Former Gator Tyree Appleby headed to Wake Forest for final season

Transfer guard Tyree Appleby has found a new home through the transfer portal.

Two days after graduating from the University of Florida, transfer guard [autotag]Tyree Appleby[/autotag] has found his new home for the 2022-23 season. According to ESPN’s Jeff Borzello, Appleby is headed to Wake Forest to close out his college career.

This is the second transfer of Appleby’s career, the first coming in 2019 when he arrived at Florida from Cleveland State. He’s served as the team’s starting point guard at several points while in Gainesville and averaged 10.9 points and 3.7 assists per game in 2021-22. He likes to take the three-point shot and has hit them at a 35.5% clip over his career. Perhaps his most memorable moment in the Orange and Blue came on a deep buzz-beater to beat Ohio State in Fort Myers last November.

The Demon Deacons are adding an experienced and gritty leader after a season where they finished 25-10 and as a No. 2 seed in the NIT. The hope is that Appleby can help get them to that NCAA Tournament berth. Wake Forest also brought on Delaware’s Andrew Carr and Marist’s Jao Ituka through the portal.

Florida still has three players in the transfer portal, [autotag]Keyontae Johnson[/autotag], [autotag]Elijah Kennedy[/autotag] and [autotag]Tuongthach Gatkek[/autotag]. None are expected to return which leaves first-year head coach [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] with three open scholarship spots on the roster.

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Florida basketball misses out on transfer PF Johni Broome to Auburn

Todd Golden couldn’t beat Bruce Pearl and Auburn for one of the top big men in the transfer portal.

It came down to Florida and Auburn for center transfer [autotag]Johni Broome[/autotag] on Saturday, but the Gators and [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] came up short and will now have to plan against him in the 2022-23 season.

Broome averaged 16.8 points, 10.5 rebounds and 1.2 assists per game for Morehead State as a freshman in 2021-22. The Eagles finished 23-11 and Broome quickly became one of the most intriguing names in the portal after announcing his intentions to move on from the program. Some of college basketball’s best (Gonzaga, Duke, etc.) were in the hunt early on, but Broome decided that the two SEC squads presented him with the best opportunity to take the next step in his development.

Bruce Pearl’s recent success with Auburn beat out Todd Golden’s year one pitch to the Florida native. Golden previously served as an assistant coach for the Tigers, so this was the first true battle between the former mentor and protege.

It would have been nice for Florida to add some more depth to the frontcourt for Golden’s first year at the helm. [autotag]Colin Castleton[/autotag] is set to return as the team’s starting center and has LSU transfer [autotag]Alex Fudge[/autotag], [autotag]CJ Felder[/autotag] and [autotag]Jason Jitoboh[/autotag] around him. Broome would likely have been paired with Castleton in the starting lineup, but instead, he’ll replace Walker Kessler at Auburn.

There are still some decent big men in the portal for Florida target, but this was a priority target for Golden. Now it’s time to go back to the board and figure out a different solution with three potential roster spots still open.

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Florida guard Elijah Kennedy enters the NCAA transfer portal

New Florida basketball head coach Todd Golden has three scholarships available after guard Elijah Kennedy entered the NCAA transfer portal.

The Florida Basketball Hour podcast reported that new head coach [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] will suffer more attrition this offseason on Thursday night. They tweeted that Florida freshman guard [autotag]Elijah Kennedy[/autotag] will enter the NCAA transfer portal.

Former head coach [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] added Kennedy as a late addition to the 2021 recruiting class in August. The 247Sports composite rankings have him as the 164th best player overall and as the 42nd-best shooting guard.

In 23 games last season, Kennedy averaged only 1.3 points on 21% shooting from the field, 0.7 rebounds and 0.3 assists in 6.4 minutes per game.

