a program that can be and probably will be a perennial Southern Conference title contender as long as he is at the helm. There was a little bit of a concern that he might not be at the end of the 2025-26 season, as he led the Bucs to 23 wins in his third season as the head coach.

Those 23 wins and a regular-season outright SoCon title were enough to begin to see Savage's name surface within some coaching circles, and he was in the mix for the head coaching job at Georgia State before signing an extension through the end of the 2028-29 season back in late April.

The 23 wins were the most for ETSU's basketball program since that historic 2019-20 squad under then head coach Steve Forbes, which won a school-record 30 games, as well as claiming the SoCon tournament title for the second time in a four-year span. That was the goal for the 2025-26 Bucs, however, ETSU would come up just short of making it a third SoCon tourney title and NCAA Tournament appearance since rejoining the league in 2014-15, as Furman was able to post a 76-61 win over Savage's Bucs. 

The 2026-27 championship loss to the Paladins wasn't as much about ETSU necessarily playing that bad, but more about how well Furman played. The Bucs had claimed both regular-season meetings with Furman, which included their first win at Timmons Arena since the 2016-17 season. The Bucs also swept regular-season meetings with Furman and Chattanooga for the first time in program history.

ETSU's hoops tradition is still often a topic of conversation at plenty of Johnson City's most popular watering holes, and while the 23-win campaign in year three was a great start for Savage, as he won 19 in the previous two, the pressure to get back to the Big Dance will only get more, intense now as the fans got a taste of championship success again last season. 

The Bucs will always attract talent because of that tradition and their unique fan support, which rivals the rabidness of Big Blue Nation at Kentucky relative to the SoCon, without some of the antics that pulled by Kentucky fans when the team isn't performing up to expectations. If there is an admirable trait about Bucs fans in comparison to UK's fanbase, it's that they continue to stick behind the team without being critical when things aren't going according to plan. That also makes recruiting a little easier for Savage and staff.

ETSU has won 247 total games since returning to the SoCon in 2014-15, and that includes having won 135 total Southern Conference games, which ranks second in total wins behind only Furman (256 wins) over that same span, while the 135 SoCon wins would rank the Bucs third behind only UNCG (143) and Furman (137) over the past 12 seasons. 

The 247 wins over the past 12 seasons means that the Bucs are on average winning 20.5 games per season since returning to the SoCon hardwood prior to the 2014-15 season. ETSU's basketball program really started its rise in the mid-major ranks in the mid 1980s and that  has continued over about over the better part of the next four decades no matter which conference the Bucs have called home.

Now the Bucs have their sights set on ending up back in the championship game on Monday night in Asheville, seeking a different outcome this time around. With most of the staff back in place, the Bucs have another big opportunity ahead of them in 2026-27. 

As expected in today's age of college basketball, most of that talented cast that helped the Bucs to 23 wins and get back to their title-winning ways this season, has either moved on into the transfer portal or is out of eligibility.

Like Furman, the Bucs had some big losses. Gone is leading scorer Brian Taylor II, who finished off the campaign averaging 14.6 PPG and 3.7 RPG, as well as scoring in double figures in 28 of 34 games for the Bucs in 2025-26, enjoying a season-high 28 points in ETSU's Valentine's Day home loss to Samford. Taylor finished connecting on 34.2% (53-of-152) from three-point range this past season, as well as shooting 46.4% (182-of-392) from the field as a whole. 

Cam Morris III (37 blks, 39 steals), who was the SoCon's Defensive Player of the Year, graduated from ETSU and was the Bucs' best player through the opening half of league play before he seemingly ran out of gas, and was perhaps playing at less than 100%.  Like Taylor, the UMass Lowell transfer is out of eligibility.

That is also the case for Jaylen Smith, who was the SoCon's Sixth Man of the Year and had notable performances off the bench in helping lead the Bucs to come-from-behind wins over both East Tennessee State and North Alabama this past season. Smith originally committed to Kent State and then shortly thereafter re-opened his recruitment and has now ended up at Kansas City (UMKC) out of the Summit League. 

Smith posted a key 13 points off the bench in ETSU's 75-71 overtime win over Furman, while 14 off the bench in a clutch 78-74 win over the Lions, which saw the Bucs overcome as much as a 19-point deficit early in the second half to get the win. 

