2023/24 NBA G League Draft Results
The NBA G League held its draft for the 2023/24 season on Saturday afternoon.
The 29 G League teams affiliated with NBA franchises participated in the event, as did the unaffiliated Mexico City Capitanes. The G League Ignite, which is made up of top prospects and veteran mentors, doesn’t take part in the draft.
[RELATED: NBA G League Announces Schedule For 2023/24 Season]
The first player selected in today’s G League draft was former Nuggets and Thunder forward Jack White, who recently fell victim to a roster crunch in Oklahoma City.
White spent last season on a two-way contract with Denver, then signed a two-year, minimum-salary contract with the Thunder that included a $600K partial guarantee.
That guarantee made him ineligible to suit up for the Oklahoma City Blue this season, so he entered the G League draft, where the Texas Legends, the Mavericks‘ affiliate, snared him with the No. 1 overall pick.
Outside of White, there was only one other player drafted today who has prior NBA experience. That player is Scottie Lewis, the 56th overall pick in the 2021 NBA draft. He appeared in just two games for the Hornets while on a two-way deal in 2021/22. The Windy City Bulls, Chicago’s affiliate, drafted him today with the No. 32 overall pick.
Former Tulsa wing Brandon Rachal has never appeared in an NBA regular season game, but he was among Saturday’s draftees who has at least signed an NBA contract, having inked a pair of Exhibit 10 deals with Brooklyn in 2021 and 2022. Rachal made G League history today by becoming the first player drafted by the Rip City Remix, the Trail Blazers‘ expansion franchise.
Here are the full 2023/24 G League draft results:
Round One:
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): Jack White
- South Bay Lakers (Lakers): Teafale Lenard Jr.
- Capital City Go-Go (Wizards): David Muoka
- College Park Skyhawks (Hawks): Javonte Perkins
- Grand Rapids Gold (Nuggets): Will Richardson
- Birmingham Squadron (Pelicans): Pavel Savkov
- Austin Spurs (Spurs): David Shriver
- Greensboro Swarm (Hornets): Isiaih Mosley
- Oklahoma City Blue (Thunder): Logan Johnson
- Salt Lake City Stars (Jazz): Karolis Lukosiunas
- Raptors 905 (Raptors): Myles Burns
- Mexico City Capitanes (N/A): J.J. Romer Rosario
- Sioux Falls Skyforce (Heat): Bryson Warren (Overtime Elite)
- Grand Rapids Gold (Nuggets): Olisa Akonobi
- Grand Rapids Gold (Nuggets): Walter Ellis
- Santa Cruz Warriors (Warriors): Marcus Burk
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): Nana Opoku
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): Maxime Carene
- Westchester Knicks (Knicks): Jamal Bey
- Sioux Falls Skyforce (Heat): Manny Camper
- Osceola Magic (Magic): Jaycee Hillsman
- Rip City Remix (Trail Blazers): Brandon Rachal
- Ontario Clippers (Clippers): Elijah Harkless
- Delaware Blue Coats (Sixers): Anthony Nelson
- Iowa Wolves (Timberwolves): Kok Yat (Overtime Elite)
- Oklahoma City Blue (Thunder): Lance Thomas
- Santa Cruz Warriors (Warriors): Arinze Chidom
- College Park Skyhawks (Hawks): Jared Wilson-Frame
- Wisconsin Herd (Bucks): Myron Gardner
- Maine Celtics (Celtics): Wendell Green Jr.
Round Two:
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): J.D. Tsasa (North Canyon High School)
- Windy City Bulls (Bulls): Scottie Lewis
- Cleveland Charge (Cavaliers): Eric Williams Jr.
