CBS Sports ranks the top basketball players in the transfer portal

The college basketball transfer portal is loaded with talent.

Texas head coach Rodney Terry has plenty of positions to fill following multiple departures from his Elite Eight roster. Fortunately for Terry, the transfer portal is not short on talented players looking for a change of scenery.

The Longhorns’ most pressing needs are well known. Texas needs scoring guards to replace the production Marcus Carr and Sir’Jabari Rice gave the team last year. In addition, they’ll need more height than the past two teams to combat the length of teams such as Purdue and Tennessee have had of late.

On Wednesday, CBS Sports gave an idea of some of the better players Texas could target in the portal. Here’s a look at their top 10 transfers for the 2023 offseason thus far.

Kentucky guard Sahvir Wheeler enters the transfer portal

The 5’10” guard will be looking for his third program in five seasons.

The transfer portal added another talented player on Monday. This time it was out of Lexington, Kentucky.

According to Jeff Borzello of ESPN, Kentucky Wildcats guard Sahvir Wheeler has entered the transfer portal. The Texas native will be looking to join his third team in five seasons. Wheeler started with the Georgia Bulldogs in 2019, and after two seasons he transferred to Kentucky.

Wheeler played 57 games with the Bulldogs with 43 starts. He played in 51 games for the Wildcats with 43 starts. He averaged 10.3 points, 6.1 assists, and 1.1 steals over his career. Wheeler scored 7.7 points per game with 5.6 assists in 21 games in the 2022-2023 college basketball season for Calipari.

The guard could stay within the SEC and return to his home state of Texas with the Aggies or he could opt to return to the Lone Star State with any number of Division I programs. His best season came with the Georgia Bulldogs as a sophomore scoring 14 points per game with 7.4 assists and 1.7 steals.

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How Georgia basketball transfers did in 2021-2022

How did all nine of Georgia’s 2021 basketball transfers do at their new schools in 2021-2022?

Georgia men’s basketball had a disappointing 2021-2022 season. The Bulldogs finished 6-26 and won one SEC conference game.

Georgia parted ways with head coach Tom Crean following the season and hired Florida head coach Mike White to the same position.

Georgia’s 2021-2022 season was poor due to a variety of reasons. Injuries did not help the cause either. Key FAU transfer Jailyn Ingram missed much of the 2021-2022 season with an injury. Georgia’s only returning starter, P.J. Horne, missed the entire season with a right knee injury.

The Bulldogs returned almost no production and experience from the 2020-2021 team. Georgia added several transfers, but lost a number of valuable pieces to the transfer portal.

Here’s how all nine of Georgia’s 2021 basketball transfers did at their new schools in 2021-2022:

Did he stay or did he go? Tracking the biggest NBA draft decisions

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

While the official date from the league is not actually until July 19, the NCAA has mandated the deadline of July 7 for players who wish to play college basketball next season.

Prospects who declared as early entry candidates but were just “testing the waters” often opt to return to the collegiate ranks so as to improve their draft stock for the subsequent year instead. But there are several reasons why a player might be even more willing to return to college for another campaign than usual.

For example, seniors have the option to use another year of eligibility because of the massive impact of COVID-19. Others may be interested in playing another year of college in front of fans after last season was met with many restrictions.

Meanwhile, all NCAA athletes also now have the ability to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL) for the first time. This offers an avenue to collect some money while still in college without needing to fully commit to turning pro.

Here are the latest updates about who is still testing the waters, who will be turning pro and who will be returning to the NCAA.

Did he stay or did he go? Tracking the biggest NBA draft decisions

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

While the official date from the league is not actually until July 19, the NCAA has mandated the deadline of July 7 for players who wish to play college basketball next season.

Prospects who declared as early entry candidates but were just “testing the waters” often opt to return to the collegiate ranks so as to improve their draft stock for the subsequent year instead. But there are several reasons why a player might be even more willing to return to college for another campaign than usual.

For example, seniors have the option to use another year of eligibility because of the massive impact of COVID-19. Others may be interested in playing another year of college in front of fans after last season was met with many restrictions.

Meanwhile, all NCAA athletes also now have the ability to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL) for the first time. This offers an avenue to collect some money while still in college without needing to fully commit to turning pro.

Here are the latest updates about who is still testing the waters, who will be turning pro and who will be returning to the NCAA.