Smith also posted a season-high 28 points in ETSU's impressive non-conference win over Central Arkansas.  There has been no word on where Smith will land in the portal as of yet with his one year of eligibility remaining. He finished out his only season in the Bucs Blue and Gold averaging 9.1 PPG and 2.6 RPG and also finished the season as a 34.4% (52-of-151) shooter from three-point range. 

The player that did the most for his transfer portal stock with the Bucs this past season was Third-Team All-SoCon performer is Blake Barkley. Barkley was tied for team-high scoring honors this past season, as he finished out the campaign matching Taylor's 14.6 PPG average. 

Barkley also earned SoCon All-Tournament First Team honors for his performance over the duration of three days in Asheville. Barkley spent a year in Johnson City after transferring in from Northwestern prior to the 2025-26 season. 

Maybe the biggest loss heading into the off-season is point guard Al Strothers, who is out of eligibility. In an era when everything is structured towards being transferring for bigger and better perceived opportunities, Strothers is a player that stayed the course and ended up being a major part of ETSU's run to a regular-season title this past season. 

His final campaign ended by seeing him average 4.1 PPG and 2.1 RPG, tying Smith with a team-high 100 assists for the season. Strothers was ETSU's quickest player on the perimeter, as well as being the team's best on-ball defensive player.

So where does this ETSU team go from here? The Bucs have appeared to once again start things off strongly in the portal, securing an outstanding group of both portal and freshman additions as signees for the campaign ahead.

Portal Losses/Portal Adds and Returners:

Retaining players in this day and age has become something of a treasured artform for head coaches throughout mid-major basketball, and though the Bucs lose most of their production and leadership from a year ago, the ones that have stuck around will be among the best to return in the league this coming season. 

In Jordan McCullum, the Bucs have retained at least one player that can be a challenger for Southern Conference Player of the Year candidate heading into his junior season in 2026-27. McCullum had an outstanding first season in the Bucs Blue and Gold, as he started 32 of 34 games and he is ETSU's leading returning scorer from last season, as he averaged 8.3 PPG and 3.7 RPG last season.

McCullum averaged almost 22 minutes-per-game this past season and shot an impressive 53.3% from the field in his first season in Johnson City.  He was also right at 70% from the charity stripe, while shooting just 20.1% from three-point range last season. Head coach Brooks Savage will hope both of those latter shooting averages improve this coming season.

His most significant performance for the Bucs last season came against Chattanooga, as he posted a career-high 24 points at Freedom Hall on Feb. 11. He finished off his first double-double as an ETSU player on Nov. 21, 2025 against Morehead State, as the Harriman, Tenn., product went for 13 points and 14 rebounds against his former school. 

All told, McCullum posted 14 double-figure scoring efforts last season, and his 24-point performance in the mid-February win over Chattanooga was part of a stretch which was McCullum's best of the season, as it capped a string of four-straight double-figure scoring performances.

McCullum's most valuable asset, however, might be his play on the defensive end of the floor, and with his athleticism, was able to rank second on the team in blocks last season, swatting away 31 shots, which was only six behind Cam Morris III, who led the team with 37 swatted shots. 

Brayden Crump and Maki Johnson represent a couple of more players, who saw time last season and like McCullum, could be significant pieces that enhance what could be an even better portal haul than the one procured by Savage and staff last season. Crump suffered a season-ending injury in the non-conference play.

Crump, a transfer in from Elon, saw action in 11 games before suffering his season-ending injury, averaging 6.4 PPG and 3.1 RPG. The 6-8, 220-lb product of Morganton, N.C., shot a solid 50% from the field and 31.3% from beyond the arc, however, the three-point percentage is probably a little deceiving, as he is probably a little better perimeter shooter than his percentage might indicate. 

Crump is also a decent athlete and had some solid performances prior to the injury that ended his season prematurely, finishing with three double-figure scoring performances prior to suffering his injury, which includes a season-high 15 points in a win over Tusculum. 

Maki Johnson is a player that continues to show his overall development to different areas of his game, and last season, it was a more well-rounded scorer on the offensive end of the floor, as well as really improving his on-ball defense. He's been rewarded for his loyalty and hard work at ETSU, and he's become a fan favorite in Johnson City.

Last season, Johnson averaged 5.7 PPG, 3.2 RPG and 1.1 SPG in 34 appearances. He finished the season shooting 41.5% from the field, and is a player that will provide the type of veteran leadership that coach Brooks Savage will lean on this season. Johnson is best known for his ability as a three-point marksman, as he shot 38.5% from downtown last season. He finished the season an impressive 52-of-135 from three-point range. His improved play on the defensive end last season will likely lead to even more increased minutes this season and he could even compete for a starting spot.