Playing time would’ve been hard to come by for Kennedy if he elected to stay. Golden brought in guards [autotag]Will Richard[/autotag] and [autotag]Trey Bonham[/autotag] while [autotag]Niels Lane[/autotag] and [autotag]Kowacie Reeves Jr[/autotag]. remain on the Florida roster.

His departure frees up a third scholarship spot that Golden can use this offseason. Florida will likely use two spots on guards and another one on a big man.

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Gators hoops set to play Oklahoma in inaugural 2022 Jumpman Invitational

Oklahoma snapped a six-game Florida winning streak last season, but the Gators will get a chance at revenge in the first ever Jumpman Invitational.

The Florida Gators and Oklahoma Sooners will go at it on the hardwood for the second-straight year at the first-ever Jumpman Invitational in 2022, according to a report from Jon Rothstein.

The game is expected to take place on Dec. 20 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. UNC and Michigan will face off the following day as part of the event.

Oklahoma handed Florida its first loss of the 2021-22 season, but things will be a lot different in the upcoming rematch. For starters, [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] is out and [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] is in as head coach for Florida which means the scheme should be at least slightly unfamiliar to the Sooners. Being in Charlotte also means that Oklahoma won’t enjoy any homecourt advantage as it did in Norman last season.

Florida and Oklahoma have matched up four times in total, with three of those games happening within the last six years. The Gators took the first meeting in 1995, 76-72, and ran away things in 2016-17, 84-52. Oklahoma has managed to take the last two, making this a rubber match of sorts with no regularly scheduled games against each other after that.

Given the timing of the event, the Jumpman Invitational has a chance to be one of Todd Golden’s last test runs before diving into conference play. A win would not only be a bit of revenge for the Gators but a good omen for the future as well.

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The Athletic doesn’t think too highly of Florida’s Todd Golden hire

The Athletic is a bit more lukewarm on the Todd Golden hire than others.

College basketball has seen a great deal of turnover at the head coach position in 2022 and the Florida Gators were among the many to refresh its bench with a new name. Though the transition from the [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] era was anything but smooth, the Orange and Blue quickly found their man in [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag], a young up-and-comer with a strong focus on analytics and an NBA-style approach to the game.

The jury is still out on the hire, but that has not prevented anyone from opining on the move, including the Gators Wire staff who gave its roundtable take a month ago. Along with Sports Illustrated, which was bullish on the decision to bring Golden to Gainesville, The Athletic’s Brian Hamilton also graded out the many coaching changes.

Hamilton had a less optimistic view on things, placing the move in the middle of the road at Tier 3 (out of a total of five tiers). Here is how he justified his grade.

From the outset, the 36-year-old Golden appeared to be a top target for Florida administrators. He’s one of the keener analytics-heavy minds in college hoops and has a self-assured, serrated sideline personality to boot. (The worst epithet in a Golden program is “soft.”) Best-case? Florida found another [autotag]Billy Donovan[/autotag]. The enormous variable is fit. Golden is basically a lifelong West Coast guy — an Arizona native who played at Saint Mary’s and coached at San Francisco the last five years. He spent four years combined on staff at Columbia and Auburn, but that’s comparatively a blip. Golden has one season of SEC recruiting experience, though he and his staff are off to a decent start: They held on to four-star 2022 signee [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag] and landed two well-regarded transfers ([autotag]Alex Fudge[/autotag] and [autotag]Will Richard[/autotag]). Many more brawls to come, though. It’s odd. Florida fans should be happy with the search while also remaining curious, fairly, about where the on-floor results will land on the spectrum: Boom or bust or dang near anything in between.

Hamilton is not wrong about the boom-or-bust breadth of the hire, but given the direction the college game is heading and the importance of preparing players for the next level, Golden offers a higher probability of success than failure despite his lack of big-time experience as a head coach. If nothing else, the brand of basketball he brings to the O’Connell Center is one that the fans will enjoy and that is something the Gator Nation can get behind.

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Sports Illustrated gives Todd Golden hire great grade, same as Mike White

Somewhat surprisingly, both the Golden and White hires received the same colorful grade.