- Osceola Magic (Magic): Tray Maddox
- Grand Rapids Gold (Nuggets): No pick
- Stockton Kings (Kings): Kalob Ledoux
- Wisconsin Herd (Bucks): No pick
- Memphis Hustle (Grizzlies): Sincere Carry
- Stockton Kings (Kings): Alex Hunter
- College Park Skyhawks (Hawks): Sam Daniel (Florida Tech)
- Iowa Wolves (Timberwolves): Nojel Eastern
- Ontario Clippers (Clippers): David Bell
- Indiana Mad Ants (Pacers): Stephan Hicks
- Mexico City Capitanes (N/A): No pick
- Osceola Magic (Magic): Darius Mickens (Cal State San Bernadino)
- Santa Cruz Warriors (Warriors): No pick
- Windy City Bulls (Bulls): Keyshawn Bryant
- Rip City Remix (Trail Blazers): Kevin McClain
- Memphis Hustle (Grizzlies): Davion Warren
- Indiana Mad Ants (Pacers): David Sloan
- Indiana Mad Ants (Pacers): No pick
- Westchester Knicks (Knicks): No pick
- Delaware Blue Coats (Sixers): No pick
- Delaware Blue Coats (Sixers): No pick
- Osceola Magic (Magic): Isaiah Wade (Central Oklahoma)
- Salt Lake City Stars (Jazz): Isaac Johnson
- Iowa Wolves (Timberwolves): Denzel Mahoney
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): No pick
- Texas Legends (Mavericks): No pick
- Ontario Clippers (Clippers): No pick
Round Three (supplemental picks):
- Motor City Cruise (Pistons): Robert Johnson
- Rio Grande Valley Vipers (Rockets): Kyree Walker
Teams will fill out their rosters with affiliate players, returning rights players, tryout players, and players who are assigned to the G League from the NBA roster (including those on two-way contracts).
G League training camps open on Monday, with this year’s NBAGL Showcase Cup tournament tipping off on November 10. The Showcase Cup will be played over about a month-and-a-half and will be followed by the G League regular season, which begins on December 27.
Draft Notes: Ausar Thompson, Nnaji, Hornets, Hawks, Wizards
Ausar Thompson pulled out of a scheduled workout with the Pacers on Friday, according to an Indianapolis Star story. No official reason was given, but it’s possible that the Overtime Elite star has received information that he’s likely to be selected before Indiana picks at No. 7. The article also suggests that Thompson may prefer to be drafted by a team picking later in the lottery.
The canceled workout doesn’t mean the Pacers wouldn’t consider Thompson if he’s still on the board, as he would provide a defensive boost to a team that ranked 29th in that category this season. The Star story notes that president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard is looking for a player with a “high ceiling” in the draft, and Thompson appears to fit that description.
Indiana holds five picks and has brought in more than 60 players during the pre-draft process. Most have been in group sessions, but projected lottery picks such as Thompson have been given individual workouts. The Pacers have already hosted Villanova’s Cam Whitmore, Houston’s Jarace Walker, Central Florida’s Taylor Hendricks and Kansas’ Gradey Dick.
There’s more on the draft:
- NBA teams received official measurements today for Nigerian center James Nnaji, tweets Jonathan Givony of ESPN. The potential first-round pick stands 7’0″ in shoes with a 7’7″wingspan and a 9’4″ standing reach.
- The Hornets held two more six-players workouts this week. TCU’s Damion Baugh, Kansas State’s Keyontae Johnson, G League Ignite’s Mojave King, Brazil’s Marcio Santos, Nebraska’s Derrick Walker and San Diego’s Eric Williams Jr. were in Charlotte on Thursday (Twitter link), followed by Memphis’ Kaodirichi Akobundu-Ehiogu, Maryland’s Donald Carey, Arkansas State’s Markise Davis, Texas A&M’s Dexter Dennis, Fresno State’s Isaih Moore and Washington State’s Justin Powell on Friday (press release).
- The Hawks welcomed six players on Friday, tweets Lauren Williams of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Santos was part of that group as well, along with Western Kentucky’s Emmanuel Akot, UCLA’s Amari Bailey, San Jose State’s Omari Moore, DePaul’s Nick Ongenda and Furman’s Jalen Slawson.