Those players represent the lone Bucs that return to the fold off of last season's regular-season title winning team. With that said, coach Brooks Savage and staff have put together another portal haul of players that should make the Bucs a force in the SoCon once again in 2026-27, as ETSU should be a team considered as one of the favorites to repeat their regular-season title of a year ago, along with being a very candidate to be among the few teams that could potentially cut down the nets in Asheville come early March.

One of the top additions from the transfer portal for ETSU heading into the 2026-27 season is 6-9 forward Marqus Marion, who comes to the Bucs from Winston-Salem, where he was most recently with the Wake Forest Demon Deacons playing for former Bucs head coach Steve Forbes.

Marion is the type of player that head coach Brooks Savage hopes can have a similar impact to that of Blake Barkley last season. After redshirting his first season in Winston-Salem, Marion was able to find time in 20 games last season for the Demon Deacons, recording more than 240 minutes off the bench for Wake Forest.

In early-season matchups against both Morehead State and Michigan, Marion showed his power and athleticism as an effective rebounding presence on both ends of the floor, as he collected six boards in each of those contests. 

The Skovlunde, Denmark product not only brings a high basketball IQ and good athleticism to the front court, he also brings the skill level and shooting ability into the fold that seemingly all Europeans bring into the fold, which he combines with the good old American athleticism part of it. 

In his first season with the Demon Deacons back in 2023-24, Marion saw action in 21 games as a first-year player, showing the kind promise and potential that could make him a regular with the Demon Deacons. In many ways, Marion's arrival and ultimate falling out of favor as a player had less to do with his talent, and more to do with the portal craze not leaving room on the roster nor the time spent to develop him into the complete ACC frontcourt player that he might could have become given the time spent to develop his complete game. 

However, that's become something less likely to happen at the highest level of college basketball now, which is why you see many guys going to a smaller mid-major to hone and develop their skills before moving into the big-time level of college basketball. 

Marion's time at Wake was more bad timing than anyhting else, and that's why ETSU will no doubt benefit from having a guy like him in the fold. Much like Barkley, he'll be given free reign and against lesser talent in the SoCon, should also develop an offensive profile similar to Barkley's. I'd argue even that Marion's arrival might even dare I say see the Bucs be slightly better at power forward this season than with Barkley at the position last season. 

His best performance during his first season in Winston-Salem came in a game against Georgia, as he posted five points and eight rebounds in what turned out to be a heartbreaking 80-77 loss in Athens. He averaged 11 MPG in his first season at Wake Forest.

Prior to his arrival at Wake Forest, Marion was four-star prospect coming out of Skolvunde, Denmark according to On3, as well as being a Top 50 power forward prospect according to 247Sports.  He garnered a silver medal with the U18 Danish National Team at the FIBA Division B European Championship in the summer of 2022.

Set to join Marion in the front court out of the transfer portal for the Bucs next season is Wingate transfer Kendall Campbell. The 6-8, 230-lb senior will be a load underneath the basket. Campbell was only at Wingate for one season, having spent both of his previous two seasons just up the road at Elon. 

In his junior campaign at Wingate in 2025-26, Campbell was one of only two players to start all 29 games, finishing out the season by averaging 12 PPG and 4.7 RPG, while shooting 55.8% from the field in 26.2 MPG. Campbell also proved to be a solid threat from three-point range, finishing out the campaign shooting an impressive 36.2% from three-point range.

 In his previous two seasons at Elon, Campbell logged action in a combined 58 games where he would start only three games in two seasons for the Phoenix. His best performance in two seasons with Elon came during the 2023-24 campaign against Radford, as he posted a season-high 15 points against the Highlanders.

Another wing that could figure into the front court or in the backcourt because of his major versatility is 6-6 Tyran Mason out of UT-Arlington, who is an addition that Savage thinks could have a breakout season in the Bucs rotation in 2026-27. Mason spent the previous two seasons at Arlington and prior to that, spent the 2024-25 campaign at North Texas. 

In his one season at Arlington in 2025-26, Mason ended up averaging 6.5 PPG and 3.6 RPG as one of the top players off the bench for the Mavericks. He saw time in all 32 games last season for the Mavericks, averaging 18.5 minutes-per-game off the bench. He would finish the campaign by shooting a solid 47.7% from the field, including a 31.7% from three-point land. He also shot 68.6% from the charity stripe last season. 

