When he declared for the 2026 NBA draft earlier this spring, Santa Clara freshman forward Allen Graves also entered the NCAA transfer portal. However, he has been focused more on improving his draft stock than on lining up a new college for next season, per Jeff Borzello of ESPN (Twitter link).

According to Borzello, Graves said he has only had conversations with two schools since entering the transfer: LSU and Duke. Kentucky also reached out to his representatives, Graves said, but LSU and Duke would be his top two choices if he decides to play his sophomore season.

For now though, Graves is leaning toward keeping his name in the draft pool as long as he feels confident about being a first-round pick, which seems like an increasingly realistic outcome. In their most recent mock drafts, Kevin O’Connor of Yahoo Sports had Graves at No. 16 overall, Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report had him at No. 20, and ESPN’s Jeremy Woo had him at No. 22.

Here are a few more draft-related updates from this week’s combine:

  • Stanford guard Ebuka Okorie, who is viewed as a possible first-round pick, intends to remain in the draft and forgo his remaining NCAA eligibility, according to Borzello (Twitter link). I already talked with (Stanford coach) Kyle Smith and I talked to my agents and my family,” Okorie said. “I’m staying in the draft.” When Okorie declared for the draft, he was said to be leaning strongly toward going pro but was leaving the door open for a return to Stanford.
  • As expected, Duke wing Isaiah Evans and UNC center Henri Veesaar, who rank 21st and 31st, respectively, on ESPN’s big board, will keep their names in the draft and go pro, according to Borzello (Twitter links). Evans said that he’s “fully in” and hasn’t talked to the Blue Devils at all about returning, while Veesaar said he’s “all-in” on the draft. “It’s 100% my decision to stay. I think it’s the right decision, basketball-wise,” the North Carolina big man added.
  • German point guard Jack Kayil had committed to Gonzaga for the 2026/27 season, but he plans to remain in the draft instead of going to college, agents Kevin Bradbury and Milan Nikolic tell Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress (Twitter link). Kayil is ranked just 61st on ESPN’s board, but he has receiving “first-round feedback” in Chicago this week after an excellent season with the German team Alba Berlin, Givony reports.
  • Givony (Twitter link) passes along the names of several of the notable prospects who aren’t participating in 5-on-5 scrimmages at the combine, pointing out that some of them may have already decided to return to school and won’t want to risk suffering an injury.
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