5. Isiaih Mosley | 6-5 guard | senior | Transferred from Missouri State to Missouri
The Scout: One of the best pull-up artists in all of college basketball has hit the portal. It’s tough to be a bigger scoring threat than Mosley is, a lethal scorer from all three levels that just put up one of the most efficient high-volume scoring seasons of the last decade in college basketball. He scored 20 points per game on 50 percent shooting from the field, 42.7 percent from 3 on about five attempts per game, and 90 percent from the line. The last person to put up a 50/40/90 season while averaging 20 points per game? How about we try this on for a Matt Norlander and Gary Parrish-style Trivia Time: Luke Babbitt at Nevada back in 2009-10 (shout out Larnell). He’s a professional scorer, one of those guys who would be able to get buckets no matter the talent level against him. He had two 40-point games this season, including in an absolutely sensational duel with a guy right below him on this list in A.J. Green. Mosley has some work to do on defense and could stand to be a slightly better distributor. But there is not a better scorer in the portal. He should be chased by every single team in the country. He has a case as the best transfer available in the country right now given how much you know you can trust him to just step on the floor and get buckets from Day One.
The Fit: Mizzou just got interesting. Dennis Gates needed to upgrade the talent in a major way and he’d already had a good spring by plucking the best off his old roster and a few nice grabs like former Northern Iowa wing Noah Carter, Clemson guard Nick Honor and two of the top juco prospects. That’s on top of keeping Kobe Brown in Columbia and holding onto four-star incoming freshman Aidan Shaw. Now he has a true star to build around in Year One in Mosley, a hometown guy who Mizzou somehow looked past when he was in high school. Mosley gets the opportunity to show he can produce on a bigger stage, which if he can will likely get him drafted next summer. It’s not easy for the mid-major guys to make the leap to the high-major level, but Mosley and Carter are two guys we’d bet on no matter where they landed. This is a major, major win for Gates.
25. Terry Roberts | 6-3 guard | senior | Transferred from Bradley to Georgia
The Scout: Roberts was the Missouri Valley’s Newcomer of the Year last season, a first-team all-conference player for Bradley who is lightning in a bottle offensively. He’s electric with the ball, capable of creating something out of nothing on offense in a flash. His handle is terrific, and he’s an explosive athlete who can get where he needs to go out of isolations. He averaged nearly 15 points, five rebounds and four assists this year, and hit 34 percent from 3 on a steady diet of tough pull-up shots. He makes some really impressive live-dribble passing reads, but the critical part of his game that he’s going to have to clean up will be turning it over. His assist-to-turnover ratio was very close to the 1-to-1 mark, and he makes some choices both in terms of shot selection and distribution that will worry high-major coaches. But above all, this is a high-major athlete at the guard spot with enough size to not be a liability on defense and enough handle to genuinely break down opposing teams.
The Fit: Well, Georgia needs just about everything as it transitions from the Tom Crean era to the Mike White era. As a first-year building block, Roberts is a terrific lead guard option who will absolutely perform well in the SEC. That league tends to be among the most athletic leagues in the country every year, and Roberts’ quick first step and explosive change of pace ability will fit right in as a terrific option. We’ll see who White and company surround him with to get a better feel for how Georgia could compete this year.
34. K.J. Williams | 6-10 big | graduate | Transferred Murray State to LSU
The Scout: The Ohio Valley Player of the Year this past season, Williams joined wing Tevin Brown and guard Justice Hill to form the nucleus of a 31-3 Murray State team that went to the Round of 32. Given the accolades, though, Williams was the centerpiece. He is an inside-out big who can punish smaller players on the block just as easily as he can pick-and-pop from distance. He hit just 30.4 percent from 3 this year, but over his career he’s made 35 percent of his 219 attempts. Because of that inside-out skill, he’s a fit almost anywhere at the collegiate level. He’s definitely more offense-first than defense, but he averaged 18 points and eight rebounds and is good enough on offense and versatile enough to play at the high-major level as a difference-maker. His coach at Murray State, Matt McMahon, is now the LSU head coach, so that could be a real fit.
The Fit: As predicted, Williams is headed to play for his former coach and he has all the opportunity in the world to prove himself at the high-major level, since McMahon essentially started from scratch with this roster. He now has three of his best players at Murray State in place and has quickly filled nine scholarship spots. Williams should be the star, and knowing how he would be featured had to be a big attraction.
40. Noah Carter | 6-6 forward | junior | Transferred from Northern Iowa to Missouri
The Scout: Carter is a high-IQ, big-bodied, 6-7, undersized forward who makes it work with pure feel for the game. He averaged 15 points and four rebounds in a slow Northern Iowa system, doing a little bit of everything. But above all, Carter just never really stops moving. He’s constantly searching for little creases and openings in the defense, hunting for ways to leverage his opponent to use his strength at 230 pounds to seal his man away from the rim. He was second-team All-Missouri Valley this year and moves people around at his position pretty easily. The worry with Carter at the high-major level is his footspeed and ability to defend against the most athletic guards. On top of that, Carter did only hit 29 percent from 3 this season, but his touch is excellent around the rim and from the foul line and he gives reason to believe that he has room for growth there.
The Fit: Carter’s best position is a small-ball four, and that’s the one spot where Missouri is actually in decent shape with Kobe Brown. But the Tigers really, really, really need skill and scoring, and so Carter is a great fit there. He immediately becomes Mizzou’s most skilled player. The one worry in the SEC is whether he can hang defensively, especially if he’s guarding perimeter players. “It’ll be interesting to see how he fares defensively,” an SEC coach said. “It looked like (on film) he wasn’t the most explosive athlete laterally or vertically. So what his identity on the floor is defensively should be interesting to see. But he’s definitely a really skilled offensive player.”