Mason posted seven double-figure scoring efforts in his sophomore season with the Mavericks and posted a career-high 20 points in just 28 minutes against Utah Valley in what was an 81-60 loss in early February in Orem. Mason narrowly missed a double-double in the regular-season finale against Abilene Chrstian, as he finished that contest with 15 points and a career-high nine rebounds.  

In his rookie campaign at North Texas in 2024-25, Mason saw action in only four games as a true freshman with the Mean Green.

The talented wing guard/small forward will have two years of eligibility remaining in Johnson City if he chooses to remain a Buc for his senior season. 

With the likes of McCullum and Crump returning for ETSU next season, the task wasn't as tall for Savage and staff to find front court production and depth to go with it like the Bucs have had to do each of the past two seasons. In fact, there was more of a concentration on the backcourt, and scoring production and depth from the portal in this particular haul for the Bucs.

While Johnson returns, Jaylen Smith, Brian Taylor II, Gabe Sisk, Milton Matthews III and Allen Strothers have all moved on in the portal of have graduated with no eligibility left.  In Savage's first season at the helm in 2023-24, he procured a pair of guards that would end up putting the Bucs in a position to win the SoCon title on Monday night in Asheville, despite heading into the tournament as the No. 7 seed. 

Quimari Peterson, who would go on to garner the SoCon Player of the Year honor in 2024-25, teamed with Ebby Asamoah (Delaware) and the scoring exploits and shooting ability of each would end up being enough to help the Bucs go on a run to the title game before running out of gas in the title game following a valiant effort in what was a 76-69 loss to top seed Samford.

In much the same way that Asamoah and Peterson would shine as guards in Savage's first star backcourt tandem in that inaugural portal haul to Johnson City back in 2023-24, there are some players within the most recent haul of players from the portal that could produce similarly big numbers in 2026-27.

New ETSU Guard Jayden Cooper

One of those key scoring additions is 6-2 guard Jayden Cooper out of South Alabama, where he was one of the key players for head coach Richie Riley's Jaguars. The Pike Road, AL., product will have one season of eligibility remaining and he would end up starting 31 of 33 outings for the Jaguars last season, and ended up filling out several different categories, including averaging in double figures, posting 11.6 PPG to go along with 2.6 RPG, 1.0 APG and 1.1 SPG.

Cooper is a player that gets it done on both ends of the floor, excelling as an offensive scorer on one end, while being impactful on the defensive end of the floor. Cooper will be a guy that comes in and will be a factor on the defensive end right away as one of ETSU's best on-ball defenders in 2026-27. 

With the Jaguars last season, Cooper ended up connecting on 41.2% of his shots from the field and was second on the team with 55 made threes. 

Another thing to like about adding a guy like Cooper into the fold is that he's been in a program that has been a winning one, in South Alabama, as the Jaguars have back-to-back 21-win seasons. The Jaguars were even NIT participants this past season at the expense of an ETSU team that many felt, including myself, should have been in that particular NCAA sanctioned tournament. 

Cooper will be a guy looked instantly to provide for ETSU as an offensive threat in the backcourt for ETSU next season. In Cooper's first season at South Alabama, he averaged just 3.8 PPG and recorded a pair of double-figure scoring performances, which included a season-high 17 points and four rebounds against Troy. 

He actually started his career at NCAA Division II Faulkner, where he would show his talents right away during the 2023-24 campaign, as he was voted as the Southern States Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year, while also garnering first-team all-conference honors. In his rookie campaign, the Pike Road, AL product averaged 20.7 PPG, highlighted by a career-high 39-point effort against Dalton State.

BJ Ward (Southeast Missouri State), DeCarl Payne (John A. Logan JUCO), and Trevor Hennig (Weber State) round out an impressive transfer portal haul for the Bucs in the backcourt. Ward is a 6-0, 195-lb senior that is the latest talent to come from SEMO to the Southern Conference, joining Teddy Washington Jr. from last season, who transferred into the Mocs program after helping the Redhawks to a remarkable turnaround story only to fall short in the OVC title game against SIU-Edwardsville. 

Like Washington, Ward is another potential impact player in the SoCon, and at least I would imagine from coach Brooks Savage's perspective, he is a player that can be a game-changer for ETSU right away on both ends of the floor. 