Did he stay or did he go? Tracking the biggest NBA draft decisions

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

All prospects who declared early entry for the 2021 NBA draft without foregoing their collegiate eligibility had until July 7 to withdraw.

While the official date from the league is not actually until July 19, the NCAA has mandated the deadline of July 7 for players who wish to play college basketball next season.

Prospects who declared as early entry candidates but were just “testing the waters” often opt to return to the collegiate ranks so as to improve their draft stock for the subsequent year instead. But there are several reasons why a player might be even more willing to return to college for another campaign than usual.

For example, seniors have the option to use another year of eligibility because of the massive impact of COVID-19. Others may be interested in playing another year of college in front of fans after last season was met with many restrictions.

Meanwhile, all NCAA athletes also now have the ability to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL) for the first time. This offers an avenue to collect some money while still in college without needing to fully commit to turning pro.

Here are the latest updates about who is still testing the waters, who will be turning pro and who will be returning to the NCAA.

Tom Creans blows it again; former players and media sound off

Tom Crean continues to struggle as coach of Georgia, is it time to move on?

To say the Tom Crean experiment is off to a rough start in Athens would be a ridiculous understatement.

The former Indiana and Marquette men’s basketball coach has slightly improved the team’s record year-to-year from his disastrous first season at Georgia, but that’s not the problem here.

The problem is Crean was brought in to lock down the state of Georgia in basketball, or at least pluck a handful of in-state products from the likes of Auburn, Tennessee, Ole Miss, Alabama and others.

Mark Fox did a solid job getting the most out of his players at Georgia prior to Crean, but many wanted to see the program take the next step with a guy like Crean who was expected to recruit.

Many fans’ frustrations boiled over by the midpoint of another disappointing season in 2020-2021.

However, most were on board with trusting Crean for another year, given he had developed Sahvir Wheeler, Toumani Camara, Tye Fagan and others now.

Then, over half of the Bulldogs’ leading scorers left the program.

Crean is left with an empty cupboard in Athens, while managing to recruit 13th out of 14 teams in the SEC for 2021.

As of right now, the leading contributor returning outside of KD Johnson is walk-on Jaxon Etter.

The program has hit rock bottom, even with any COVID-19 or transfer rule excuses that Crean keeps pumping along. The fact of the matter is, the Dawgs are in trouble.

Every SEC team has won an NCAA Tournament game since Georgia last did in 2002, which was also vacated. The Dawgs have not won a tournament game that counted in the record books since 1996.

Athletic Director Josh Brooks has been excellent with fan engagement, communication and just about everything else during his tenure as the head guy at Georgia.

It’s time to see what Brooks can do with a hire in the basketball realm now.

Just look at these tweets from former players within the program and members of the media.

Who would want to play for this guy?

And for the ‘Georgia is a football school’ crowd …

Obviously the Dawgs aren’t going to be a blue blood like a Duke, UNC or Kentucky. They aren’t going to be able to get a coach like Mick Cronin who went and found success in fixing UCLA.

However, they can do better than Tom Crean.

Alabama, Auburn, Tennessee and Vanderbilt have all won at least a share of the regular season SEC title or the tournament in the past decade.

The Tigers and South Carolina, two of Georgia’s primary basketball rivals, have made Final Four runs in the past 5 years.

Georgia doesn’t have to make a run at a Final Four, but you can’t tell me the program is the best it can be right now. Especially under a guy making $3.2 million a year to do this.

Look around the region. Georgia Tech, Clemson, Auburn, Alabama, Tennessee, Florida State and South Carolina all seem to have figured it out to some degree.

Heck, Nate Oats is over at Alabama, a perennial football power, with an arena in worse condition than Georgia’s, winning both the regular season and conference tournament title.

Oats took his Tide to the Sweet 16 in year two and is recruiting with the likes of Duke, Kentucky, Kansas and UCLA.

A little further to the South, you will find Auburn. Bruce Pearl and company just plucked five-star Jabari Smith out of the Atlanta metro, in addition to nabbing Georgia legacy Walker Kessler in the transfer portal.

The Dawgs may never be a legitimate threat in basketball, but getting rid of Tom Crean at least opens the door for some kind of hope.

And look at this. The guy puts his former standouts from other schools on wallpaper in his office, while making the UGA legends of the program a cardboard cutout on the side.

You know, the guys who actually played for the G logo on their chests and in that very building.

