Four-star guard Kaden Magwood lists Auburn among top schools

Auburn is in the mix to land the No. 2 recruit from North Carolina for the 2025 cycle.

2025 four-star shooting guard [autotag]Kaden Magwood[/autotag] has narrowed his list down to three schools ahead of his commitment on November 11.

The 6-1 prospect recently told On3’s Joe Tipton that NC State, Ole Miss, and Auburn have made the final three ahead of next month’s announcement.

A consensus top-60 recruit in the nation, Magwood is the No. 2 ranked player from the state of North Carolina. While he lacks the size of a normal top recruit, Magwood’s quickness around the rim and mid-range game helped him average nearly 23 points per game on the 3SSB Circuit this summer. Between his scoring ability and slightly undersized nature, Magwood sees a lot of former Auburn star guard Sharife Cooper in himself. The coaching staff… said I’m a scoring point guard, so I feel like I could come in and be a Sharife Cooper-type of guard, or whoever they have had there.”

The Charlotte, North Carolina native took an official visit to the Plains a few weeks ago and received an offer shortly after. When speaking with On3, Magwood explained how Auburn’s atmosphere made him feel a part of something special.

“I was there for a football game, I mean, they lost that game, but the atmosphere was great,” Magwood said. “They were up at halftime, so there were a lot of people there and a great atmosphere. I really liked it.”

If Magwood were to commit to Auburn, he’d join 2025 commit [autotag]Simon Walker[/autotag] to create a solid 1-2 combo guard punch at the top of next season’s recruiting class.

We’ll see if Auburn’s early season success, or lack thereof, will have any impact on Magwood’s decision in November. [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] and his Tigers open up the 2024-25 campaign on November 6 against Vermont at Neville Arena.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch

In photos: Auburn takes the podium at SEC Media Day

Bruce Pearl, Denver Jones, and Johni Broome addressed the media Tuesday at SEC Media Day in Mountain Brook.

The college basketball season is just around the corner. Evidence of that could be seen during Tuesday’s SEC Media Day at the Grand Bohemian Hotel in Mountain Brook, Alabama, just outside of Birmingham.

Head coach [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag], forward [autotag]Johni Broome[/autotag], and guard [autotag]Denver Jones[/autotag] represented Auburn during the event, where they fielded questions from the media regarding the upcoming season. Jones, who is working toward becoming the team’s point guard, spoke about how Pearl is working to prepare him for his new role.

“He was teaching me a lot — deep in detail about my footwork, being able to shoot floaters, because I’m not gonna be able to get to the rim every single time in this league,” Jones said Tuesday. “Obviously, like, helping with my passing ability — there are a lot of attributes that come with playing point guard, and I feel like he prepared me for that.”

Photographers snapped great shots of Pearl, Broome, and Jones during their stay in Mountain Brook. Here are the best photos from Auburn’s time at SEC Media Day on Tuesday.

A challenging nonconference schedule is something Bruce Pearl, Auburn has ‘worked for’

The Tigers brutal non-SEC slate is a challenge that Bruce Pearl is not taking lightly.

Auburn head men’s basketball coach [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] took the podium Tuesday during SEC Media Day to discuss his team’s upcoming season.

One of the biggest storylines heading into the season for the defending SEC Tournament champions is their nonconference schedule, which is among the most challenging in all of college basketball. The Tigers are set to meet up with 14 teams who are either ranked in the preseason Associated Press poll or are receiving votes during its 2024-25 slate.

Some headliners of Auburn’s nonconference slate include No. 4 Houston, No. 7 Duke, and No. 14 Purdue. The possibility of facing the defending national champions, No. 3 UConn as well as No. 9 North Carolina is on the table for Auburn as part of the Maui Invitational competition that takes place this November.

Pearl was asked about his schedule and mentioned that his teams have worked toward being competitive enough to earn the right to play some of the sport’s heavy hitters during regular season play and that he is honored that coaches such as Houston’s Kelvin Sampson and Purdue’s Matt Painter consider Auburn to be a great draw for neutral site action. When breaking down the reasoning for building a challenging schedule, Pearl says that it is time for his squad to prove that they “belong.”