- The Wizards held a workout on Saturday, tweets Chase Hughes of NBC Sports Washington, bringing in Akot, along with Virginia’s Jayden Gardner, Overtime Elite’s Bryce Griggs, North Carolina-Central’s Brendan Medley-Bacon, Gonzaga’s Malachi Smith and Kentucky’s Jacob Toppin.
NBA Announces Initial Early Entrant List For 2022 Draft
The NBA has officially released the initial list of early entrants for the 2022 NBA draft, announcing in a press release that 283 players have filed as early entry candidates. Of those prospects, 247 are from colleges, while 36 are international early entrants.
Those are big numbers, but they fall well short of the 353 early entrants who initially declared for the draft a year ago. Beginning in 2021, the NCAA granted players an extra year of eligibility due to the coronavirus pandemic, resulting in seniors having to decide between staying at college for one more season or declaring for the draft as an “early” entrant.
That tweak to the NCAA’s eligibility rules has increased the number of total early entrants due to the influx of seniors into the pool. However, as Jonathan Givony of ESPN observes (via Twitter), the number of college non-seniors (123) on the initial early entry list this year is actually the lowest since 2016, while the number of international prospects (36) is the lowest since 2014.
This year’s total of 283 early entrants figures to shrink significantly by June 1 and again by June 13, the two deadlines for players to withdraw their names from the draft pool. But it still looks like the pool will remain extremely crowded, with the eventual number of early entrants certain to exceed 58, the number of picks in the draft.
Our tracker of early entrants for the 2022 draft is fully up to date and can be found right here.
Here are the changes we made to our tracker today:
Newly-added players:
College players:
These players either didn’t publicly announce that they were entering the draft or we simply missed it when they did.
- Max Abmas, G, Oral Roberts (junior)
- Tez Allen, G/F, Southern Oregon (senior)
- Avery Anderson III, G, Oklahoma State (junior)
- Eric Ayala, G, Maryland (senior)
- Marcus Azor, G, UMass Dartmouth (senior)
- Emmanuel Bandoumel, G, SMU (senior)
- Evan Battey, F, Colorado (senior)
- James Bishop, G, George Washington (junior)
- Henry Blair Jr., G, Bob Jones (SC) (junior)
- Buddy Boeheim, G, Syracuse (senior)
- Rasir Bolton, G, Gonzaga (senior)
- Mike Bothwell, G, Furman (senior)
- Jordan Brown, F, Louisiana (junior)
- John Butler Jr., F/C, Florida State (freshman)
- Jared Bynum, G, Providence (junior)
- Toumani Camara, F, Dayton (junior)
- Dylan Cardwell, C, Auburn (sophomore)
- Xavier Castaneda, G, Akron (senior)
- Dhieu Deing, G, UTSA (junior)
- Dylan Disu, F, Texas (junior)
- Boogie Ellis, G, USC (junior)
- BJ Fitzgerald, G, Virginia State (junior)
- Allen Flanigan, G/F, Auburn (junior)
- Joe French, G, Bethune-Cookman (sophomore)
- Jacob Grandison, G/F, Illinois (senior)
- Tykei Greene, G, Stony Brook (senior)
- Quincy Guerrier, F, Oregon (junior)
- Mouhamed Gueye, F/C, Washington State (freshman)
- D.J. Harvey, G/F, Detroit (senior)
- Jericole Hellems, F, North Carolina State (senior)
- Cedric Henderson Jr., G/F, Campbell (senior)
- D’Moi Hodge, G, Cleveland State (senior)
- Trevor Hudgins, G, Northwest Missouri State (senior)
- Bodie Hume, G/F, Northern Colorado (senior)
- Austin Hutcherson, G, Illinois (junior)
- Josiah-Jordan James, G/F, Tennessee (junior)
- Deante Johnson, F, Cleveland State (senior)