During the 2025-26 season at SEMO, Ward was one of two Redhawks that started all 33 games and finished the season averaging 10.9 PPG and 2.1 RPG, while distributing the basketball especially well, contributing 3.7 assists-per-game. His 122 assists on the season ended up ranking him fifth in the OVC last season, while his 3.7 helpers-per-game ranked him sixth in the league. 

A native of St. Louis, MO, Ward finished the season shooting 38.9% from the field per game, while connecting on 50-of-143 from long range last season, which was good enough for a 35.0% shooting clip for the season from long-range.He connected on 101 threes each of the past two seasons for the Redhawks, and totaled 105 threes made in three seasons in Cape Girardeau. 

In his junior season with the Redhawks just last season, Ward ended up enjoying his best game of the season in a big win over Western Illinois, finishing not far from triple-double territory, with 23 points, nine rebounds and five assists. Ward also had 21 points against Morehead State, while finishing with 20 points against SIU Edwardsville. 

All told, Ward scored in double figures in 18 starts last season, garnering second-team All-OVC recognition. In three seasons in Cape Girardeau, Ward logged action in 95 games, which included making 67 starts. 


A player that could be set to join both Ward and Cooper as a viable scoring threat in the backcourt for ETSU this coming season is Weber State transfer shooting guard Trevor Hennig. The 6-4, 185-lb junior will have two years of eligibility remaining at ETSU after arriving from Ogden, Utah and the Weber State basketball program.

Speaking of Weber State, Hennig comes from one of the most decorated basketball programs in the Big Sky Conference, as the Wildcats have totaled 16 NCAA Tournament appearances in their history, with Hennig essentially moving from one program with a reputable conference title winning tradition to another.

Like Ward and Cooper, Hennig is a player that comes to Johnson City off a campaign which saw him average in double figures in the previous backcourt he was a part of, as Hennig averaged 10.0 PPG and saw action in 26 games, with seven starts, helping the Wildcats to a 16-16 mark as a sophomore in 2025-26.

In the 2025-26 season opener against West Coast Baptist, Hennig got his sophomore season off to a strong start, posting 20 points in what was a 92-point (130-38) win. He also finished the season with a trio of 19-point scoring efforts, which came in games against Utah Tech, Utah State and Montana State. All told, Hennig finished his sophomore season in Ogden with a total of 13 double-figure scoring efforts.

In his rookie season as a Wildcat back in 2024-25, Hennig played in all 34 games, which included starting the final 11, averaging 7.8 PPG, totaling 15 double-figure scoring efforts, which included 12 in Big Sky play. He shot 47.8% from the field last season, including 30% from three-point land on 18-for-60 shooting from long-range. In two seasons at Weber State, Hennig connected on 40 threes, shooting them at a 30.8% (40-of-130) clip.

DeCarl Payne rounds out the portal additions for the Bucs in the backcourt, as he came to Johnson City from John A Logan College, which is a program that ETSU is most familiar with, having procured talents like Devontavius Payne and Quimari Peterson to name a couple of the more prominent ones. 

In fact, Payne is part of a direct lineage to play at ETSU from John A. Logan, where his older brother Devonatavius Payne actually helped the Bucs to the 2016-17 Southern Conference Tournament crown. Payne hopes to become the latest of the greats in Johnson City to come from that particular program to play at ETSU.

Payne might have a chance to exceed what even his older brother was able to do in Johnson City in the very near future, where he will have two years of eligibility remaining. During his sophomore season at John A. Logan, Payne garnered All-Great Rivers Athletic Conference honors, playing in 29 games, which included nine starts.

Payne finished out his sophomore season averaging in double figures, posting 10.6 PPG and 2.2 RPG for the Region 24 runners-up. He finished his sophomore campaign connecting on 42% of his shots from the field, including 39% from three-point land and ended up making 46 of his long-range efforts last season. Payne also proved to be an excellent shooter from the charity stripe last season, connecting on 84% of his shots from the free throw line. 

In his freshman campaign with the Vols, he logged action in 32 games, including 11 starts and averaged 9.6 PPG, 2.0 RPG and 1.5 APG, shooting 47% from the field and 40% from three-point range, having made 40 triples.

Payne does a little bit of everything well, and he's a guy that you can't leave open from three, as he has an outstanding shot selection and shot discipline from long range. Those types can be the toughest kinds to guard from the perimeter. 