“Well, two things jump out at me. Number one, you’d better be careful what you wish for. We’ve got all we can handle for sure. But it’s what we built. It’s what we worked. It’s easier to get someplace than it is to stay someplace. So to try to stay competitive at Auburn has been a great, great challenge, and we’ve managed to win four championships in the last seven years, two regular season and two tournament, with four different teams. Sometimes you’ve got to act like you belong, and you can’t always control the recruiting, you can’t control the transfer portal, you can’t control a lot of things that are happening, but you can control who you schedule.”

Pearl also addresses the opportunity that a taxing schedule brings to their players, and how it improves the mental aspect of the game.

“I just think from the standpoint of our players, I think our players deserve the opportunity to play against the best and have that great, great challenge. Adversity doesn’t always build character, but adversity will reveal character. We’re going to have some adversity. We’re going to lose some games in non-conference, perhaps more than we have in the past, just because of the strength of the schedule. How do we handle that? How do we bounce back? What do we learn? And obviously getting better throughout the season. Then also if you look at the SEC-ACC matchup, the fact that Alabama and Auburn are both going to North Carolina and Duke and a lot of responsibility in those two matchups because those are going to be two of the hardest games in that matchup, and so I will wear the responsibility of trying to uphold our end, knowing the challenge of going to Duke.”

Auburn kicks off the 2024-25 campaign on Wednesday, Nov. 6 at Neville Arena against the Vermont Catamounts. The Tigers will then go through their gauntlet of nonconference foes before opening SEC play with Missouri on Saturday, Jan. 4.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

Auburn earns top-five spot in first KenPom rankings of season

Auburn will meet up with nearly half of the KenPom’s preseason top-13 at some point in the 2024-25 season.

With the college basketball season begins in three short weeks, Ken Pomeroy has released his initial “KenPom Rankings” ahead of the 2024-25 campaign.

The rankings, which have become one of the predominant metrics in analyzing team success, rank each college basketball program using various factors, such as offensive and defensive efficiency, tempo, and strength of schedule.

While the ranking is not a perfect indicator of future success (Auburn and Arizona were top-five heading into last season’s NCAA Tournament before bowing out early) it is a useful tool.

After claiming spots throughout the top 10 throughout last season’s SEC Tournament winning campaign, [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag]’s Auburn Tigers have opened the season at the No. 3 spot in KenPom, trailing only Houston (1) and Duke (2), teams Auburn will face during the 2024-25 slate. The Tigers check in just ahead of rival Alabama (4) and defending back-to-back National Champion UConn (5) to round out the top 5.

With future 2024 opponents Purdue (No. 10), Iowa State (No. 7), and SEC counterpart Tennessee (No. 13) also ranked in the top 15, the Tigers are guaranteed to face off against nearly half of the top-13 ranked teams at some point this season. That number could elevate to more than half if the Tigers match up with Dan Hurley’s UConn Huskies during the Maui Invitational in late November.

Auburn’s basketball program is in arguably a better spot than it was at this point a year ago. With transfers [autotag]JP Peagues[/autotag] and [autotag]Miles Kelly[/autotag] joining a great incumbent core featuring Johni Broome, Chad Baker-Mazara, Denver Jones, Chaney Johnson, and Dylan Cardwell, Bruce Pearl should again feature one of the better and deeper rotations in the country.

A much more difficult non-conference schedule could suit the Tigers well in the SEC and in March. We’ll see if Auburn can live up to the preseason hype when the season tips off at Neville Arena on November 6 against American East opponent Vermont.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch

Where does Johni Broome rank amongst Andy Katz’s top bigs?

The college basketball season is just a few short months away from beginning and Andy Katz has released his top big men for the 2024-25 year

Auburn basketball is preparing for yet another season with the hopes of making its mark against some of the nation’s best teams. It takes a wealth of talent to do that, but the Tigers have some veteran leadership that will at least give them a chance to pick up some quality wins.

One of those leaders that Auburn has returning is big man [autotag]Johni Broome[/autotag], who was listed at No. 3 on Andy Katz’s list of top big men heading into the 2024-25 season.

Broome has played a huge part in the success that the Tigers have had since he stepped on the Plains and has consistently made national headlines as a player.