It’s time to end this disaster.

Grab Jonas Hayes from Xavier and turn this program around. Hayes has key connections in the recruiting hotbed of Georgia and out-recruits Crean there from 500 miles away.

Georgia basketball suffers painful overtime defeat

The Dawgs fought until the end, coming up just short by a final score of 105 to 102.

In a conference matchup between two teams sporting losing SEC records (despite both maintaining winning overall records), the Georgia Bulldogs lost a heart-breaker against Alabama. The Dawgs fought until the end, coming up just short by a final score of 105 to 102.

The game was tied at 92 points apiece with 21.6 seconds remaining. The score at the end of regulation remained the same, sending the SEC foes to the conference’s third overtime contest of the day.

In the Bulldogs’ first 100-point offensive performance of the year, projected top-five NBA Draft selection Anthony Edwards was limited to 14 points on 5-17 from the field.

Freshman Sahvir Wheeler led the Dawgs with 24 points and 8 assists.

Rayshaun Hammonds posted 20 points. Toumani Camara recorded 12.

The Dawgs will play their next game on Wednesday at home against South Carolina. Tom Crean’s squad somehow maintains 12-11 overall record while having gone 2-8 against SEC opponents.

Upset complete: Georgia basketball knocks off #11 Memphis

Behind a balanced offensive performance, Tom Crean’s squad outlasted a red-hot Memphis team 65-62 in an early season classic.

Georgia’s men’s basketball team marched into Memphis to face a Tigers team in the middle of a ten-game winning streak. Correction: at the end of a ten-game winning streak.

Behind a balanced offensive performance featuring four Bulldogs scoring double-digit figures, Tom Crean’s squad outlasted a red-hot Memphis 65-62 in an early season classic. The game featured over twenty lead changes and no team ever led by more than eight points.

Junior Rayshaun Hammonds led the way for the Dawgs, scoring 15 and securing 12 rebounds.

Freshman star Anthony Edwards had a less-than-memorable afternoon, shooting 4-17 from the field, but found some rhythm at a crucial time. Seven of his thirteen points were scored during a run that brought Georgia back from being down 39-47 to being up 51-48 across a span of three minutes and ten seconds.

Graduate transfer Donnell Gresham, Jr. posted 12 points and freshman spark plug Sahvir Wheeler racked up 10 off the bench.

Georgia improves to 10-3 on the season and has won four straight. The Dawgs’ next game takes place on Tuesday night, when they welcome the #14 Kentucky Wildcats to Stegeman Coliseum.

The broadcast begins on ESPN at 9:00 p.m. EST.

Georgia basketball secures win over Georgia Southern

A trio of freshmen helped propel the Georgia Bulldogs men’s basketball team to a home victory over Georgia Southern this Monday night.

The Georgia Bulldogs outlasted a scrappy Georgia Southern team Monday night at Stegeman Coliseum by a final score of 73-64.

The Dawgs were led to victory by a duo of freshmen.  Freshman forward Toumani Camara shot a perfect 8/8 for 16 points and tacked on 7 rebounds and an assist to top it off.  Going with that was Anthony Edwards’ 23 points on 50% shooting, as well as 3 rebounds and 4 assists.

The 16 points out of Camara were his collegiate career high and Edwards remains the #1 freshman scorer in the country with his 23 piece.

Georgia Southern put up a fight for the entirety of the game.  Their zone defense was working until Edwards closed it out with a few big buckets late down the stretch in the 2nd half.  Georgia Southern’s Ike Smith led all players with 25 points on the night.

With Georgia down 60-59 and under 4:30 left in the game, Edwards had a consecutive assist, dunk, layup, dunk and dunk without Georgia Southern scoring to give the Dawgs a 69-60 lead and close out the game.

Here are two of his dunks from that clutch 2:30 stretch:

Edwards has been special all year, living up to the hype that has been surrounding him.  Right now he is a projected top-5 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft.

UGA head coach Tom Crean credited freshman guard Sahvir Wheeler and Toumani Camara on their defensive effort in the game.  “We won the game because of what we did on defense.  Sahvir and Toumani didn’t come out of the game at all in the second half, two freshmen just rallied it up in a big way, we earned these two victories.” said Crean in a postgame interview.

The Bulldogs advanced to 8-3 on the season with the win and will face Austin Peay at home next on December 30th.

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