- Andrew Jones, G, Texas (senior)
- Noah Kirkwood, G, Harvard (senior)
- Hyunjung Lee, G/F, Davidson (junior)
- Kyle Lofton, G, St. Bonaventure (senior)
- Josh Mballa, F, Buffalo (senior)
- Trey McGowens, G, Nebraska (senior)
- Nathan Mensah, F/C, San Diego State (senior)
- Isaih Moore, F, Southern Mississippi (senior)
- Bryson Mozone, G/F, USC Upstate (senior)
- Grayson Murphy, G, Belmont (senior)
- Dwight Murray Jr., G, Rider (senior)
- Nick Muszynski, C, Belmont (senior)
- Ike Obiagu, C, Seton Hall (senior)
- Edward Oliver-Hampton, F, South Carolina State (senior)
- Shareef O’Neal, F, LSU (junior)
- Nick Ongenda, C, DePaul (junior)
- Malik Osborne, F, Florida State (senior)
- Osayi Osifo, F, Jacksonville (senior)
- Zyon Pullin, G, UC-Riverside (junior)
- Eric Reed Jr., G, Southeast Missouri State (senior)
- Will Richardson, G, Oregon (senior)
- Orlando Robinson, F/C, Fresno State (junior)
- KJ Simon, G, UT-Martin (junior)
- Jalen Slawson, F, Furman (senior)
- Jamari Smith, F, Queens University (NC) (junior)
- Amadou Sow, F, Santa Barbara (senior)
- Seth Stanley, F, Hendrix College (AR) (senior)
- Gabe Stefanini, G, San Francisco (senior)
- Sasha Stefanovic, G, Purdue (senior)
- AJ Taylor, F, Grambling (junior)
- Kerwin Walton, G, North Carolina (sophomore)
- Collin Welp, F, UC Irvine (senior)
- Aaron Wheeler, F, St. John’s (senior)
- Khristien White, G, Southwest Christian (senior)
International players:
These players weren’t previously mentioned on our list of international early entrants. The country listed here indicates where they last played, not necessarily where they were born.
- Ibou Badji, C, Spain (born 2002)
- Kay Bruhnke, G/F, Germany (born 2001)
- Tom Digbeu, G/F, Australia (born 2001)
- Fallou Gueye, G, Senegal (born 2003)
- Millan Jimenez, G/F, Spain (born 2002)
- Yannick Kraag, G/F, Spain (born 2002)
- Zsombor Maronka, F, Spain (born 2002)
- Mario Nakic, F, Spain (born 2001)
- Jaime Pradilla, F/C, Spain (born 2001)
- Pavel Savkov, G, Spain (born 2002)
- Luka Scuka, F, Slovenia (born 2002)
- Emil Stoilov, C, Spain (born 2002)
- Giorgos Tanoulis, F/C, Greece (born 2002)
- Luke Travers, G/F, Australia (born 2001)
- Nicolas Vanel, G, France (born 2003)
Other notable draft-eligible early entrants:
The NBA sent its teams a list of 33 “also-eligible” names. That list isn’t public, but Jonathan Givony of ESPN (Twitter link) shared some of the most notable players on it, and we’ve added them to our early entrant tracker. They are as follows:
- Dominick Barlow, F, Overtime Elite
- MarJon Beauchamp, G/F, G League Ignite
- Dyson Daniels, G, G League Ignite
- Henri Drell, G/F, Windy City Bulls
- Michael Foster, F, G League Ignite
- Jaden Hardy, G, G League Ignite
- Makur Maker, C, Sydney Kings (formerly Howard Bison)
- Jean Montero, G, Overtime Elite
- Samson Ruzhentsev, G/F, Mega Basket (formerly Florida Gators)
- Kai Sotto, C, Adelaide 36ers (formerly G League Ignite)
- Zaire Wade, G, Salt Lake City Stars
- Kok Yat, F, Overtime Elite
- Fanbo Zeng, F, G League Ignite
Players removed:
Despite reports or announcements that the players below would declare for the draft, they didn’t show up on the NBA’s official list.
That could mean a number of things — they may have decided against entering the draft; they may have entered the draft, then withdrawn; they may have had no NCAA eligibility remaining, making them automatically draft-eligible; they may have incorrectly filed their paperwork; or the NBA may have accidentally omitted some names.