Florida basketball saw some significant turnover on its bench after the conclusion of a disappointing 2021-22 season, with [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] departing to Athens to take the reins of the Georgia Bulldog‘s program while the Gators grabbed San Francisco Dons head coach [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] to lead its team. Despite a mutual decision to split, the former departed UF with great acrimony while the latter was welcomed by the Gator Nation with much fanfare.

Kevin Sweeney from Sports Illustrated took a look at the many recent head coaching hires throughout the college basketball landscape and graded each acquisition accordingly. The top grade (A) was earned by three schools: Seton Hall, Mississippi State and Xavier, who added Shaheen Holloway, Chris Jans and Sean Miller, respectively. It is in the next tier where the Gators get a strong mention.

In the A-minus class are four hires, two of which are Bulter’s Thad Matta and Kansas State’s Jerome Tang. The other two are a pair of schools that are very familiar with each other — and share even more familiarity on the sidelines as well — are Florida’s Todd Golden and Georgia’s Mike White. Here is what Sweeney had to say about the Golden hire.

There’s certainly some risk involved here for AD [autotag]Scott Stricklin[/autotag], who handed a top-20 program with national championship history to a 36-year-old with three years of head coaching experience and a 23–22 career record in the WCC. But Golden is universally lauded among industry insiders as a rising star in the profession, and what he was able to accomplish at San Francisco is far more impressive than his record indicates. He’s the first coach in two decades to bring a WCC team not named Gonzaga, BYU or Saint Mary’s to an at-large NCAA tournament berth, using an analytically savvy approach to build a winner at an under-resourced program.

The big question here is whether Golden can navigate the tricky recruiting waters of the SEC against powerhouses like John Calipari, Eric Musselman, Rick Barnes, Bruce Pearl and Nate Oats. Early transfer signings of Will Richard (Belmont) and Alex Fudge (LSU) are a somewhat encouraging sign on that front.

In regards to the other guy, Sweeney blames White’s woes at Florida on the large shadow cast by Gator great [autotag]Billy Donovan[/autotag], who took the team to stratospheric heights during his tenure in Gainesville. Perhaps some new scenery will benefit Florida’s ex-coach, but given the weakness of UGA’s men’s basketball program overall, he is unlikely to see much more success than he did with the Gators.

All in all, an A- grade seems pretty fair (Editor’s note: this is the grade I gave the hire in our Gators Wire roundtable), especially if Golden can live up to the lofty expectations. With his modern brand of analytics-driven basketball coming to town, there is a lot for Gators fans to be excited about in the coming seasons.

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Two incoming Gators make The Athletic’s best fit list out of the transfer portal

Will Richard and Alex Fudge figure to be two big additions to the Florida roster this season.

Transfer season is in full swing for the college basketball world and enough players have found new homes for The Athletic to take a crack at ranking the best pickups based on how well players fit their new squads. Two incoming Gators made the list, Belmont transfer [autotag]Will Richard[/autotag] and LSU transfer [autotag]Alex Fudge[/autotag].

Richard is the higher-ranked of the pair at No. 4 and is described as “the perfect test case to find out what this Florida staff is capable of.” He’s got three years left of college eligibility and the tools to turn into one of the conference’s best wings after a year of development.

Richard has all of the tools to be a potential pro wing down the road. He’s the kind of player as a two-way wing that is really hard to find in the portal, and the kind of guy you can build just about any type of team around. He might not average 16 per game next season, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him as a Day 1 starter averaging 13 points, four rebounds, a couple of assists and a couple of steals while providing a great impact as a winning player.

That’s as strong an endorsement as you can get as a transfer, but Richard will have to live up to the hype in an SEC that only figures to get stronger with time.

Fudge is a bigger project player than Richard is and lands at No. 13 on the list. Defensively, Fudge is an asset for any program, but his offense is questionable at this stage and there’s [autotag]Colin Castleton[/autotag] on the floor to worry about.