In the 2023-24 campaign, Broome started 34 of 35 games for the year and was a 54.8% shooter, scoring 576 points and leading the team in that category. He also was a 61.5% free throw shooter as well.

He totaled 299 rebounds, averaging 8.5 for game, being a tough rebounder to go up against. Broome also recorded 78 blocks and 31 steals, cementing himself as a force to be reckoned with on shot attempts.

The two big men that Katz listed ahead of Broome are Kansas center Hunter Dickinson and Creighton’s Ryan Kalkbrenner.

Auburn will see what Broome can do this season in his final campaign under head coach [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag], as the team faces the likes of Houston, Iowa State, Duke, Ohio State and Purdue as part of the nonconference schedule.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes and opinions. You can also follow Tyler on X @traley34

Auburn hosting a pair of four-star power forwards this weekend

2025 four-star power forward Sebastian Williams-Adams and 2026 four-star power forward Jalan Wingfield are scheduled to spend some time on the Plains

Auburn basketball is set to host a pair of top 50 recruiting targets this weekend, as 2025 four-star power forward [autotag]Sebastian Williams-Adams[/autotag] and 2026 four-star power forward [autotag]Jalan Wingfield[/autotag] are scheduled to spend some time on the Plains. The former, Houston, Texas native Sebastian Williams-Adams, will be in Auburn for an official visit while Wingfield’s visit is designated as unofficial.

A consensus top 40 recruit in the 2025 class, Williams-Adams is a 6-foot-8, 230 pound power forward who has visits scheduled to Kansas (Sept. 13), Purdue (Sept. 20), SMU (Sept. 27), and Oklahoma State (Oct.4) later this fall. He also spent time in College Station last weekend on an official visit to Texas A&M.

The high school senior led St. Johns High School in nearly every statistical category during their 26-7 season in 2023. His 21.1 points and 10 rebounds per game as a junior make him one of the more intriguing inside threats heading into the 2025 recruiting cycle.

As for Jalan Wingfield, the 2026 four-star power forward has an extremely similar build to Williams-Adams despite being a year younger. The Atlanta, GA native stands at 6-foot-8, 225 pounds, and is a consensus top 50 recruit in the 2026 class. While he is yet to take an official visit, Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Cincinnati, Florida State, and Georgia Tech have all offered the star high school forward a scholarship.

We’ll see if [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] and the Auburn coaching staff can convince either prospective Tiger to lean towards committing this weekend. A good showing from Hugh Freeze, Payton Thorne, and the Auburn student section could help out the basketball coaching staff as well.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch

Auburn basketball to open up Maui Invitational against Iowa State

Auburn’s schedule keeps getting tougher and tougher.

Auburn basketball now knows who it will be playing when it travels to Hawaii for the 2024 Maui Invitational, playing in the tournament for the first time since 2018.

The Tigers and head coach [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] open up the festivities with the Iowa State Cyclones on Nov. 27, looking to make a statement in the midst of a brutal non-conference schedule.

The two teams are 2-2 against each other all-time, with Auburn being the most recent victor in the series after winning in the 2020 SEC-Big 12 Challenge at Neville Arena .

No matter what happens in the opening game, however, the road will not be easy for Auburn. The second game of the tournament will be against either North Carolina or Dayton, while the third game will be a game with a team on the other side of the bracket in UConn, Memphis, Michigan State or Colorado.

Prior to the tournament, the Tigers will go on the road to take on the Houston Cougars, while playing the Duke Blue Devils shortly following.

Needless to say, the entire stretch of this non-conference schedule for Auburn is going to determine a lot about the team, and the Cyclones will be the first of many tests in Maui.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Tyler on Twitter @traley34

Former Tiger Chance Westry fully cleared for basketball activities

The 6-6 forward entered the portal after the playing only 11 games for the Tigers in 2022-23.

Following a near two-year rehab from a knee injury, former Auburn Tiger [autotag]Chance Westry[/autotag] has been cleared to take the court again with the Syracuse Orange.