In any case, we’ve removed the following names from our early entrant list, at least for the time being.
- Joe Bryant, G, Norfolk State (senior)
- Keyshawn Bryant, F, South Carolina (senior)
- Ricky Council IV, G, Wichita State (sophomore)
- Devonaire Doutrive, G, Boise State (senior)
- Kevin Easley Jr., F, Duquesne (junior)
- Umoja Gibson, G, Oklahoma (senior)
- Jalen Hawkins, G, Norfolk State (senior)
- Makhel Mitchell, F/C, Rhode Island (sophomore)
- Makhi Mitchell, F/C, Rhode Island (sophomore)
- Lamar Norman, G, Western Michigan (junior)
- Chuba Ohams, F, Fordham (senior)
- Nana Opoku, F, Mount St. Mary’s (senior)
- Anthony Roberts, G, Stony Brook (junior)
- Nate Roberts, F/C, Washington (junior)
- Luis Rodriguez, G/F, Ole Miss (junior)
- Tariq Silver, G, Austin Peay (senior)
- Derek St. Hilaire, G, New Orleans (senior)
- John Walker III, F, Texas Southern (senior)
- Eric Williams Jr., G/F, Oregon (senior)
Finally, Givony reports (via Twitter) that Canadian forward Leonard Miller, from the Fort Erie International Academy has been asked to fill out additional paperwork to finalize his entrance into the draft pool. According to Givony, there’s an expectation that Miller will be added to the list, so we’ve left him listed in our early entrant tracker among the international players.
Draft Notes: Koloko, E. Williams, Welch, Mock
Arizona junior big man Christian Koloko has decided to enter the 2022 NBA draft, he tells Shams Charania of Stadium and The Athletic (video link).
Koloko doesn’t specify whether he plans to leave school or simply test the draft waters, but he doesn’t mention anything about maintaining his college eligibility, and Charania’s tweet indicates the young center intends to go pro.
Koloko enjoyed a breakout season for the Wildcats in 2021/22, averaging 12.6 PPG, 7.3 RPG, and 2.8 BPG in 37 games (25.4 MPG). He was named both the Most Improved Player and the Defensive Player of the Year in the Pac-12, earning All Pac-12 First Team honors.
Jeff Goodman of Stadium, referring to Koloko as an “elite” defender, projects him to go in the 20-35 range of this year’s draft (Twitter link). Jonathan Givony places Koloko at No. 36 on ESPN’s big board, praising his mobility, quickness, and improved offensive game, but noting that some scouts may have concerns about his thin frame and “lack of physicality.”
Here are a few more draft-related notes:
- Oregon senior swingman Eric Williams Jr. will forgo his final year of NCAA eligibility and hire an agent as he enters the draft, he announced on Twitter. Williams spent his first two college seasons as Duquesne before transferring to the Ducks. He put up 8.4 PPG and 4.6 RPG in 33 games (26.8 MPG) in 2021/22.
- St. Bonaventure senior guard Dominick Welch will test the draft waters by putting his name in the 2022 pool while maintaining his final year of eligibility, he announced on Twitter. Welch, who has started 105 of his 110 games for the Bonnies across four seasons, averaged 12.3 PPG and 6.0 RPG with a .374 3PT% in 2021/22.
- With the odds for the draft lottery set, Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report has updated his 2022 mock draft, projecting all 58 picks (two second-rounders have been forfeited), from Jabari Smith at No. 1 to Dereon Seabron at No. 60.
NBA Announces Initial Early Entrant List For 2021 Draft
The NBA has officially released the initial list of early entrants for the 2021 NBA draft, announcing in a press release that 353 players have filed as early entry candidates. Of those prospects, 296 are from colleges, while 57 are international early entrants.
That number obliterates the previous record of 236 early entrants, established in 2018. That had been expected, however, since the NCAA gave players an extra year of eligibility due to the coronavirus pandemic, resulting in seniors having to decide between staying at college for one more season or declaring for the draft as an “early” entrant.