The fit here could also depend how he pairs with Colin Castleton. If they develop chemistry where Castleton learns to find him in the dunker spot when his man goes to help on Castleton post-ups, maybe it works out. But if those two log a lot of minutes together. [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] is going to need to surround them with shooting.

Gambling on Fudge is worth it for the Gators because he’s considered one of the transfers with the highest upside in the cycle. His block numbers translate to first-round pick level, but the scheme at LSU wasn’t quite right. If Golden can bring in the right pieces around him, Fudge’s untapped potential is there for the taking at 18 years old.

The Golden Era of Florida basketball appears to be off to a promising start with strong transfers coming in early. There are still a few more scholarship spots on the roster open too, so Golden can still add a few more names to the list.

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What is this ‘culture change’ we keep hearing about at Florida?

Pat Dooley talks with some big names about what exactly “culture change” entails.

On a list of cliches that are tired and worn out, there is this one: “There’s a new sheriff in town.”

With a new coach in any sport there is a change in the way everyone in any sport goes about their daily work because — and here comes another beauty — of “culture change.”

In some cases, it can be culture shock as coaches wean their rosters of the people who just don’t get it. Because in the end, while there is a template for how a college program should be run, there is no handbook. Every coach at every level in every sport has his fingerprints on his or her program that is part of the culture change.

“Culture change,” said CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd, “is a mystery phrase to me. But it can be anything from running off players to just teaching kids the way the coaches want to approach it.”

And that’s the thing about culture change.

There’s no right way to do it.

There’s only YOUR WAY or the highway.

We’ve seen it in Gainesville over time and certainly currently with new coaches on football and basketball.

The biggest culture change happened when [autotag]Steve Spurrier[/autotag] took over on New Year’s Eve 1989 as the head football at Florida. He switched to the blue jerseys because the orange ones “looked like Clemson,” ripped up the artificial turf and set the new policy of no excuses.

“It was about attitude as much as anything,” he said. “We had to get the players to believe that they could beat Georgia, that playing Auburn and Georgia back-to-back wasn’t a problem. We had good players, really good players, when I got here and we just had to get the attitudes straightened out.”

Spurrier did that and had incredible success.

“For him to do that so quickly was incredible,” said [autotag]Chris Doering[/autotag] of the SEC Network and Sirius radio. “We inherited his personality.”

One thing that tends to happen when an athletic director is making a coaching change is that he wants something different. In the case of [autotag]Billy Napier[/autotag], Florida wanted a coach that was passionate about recruiting after the previous coach was not.

“Being around Billy, everything is so well thought out, nothing is left to chance,” Doering said. “It’s not just the recruiting part of it. It’s everything.

“The biggest thing is the ability to connect with players. And you have to be clear in what they want to create.”

Certainly, it is different when a coach leaves on his own. In the case of [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag], he inherited a program that had been good but not great.

Florida basketball will look different under Golden than it did under [autotag]Mike White[/autotag] and in many ways “different” was what a program that had become stagnant needed — a jolt, if you will, built on a modern approach to the game.

It’s always been that way. When [autotag]Billy Donovan[/autotag] took over the basketball program, the biggest change in culture was to ramp up recruiting to a level we had never seen at Florida. At the same time, Donovan established early that players who did not but in were not going to play.

[autotag]Urban Meyer[/autotag] came into the Florida football program in 2005 and immediately went about establishing a culture change by banishing the players from the locker room and not allowing them to wear Gator gear until it was earned.

Meyer’s culture included the same attention to detail and enthusiasm for recruiting that Napier has, but Meyer did establish another culture that was dangerous — entitling his best players to have a different set of rules to live by.

What he left behind was a mess that [autotag]Will Muschamp[/autotag] had to clean up. That started when he threw [autotag]Janoris Jenkins[/autotag] off the team.