The former No. 37 prospect in the 2022 class, Westry started his career under [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] as a Tiger. Unfortunately the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania native failed to capitalize on his high school hype following a preseason injury that forced him to miss over 60% of Auburn’s games during the 2022-23 season.

In the 11 games Westry did suit up for, he played just 9.3 minutes per contest, scoring just over one field goal a game. The 6-6 forward entered the portal after the disappointing 2022, taking his talents up north to join the Syracuse Orange. He once again injured himself in 2023 but has now been cleared for basketball activities well ahead of the 2024-2025 campaign.

Still with multiple years of eligibility left, the former Tiger told pennlive.com he feels he is in the best spot of his college career. “This season is big for me. I have high expectations of myself and am glad to be back where I was at a year ago before surgery. I’m ready to play the best basketball of my life.”

While Westry’s time on the Plains is over and he is unlikely to play against the Tigers unless the two programs match up in the postseason or ACC/SEC Challenge, the former No. 7 recruit from Arizona finally has the chance to display his talent for the Orange. We’ll see how big of a rotation piece he is for head coach Adrian Autry when Syracuse tips off its season in late November.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch

Five-star forward AJ Dybantsa places Auburn in top schools

The 6-9 small forward is the No. 1 prospect in the 2025 class.

Forward [autotag]AJ Dybantsa[/autotag] narrowed his favorite list of schools down to seven on Friday morning. The No. 1 overall recruit in the class, Dybantsa’s list includes BYU, North Carolina, Kansas State, Kansas, Baylor, Alabama, and Auburn.

The 6-9, 200-pound small forward rates at a “100” on the recruiting scale according to most scouts. That scouting report has made him an early favorite to become the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, something that has weighed heavily on Dybantsa’s decision regarding where he would like to play college basketball.

Out of the seven schools he listed, Auburn is the only one in which he has already visited. The Brockton, Mass. native spoke highly of his time with [autotag]Bruce Pearl[/autotag] on the Plains, specifically stating Pearl’s ability to develop him into a scorer at the next level.

“They were saying that if I came here, they would play me a lot at the wing, the 2-guard ..I’d be a scorer and a playmaker,” Dybantsa said in a recent interview with On3’s Joe Tipton. “That’s what I’m trying to do at the next level.”

While many experts currently give Auburn the edge in landing the most coveted recruit in the 2025 class, fans will receive more clarity after Dybansta finishes his visits later this year. If he were to become a Tiger, Bruce Pearl would land his biggest recruit since [autotag]Jabari Smith[/autotag] came to the Plains as the No. 7 ranked prospect in the nation.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch

Auburn and Houston basketball agree to two-year neutral site series

Bruce Pearl and the Auburn Tigers aren’t shying away from tough competition.

Auburn’s 2024 and 2025 basketball schedules have become a tad more difficult.

The Tigers reportedly agreed to play a two-year neutral site series with the Houston Cougars of the Big 12 on Wednesday. The series begins this season at Toyota Center in Houston, and will conclude next season at Legacy Arena in Birmingham.

The Kelvin Sampson-led Cougars have become a staple of the college basketball world, having made at least the Sweet 16 in every NCAA Tournament since 2019. With Bruce Pearl having created the same type of “basketball renaissance” on the Plains, the quick series makes plenty of sense for both programs.

This year’s matchup will be the first between the pair of National Champion hopefuls since the second round of the 2023 NCAA Tournament, where No. 1 seed Houston overcame an early deficit to defeat the Tigers.

This announcement adds another difficult game to what has become a gauntlet of a conference slate for the Tigers. Starting with the Maui Invitational in November in which Bruce Pearl’s squad will play some combination of Memphis, Michigan State, UConn, Colorado, Dayton, Iowa State, and North Carolina, the Tigers also travel to Durham to take on Duke in early December before a matchup against Purdue a few days before winter break.

Pearl and the Auburn staff could be more inclined to put the Tigers through “the ringer” early on in the season after seeing the success of Alabama in the NCAA Tournament after the Tide played an extremely tenuous non-conference schedule last season. If anything, Auburn will certainly be more battle tested than it was a season ago when [autotag]Johni Broome[/autotag] and company lost to Yale in the Round of 64.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on  X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Brian on Twitter @TheRealBHauch