Since well over half of the college early entrants are seniors, there are actually fewer college underclassmen than usual in this initial group of early entrants.
This year’s total of 353 early entrants figures to shrink significantly by July 7 and again by July 19, the two deadlines for players to withdraw their names from the draft pool. But it still looks like the pool will remain extremely crowded, with the eventual number of early entrants certain to exceed 60, the number of picks in the draft.
Our tracker of early entrants for the 2021 draft now includes seniors and is fully up to date. It can be found right here. It doesn’t include players who are automatically draft-eligible this year. As Jonathan Givony of ESPN tweets, that list of auto-eligible players includes the prospects who played for the G League Ignite, such as Jalen Green and Jonathan Kuminga.
Here are the changes we made to our tracker today:
Newly-added players:
College players:
These players hadn’t previously been included on our unofficial list of underclassmen early entrants and weren’t on the list of senior early entrants that the NBA sent to teams last week.
- Josiah Agnew, G, Denmark Technical College (SC) (freshman)
- Justin Bean, F, Utah State (junior)
- Chudier Bile, F, Georgetown (senior)
- Jahvon Blair, G, Georgetown (senior)
- Isaac Bonton, G, Washington State (senior)
- Izaiah Brockington, G, Penn State (junior)
- Chaundee Brown, G, Michigan (senior)
- D.J. Burns Jr., F, Winthrop (sophomore)
- Maurice Calloo, F, Oregon State (junior)
- Trevion Crews, G, Bethel (IN) (senior)
- Sam Cunliffe, G/F, Evansville (junior)
- Cartier Diarra, G, Virginia Tech (senior)
- Lydell Elmore, F, High Point (senior)
- Hasahn French, F, Saint Louis (senior)
- Gorjok Gak, C, California Baptist (senior)
- Patrick Greene Jr., G, National Park College (AR) (sophomore)
- Jordan Hall, F, St. Joseph’s (freshman)
- Kashaun Hicks, G/F, Norfolk State (senior)
- Taveion Hollingsworth, G, Western Kentucky (senior)
- Trevor Hudgins, G, NW Missouri State (junior)
- Anthony Hughes Jr., G, Millsaps College (MS) (senior)
- Damien Jefferson, G/F, Creighton (senior)
- Bryson Johnson, G, Univ. of The Ozarks (AR) (senior)
- Latrell Jones, G, Portland (junior)
- Miller Kopp, F, Northwestern (junior)
- Kameron Langley, G, North Carolina A&T (senior)
- Matt Lewis, G, James Madison (senior)
- Makuach Maluach, G/F, New Mexico (senior)
- Steffon Mitchell, F, Boston College (senior)
- Matthew Moyer, F, George Washington (senior)
- Issa Muhammad, F, Daytona State (FL) (sophomore)
- Joel Ntambwe, F, Texas Tech (sophomore)
- Kobi Nwandu, F, Niagara (senior)
- Kevin Obanor, F, Oral Roberts (junior)
- Chris Parker, G, Liberty (senior)
- Jordan Phillips, G/F, UT Arlington (junior)
- Alex Reese, F, Alabama (senior)
- Shawn Royal Jr., G/F, Victory Rock Prep (FL) (post-graduate)
- Marcus Sasser, G, Houston (sophomore)
- Ronaldo Segu, G, Buffalo (junior)
- Roman Silva, C, Oregon State (senior)
- Chris Smith, F, UCLA (senior)
- TJ Starks, G, Cal State Northridge (junior)
- Jeremiah Tilmon, C, Missouri (senior)
- Kyree Walker, G/F, Hillcrest Prep Academy (AZ) (post-graduate)
- Keaton Wallace, G, UTSA (senior)
- Isaiah Washington, G, Long Beach State (senior)
- Richard Washington Jr., G/F, San Jose State (senior)
- Brandon Williams, G, Arizona (sophomore)
- Jeenathan Williams, G/F, Buffalo (junior)
- Bryce Wills, G/F, Stanford (junior)
- Sidney Wilson, G/F, SIU-Edwardsville (junior)
International players:
These players weren’t previously mentioned on our list of international early entrants. The country listed here indicates where they last played, not necessarily where they were born.