49. Tyreke Key | 6-3 guard | senior | Transferred from Indiana State to Tennessee
The Scout: Key missed this entire season at Indiana State following shoulder surgery, but he is a multi-time first-team All-Missouri Valley Conference player who is about as terrific a scorer as you’ll find at that level. He’s very polished and poised, a ground-bound player for the most part who gets by with terrific footwork and strength to bump guys off their spot. Indiana State back under Greg Lansing would even use him as a pseudo-post-up/mid-post option where he could use those drop steps and spin moves to score. Plus, prior to the shoulder injury he could really step away and knock down shots. That percentage took a bit of a dive in his senior season in 2021, but the hope is that he can get back to the level he was at previously, where there were few more efficient high-volume scorers at the high mid-major level. There are some questions here with him returning from injury, which is why he falls below guys like Reeves and Carter from the Missouri Valley. But at his best, he’s very much in their group and maybe even better.
The Fit: Key goes to a spot where the coach likes a good post-up, and that’s where he thrives. Rick Barnes is usually feeding a bigger player like Grant Williams, but he’d be smart to invert the floor with Key. The question marks here are whether Key can find his jump shot again — he shot 41 percent from 3 during his sophomore and junior seasons — and whether he’s athletic enough to hang in the SEC. His skillset should diversify Tennessee’s offense. The Vols had speed and shooting on the perimeter last season but didn’t really have an isolation scorer like him who could work in the mid-range.
Valleys are Filled with Most Impactful Coaches--Valley Hoops Insider
Missouri Valley Coaches
Three current Missouri Valley Conference assistant coaches were honored. Bradley’s Drew Adams, Southern Illinois’ Brendan Mullins and Drake’s Marty Richter.
Adams has been a staple on Brian Wardle’s staff and now enters his eighth season at Bradley. During their time in Peoria, the Braves have won two MVC ‘Arch Madness’ titles.
After spending two years at the Valley’s Illinois State, Mullins joined his younger brother Bryan’s staff at SIU. The Mullins brothers are beginning their fourth season in Carbondale.
During Richter’s first four seasons assisting Darian DeVries, the Bulldogs have amassed a record of 95-40 and tied for the Valley’s 2019 regular season championship. Drake played in and won a game in the 2021 NCAA Tournament.
Foust joins women’s basketball staff at MAC rep Buffalo--Murray Ledger & Times
From TJD to Ali Ali: The top-20 most-important offseason moves in Indiana college basketball--Evansville Courier & Press
19. Indiana State's work in the transfer portal
Josh Schertz, who enters Year 2 in Terre Haute, had a busy two-week stretch early this offseason, adding four players via the transfer portal: Jayson Kent (March 28), Courvoisier McCauley (April 4), Cade McKnight (April 7) and Trenton Gibson (April 9).
McCauley is a name that jumps out to Indianapolis-basketball fans who may have followed his high-scoring exploits at Manual. McCauley started his collegiate career at Lincoln Memorial, where he played under Schertz, and then moved on to DePaul, where he played in 29 games last season, averaging 5.7 points and 2.4 rebounds.
McKnight was a two-time All-American at Division II Truman State, Gibson scored more than 1,600 points at Division II Tusculom and Kent started 15 games at Bradley, averaging 6.9 points.
The Sycamores were 11-20 in Schertz's first season, including a 4-14 Missouri Valley Conference mark. Reinforcements are welcomed.
9. Evansville fires Todd Lickliter and hires David Ragland
It's been a mess for Evansville basketball lately. Todd Lickliter was fired two months after the season's end and two weeks into new athletic director Ziggy Siegfried's tenure.
Lickliter went 15-53 in two-plus seasons after taking over for Walter McCarty, who was fired in January 2020 over allegations of sexual misconduct that violated Title IX.
Change felt inevitable. So enter Ragland, who was a finalist for the job when McCarty was hired. An Evansville native, Ragland was the lone assistant coach Thad Matta retained after taking the Butler job earlier this offseason. He has a tall task. The Purple Aces have not made an NCAA Tournament since 1999 and have finished last in the Missouri Valley Conference three times in the past four seasons.
Women's Basketball Announces Full Recruiting Class--bradleybraves.com
Watch now: Illinois State women's basketball says farewell to Keller, hires Cole--The Pantagraph
Gonzaga Star Drew Timme to Return for 2022–23 Season As the Transfer Market Nears Its End, Who Might Still Land a Difference-Maker?--Sports Illustrated
Recently Committed
Isiaih Mosley, Missouri
In rare company as one of just three players in the last 30 years to average 20 points per game while shooting 50% from the field, 40% from three and 90% from the free throw line, Mosley is perhaps the best pure scorer changing teams this offseason. He picked Missouri on Monday over Mississippi State, staying in-state after three years at Missouri State.
The fit here makes a lot of sense: Mosley is a pure isolation scorer that slots in better as an offensive focal point for a team like Missouri than just as a cog in a larger machine at some of the blue blood programs that reached out earlier in the process. Plus, he gives Dennis Gates a much-needed talent injection in his first year as head coach of the Tigers.
Tracking top 25 transfers for 2022: Missouri lands Isiaih Mosley, the best player who was still in portal--CBS Sports
Missouri lands Missouri State transfer guard Isiaih Mosley--Zags Blog
Missouri State Transfer Isiaih Mosley is Staying Home with Missouri--The Portal Report
Report: Top transfer Isiaih Mosley choosing between two SEC programs--ON3
Former Missouri State basketball star Isiaih Mosley commits to Mizzou--Springfield News-Leader
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