Freshman Additions:

There will be a healthy mix of both freshmen and portal additions during the 2026-27 season for ETSU. Just like the recruiting from the portal, the Bucs put more emphasis on the backcourt than the front court, bringing in two newcomers at the guard spots, in Colte Busse and Ben Maller, while Elton Smith is the lone big man to join the program. If you included freshman guard Maddox Huff, who redshirted last season, there are three young, viable options in the backcourt to give ETSU some quality young depth.

ETSU has recruited a lot from the portal under Brooks Savage in his first three seasons as the head coach, but with the foundation and groundwork laid for a successful and sustainable winning culture, Savage and staff can now start to feed that culture by recruiting from the high school ranks. 

As a whole last season, Freshmen classes around the league played a larger role than maybe they ever have, and it's a new trend among mid-majors to play that young talent as early as possible, but it can prove to be a two-edged sabre, as many of the freshmen that played such a vital role at places like Furman, Western Carolina, Wofford and UNCG last season, they ended up transferring out to bigger programs for much more money. With that said, most coaches around the league will tell you that it's absolutely a chance you have to take.

ETSU isn't a stranger to this even before the transfer portal. Pretty much everyone remembers a guy like DamarI Monsanto and how important he was to ETSU's squad back during the 2020-21 season. As a redshirt freshman, Monsanto absolutely took the league by storm, as he averaged 10.6 PPG and shot better 45% from three-point range as a freshman. After Jason Shay was unceremoniously fired at the end of the season, Monsanto moved on to Wake Forest with Shay. He might have stayed had Shay not been let go.

One of the unique players to watch this season for the Bucs is likely the player that decided to redshirt last season--Huff--who has a chance to be an absolute impact player next season for ETSU. Huff enjoyed a standout career at Harlan County High School in Baxter, KY. 

To give you an idea of how good Huff is, he was the first player from Harlan County High School to be selected to play in the Kentucky-Indiana series, and he comes to ETSU off a final season as a prep basketball that saw him average 29.4 PPG and 7.9 RPG, leading the Black Bears to a 25-9 overall record and a third-straight district title as a senior.

For his efforts in his senior campaign at Harlan County, Huff garnered 13th Region Player of the Year honors by the Kentucky Association of Basketball Coaches. Huff can flat out shoot the basketball, and that, if anything, could give him his greatest chance to garner a spot in Savage's rotation as soon as the 2025-26 season.

In a state known for good shooters, Huff led them all, as he finished out his senior campaign by leading the Bluegrass State in total made three-pointers, knocking down 151 triples in his final campaign as a prep.

Another especially impressive freshman coming into the ETSU program that the Savage and the ETSU staff are excited about is 6-4 guard Colt Busse, who is another impressive freshman talent the Bucs staff signed back in mid-November.

Busse comes from a great region of basketball talent, as he arrives from Baltimore, MD, after starring at at Archbishop Spalding in Severn, MD last season. The combo guard has excellent ball handling ability to go along with his proficiency as a shooter. 

Busse helped Archbishop Spalding to a 20-14 record this past season. Busse finished his senior campaign with 73 made threes, accounting for a majority of his 115 made field goals last season. Busse has a chance to be a real impact player and will join Huff and Johnson as three primary perimeter threats for ETSU in the coming season. 

Another combo guard to join the ETSU program for the upcoming 2026-27 basketball season is Ben Maller, who comes to Johnson City all the way from Mountain View, CA. The 6-4, 204-lb prepped at Prolific Prep in South Florida in 2025-26 where he played for head coach Ryan Bernardi. Prior to his time in South Florida, Maller was a three-year letterwinner at Mountain View High School. Maller played multiple sports during his prep career and is yet another player that can be plugged in to a game and affect it with his shooting ability.

The final addition to the roster during the offseason is talented freshman power forward Elton Smith, who joins the Bucs program from Columbia, S.C. and spent a year prepping at Dynamic Prep and OTE FaZe in Irving, TX., under head coach and former NBA big man Jermaine O'Neal before finding his way to ETSU. He averaged 5.1 PPG and 4.0 RPG in 13.8 MPG off the bench for Overtime Elite.

In his high school career at Cardinal Newman HS in Columbia, Smith was a two-time SCISA All-State selection, as well as being a 4A two-time All Region 1 performer. He helped Cardinal Newman to the 4A State title. 