“You look at how the culture changed under Nick Saban at Alabama,” Dodd said. “Same with Sam Pittman at Arkansas. They got the players to buy in quickly and then it is established what the standard is.”

That goes for every sport that brings in a coach with a different set of expectations for his players.

You can change the culture, but not everyone will jump on board the bright and shiny new train. Napier himself is trying to weed out the problems of inheriting a roster of student-athletes that didn’t come to Florida to play for him.

Not everyone accepts culture change. That’s why the transfer portal in every sport is stacked with players who want a different culture and that’s where it gets tricky.

Any player who wants to come to Florida in any sport has to understand what that culture is and what is expected of them.

There are some new cultures in town. Gator fans are excited about the coaches who are implementing them.

Of course, they are both still undefeated as Gator coaches. How these new cultures work out is still a work in progress and — in the cases of both football and basketball — there is a long way to go to establish that culture.

Buckle up. It’s going to be interesting.

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Gators hoops prospect reopens recruitment, still considers UF ‘home’

Seems like with good news always comes the swing of the pendulum in the other direction.

Not long after Florida basketball got word that former VMI point guard Trey Bonham would be joining the team through the transfer portal, effectively replacing the departing [autotag]Tyree Appleby[/autotag], it got some bad news from the recruiting front on Monday. Power forward signee [autotag]Jalen Reed[/autotag] of the 2022 prospect class announced on Twitter that he is reopening his recruitment, though has not ruled out UF as his final destination.

“2022 has brought many changes and after much consideration, I have decided to reopen my recruitment,” according to Reed’s Twitter post. “I am open to the many possibilities while still considering The University of Florida as my college home.”

The 6-foot-10-inch, 220-pound prep prospect from Castaic, California, was considered a four-star prospect in the 2022 class, sitting at No. 75 overall according to the 247Composite, while ranking as the No. 16 power forward as well as the No. 10 player in the state of California. Reed committed to the Orange and Blue in late October and officially signed during the early period in November, choosing Florida over Ole Miss, Arizona State, Maryland, and Oklahoma.

Reed is the second player from the 2022 recruiting class to have cold feet about their commitment, joining five-star prospect [autotag]Malik Reneau[/autotag], who also announced Monday that he is joining the Indiana Hoosiers. That leaves combo guard [autotag]Denzel Aberdeen[/autotag] as the lone remaining commit from the class currently planning on suiting up for [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag]’s team next season.

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Florida guard Myreon Jones set to return for extra year

First Colin Castleton announced his return to Florida basketball and now Myreon Jones has done the same.

On Monday, [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] received the good news that [autotag]Colin Castleton[/autotag] would be exercising his extra year of eligibility to return to Florida for another season. Six days later, [autotag]Myreon Jones[/autotag] followed in his footsteps and decided to return for a super-senior season, according to a report from Jon Rothstein.

Jones’ return gives the Gators a veteran ball-handler in the backcourt to pair with rising sophomore [autotag]Kowacie Reeves[/autotag] and Belmont transfer [autotag]Will Richard[/autotag]. There’s also sophomore [autotag]Elijah Kennedy[/autotag] and incoming freshman [autotag]Denzel Aberdeen[/autotag] to consider in the backcourt rotation.

The thought was that Florida would need to grab a point guard from the portal after [autotag]Tyree Appleby[/autotag] announced his decision to transfer, but Jones fills that spot in nicely. Golden can still go after someone he likes in the portal with three open roster spots, though.

Jones transferred from Penn State in 2021 and averaged 8.5 points, 2.8 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game with the Gators as a senior. He was very streaky over the season and finished with the season shooting 35.5%. Most of Jones’ shots came from beyond the arc, which made for some exciting offense at times. His best performance came against Georgia when he made seven three-pointers en route to 23 overall.

If Jones can find some consistency, he can be a valuable piece of this Gators team. Golden’s usage of him could help Jones improve his stats and allow the younger guards to grow as the seasons unfolds.

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