Utah basketball lands guard Mike Sharavjamts out of transfer portal

The Utah Utes landed their sixth transfer portal addition of the offseason in San Francisco guard Mike Sharavjamts.

Mike Sharavjamts has found his next college basketball home, committing to join Craig Smith and the Utah Utes out of the transfer portal – according to a report from ESPN’s Jonathan Givony.

Sharavjamts began his college career at Dayton in the A10, starting 20 out of 32 games and averaging 5.6 points, 2.6 assists, and 1.9 rebounds. The 6’8 guard hit the portal and landed at San Francisco, starting all 34 games for the Dons and boosting his numbers up to 7.7 points, 2.7 assists, and 3.0 rebounds while shooting a solid 36% from the three point line.

However, Sharavjamts decided to hit the portal once again, and after revealing a top-six last last month – that did not include Utah – Mongolian Mike ultimately ended up with the Utes as they transition into the Big 12.

Sharavjamts has the size and range to play the one, two, or three, although he has not taken the leap many envisioned he would as a top ranked prospect coming out of high school. Still, he represents a versatile wing option for the Utes heading into the 2024-25 season.

The addition of Sharavjamts is the sixth transfer coming in for coach Smith, joining Ezra Ausar (East Carolina), Mason Madsen (Boston College), Miro Little (Baylor), Keanu Dawes (Rice), and Zach Keller (Wake Forest).

Utah still has three scholarships available, so they might not be done finalizing this roster heading into 2024-25.

Former Husker target enters transfer portal

Will the Huskers make another run at the forward?

A former target of the Nebraska men’s basketball team has entered the transfer portal. Mike Sharavjamts averaged 7.7 points, 3.0 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game for San Francisco last year.

Sharavjamts transfer to the Dons after starting his career at Dayton. He entered the portal last offseason as well and was a target for the Cornhuskers before the start of the 2023-24 season.

Sharavjamts is the first Mongolian citizen to earn a Division I athletic scholarship. He was a 4-star recruit who averaged 10.2 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 3.6 assists in 24 games for the International Sports Academy in Willoughby, Ohio.

While Nebraska maybe willing to target the forward once again, early reports have him returning to Dayton.

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Catching up with the Boston Celtics’ 2023 NBA draft workouts Part IV

Let’s dive into who the Celtics might be targeting at No. 35.

Even with the offseason here in earnest, the Boston Celtics have plenty on their plate regarding their future as they continue to work out prospects projected to go in the second round of the ’23 NBA draft.

With the Celtics likely to need cheap depth in the future, look for prospects who are either polished enough to get some real minutes in their rookie campaign or who might be okay with a season or two stashed abroad while the team makes decisions about how it will use the new two way player slot added to rosters in the latest collective bargaining agreement recently adopted by the league.

Adding to our previous reporting of the team’s known workouts comes a new wave of prospects Boston has been working out — let’s dive into who the Celtics might be targeting at No. 35.