ETSU Bucs Early Outlook for 2026-27                                                    

The Bucs have enough talent, at least on paper, to be a serious contender for a Southern Conference title once again this season, and will enter the conference slate as one of the favorites to win what would be a second-straight Southern Conference regular-season title.

The Bucs will be a little different in makeup once again this season, as it will be a team that will be stacked with most of its scoring talent and shooting prowess in the backcourt. The Bucs will rely on the veteran leadership of newcomers BJ Ward (SEMO) and Jayden Cooper (South Alabama). 

Much like the Bucs had last season with Brian Taylor II and Jaylen Smith, in Ward and Cooper, the Bucs will have both scoring ability, as well as perimeter shooting ability.  Ward and Cooper are also dynamic off the dribble, and both can be three-level scorers.

The x-factor might well be DeCarl Payne due to his ability both off the dribble and as a shooter. Payne is a guy that could also prove beneficial as a perimeter defender this season. That is something that will always be a hallmark of ETSU teams under Savage, and that is their ability defensively, especially pushing effective bigs off the block in the low-post, as well as guarding the three-point line, as Savage knows that the three-point shot is a way of life for most teams in the Southern Conference.

Offensive shouldn't be a problem with this new roster of players, and as with any new crop, it will be the defensive buy in that will ultimately determine where this team ends up, but Savage and staff have stockpiled enough talent to win the league once again this season.

One of the biggest takeways for me in observance of how ETSU and Brooks Savage himself were different last season was the character of his team and the players really seemed to embrace playing for one another. In those three years after Forbes left and before Savage took over, there was a lot of individual basketball being played in Johnson City, and it showed with what was allowed to transpire off the court, and that translated to how the game was played on the floor.

Since Savage, he has assembled an outstanding staff, which now includes more head coaching experience, with former Wofford head coach Dwight Perry joining former New Orleans head coach Chris Arkenburg, who was already on staff, and that has set the culture right in Johnson City.

This season, it was more apparent than ever that a culture of faith and commitment was different in Johnson City than it had been in previous seasons, and it even had an effect on head coach Brooks Savage, who got choked up speaking about this very thing after ETSU's dramatic come-from-behind win over Western Carolina in the SoCon Tournament this past March.  

The humility by coach Savage in that moment for the head coach to speak about that was a different side of Savage that few of us had witnessed, and it also was extension of and evidence of just how good the culture is in Johnson City. 

Bucs Breakdown:                                                                                                   

Starters Lost: (4/5)--PG-Brian Taylor II (14.6 PPG, 3.7 RPG, 53 made threes, 35% from 3pt range/out of eligibility); Cam Morris III (13.2 PPG, 5.2 RPG/SoCon Defensive Player of the Year/out of eligibility); Blake Barkley (14.6 PPG, 5.8 RPG, 59% FG PCT/Transferred to Grand Canyon); Allen Strothers (4.1 PPG, 2.1 RPG, 2.9 APG, 2.1 SPG/out of eligibility)

Others Lost: (4)--G--Jaylen Smith (9.1 PPG, 2.9 APG, 2.6 RPG, 1.3 APG, 52 made threes/transferred to Kansas City); G--Milton Matthews III (4.0 PPG, 1.4 RPG/out of eligibility); G/F--Gabe Sisk (3.4 PPG, 2.3 RPG/transferred to Malone); F--Isaiah Sutherland (3.5 PPG, 1.8 RPG/transferred to Wisconsin-Green Bay)

Best Returning Player: F-Jordan McCullum  (8.3 PPG, 3.7 RPG)

Potential Breakout Player in 2026-27: Brayden Crump (6.4 PPG, 3.1 RPG)

Best Transfer Portal Get: G-BJ Ward (SEMO) or F-Marqus Marion (Wake Forest)

Potential Glue Guy: G-Maki Johnson (5.7 PPG, 3.2 RPG)

Best Freshman Addition: F-Elton Smith (Cardinal Newman HS/Columbia, S.C.)

Overall Portal/Recruiting Synopsis and Grade: A


Monday, May 25, 2026

SoCon Hoops Summer Series 2026: Furman's Portal Haul Tops The New 11-Team SoCon



SoCon Summer Series 2026: Wofford Looks To Take Title Step In Year Two Under Kevin Giltner

Wofford sophomore guard Chace Whatley (Photo courtesy of Wofford athletics)  Wofford (19-13, 11-7 SoCon/T-2ND IN sOcOn)     Year two under K...