- Vinicius Da Silva, C, Spain (born 2001)
- Aristide Mouaha, G, Italy (born 2000)
- Vladislav Odinokov, F/C, Russia (born 2000)
- Joel Parra, F, Spain (born 2000)
- Tomas Pavelka, C, Spain (born 2000)
- Franger Pirela, G, Spain (born 2002)
- Nemanja Popovic, F, Serbia (born 2001)
- Jaime Pradilla, F/C, Spain (born 2001)
- Sitraka Raharimanantoanina, F, France (born 2001)
- Hugo Robineau, G, France (born 2000)
- Nikos Rogavopoulos, F, Greece (born 2001)
- Alexander Shashkov, C, Russia (born 2000)
- Luc Van Slooten, F, Germany (born 2002)
Players removed:
Despite reports or announcements that the players below would declare for the draft, they didn’t show up on the NBA’s official list.
That could mean a number of things — they may have decided against entering the draft; they may have entered the draft, then withdrawn; they may have incorrectly filed their paperwork; or the NBA may have accidentally omitted some names.
In any case, we’ve removed the following names from our early entrant list for the time being.
- Isaiah Adams, F, UCF (freshman)
- James Akinjo, G, Arizona (junior)
- Avery Anderson, G, Oklahoma State (sophomore)
- Sardaar Calhoun, G, Florida State (junior)
- Michael Devoe, G, Georgia Tech (junior)
- Ron Harper Jr., G/F, Rutgers (junior)
- Justin Minaya, F, South Carolina (junior)
- Malachi Smith, G, Chattanooga (sophomore)
- Shamiel Stevenson, G/F, Nebraska (junior)
- Eric Williams Jr. , G/F, Oregon (junior)
Draft Notes: Griffin, Robinson, Stevenson, More
Syracuse swingman Alan Griffin won’t be returning to the Orange for his senior year, having opted to go pro and forgo his remaining college eligibility. Griffin announced the decision in a video on Twitter, as Mike Waters of Syracuse.com relays.
After spending two years at Illinois, Griffin transferred to Syracuse for his junior season and emerged as a starter, averaging 13.3 PPG 5.8 RPG, and 1.6 BPG in 28 games (29.3 MPG).
Here are a few more draft-related updates:
- Fresno State sophomore forward/center Orlando Robinson is entering the draft and maintaining his NCAA eligibility, according to a press release from the program. Robinson, who has started all 54 games he has played through two seasons for Fresno State, increased his averages to 14.6 PPG and 9.2 RPG in 2020/21.
- Nebraska junior wing Shamiel Stevenson, who began his college career at Pitt announced on Twitter that he’s entering the 2021 NBA draft and intends to hire an agent. Stevenson, who averaged 5.5 PPG and 2.4 RPG in a reserve role for the Cornhuskers, doesn’t project to be drafted.
- We’ve also added the following players, who declared for the draft in recent weeks, to our list of early entrants:
- Isaiah Adams, F, UCF (freshman) (link via Instagram)
- Fardaws Aimaq, F/C, Utah Valley (sophomore) (link via TheProvince.com)
- Giorgi Bezhanishvili, F, Illinois (junior) (link via Instagram)
- Pedro Bradshaw, G/F, Bellarmine (junior) (link via WDRB.com)
- Darius Days, F, LSU (junior) (link via Instagram)
- Tyson Etienne, G, Wichita State (sophomore) (link via Twitter)
- Damion Rosser, G, New Orleans (junior) (link via WGNO.com)
- Jaden Shackelford, G, Alabama (sophomore) (link via Instagram)
- C.J. Walker, F, UCF (sophomore) (link via Twitter)
- Romeo Weems, F, DePaul (sophomore) (link via Instagram)
- Eric Williams Jr. , G/F, Oregon (junior) (link via Twitter)
