Tennessee adds Cal guard Dai Dai Ames via transfer portal

Tennessee basketball landed guard Dai Dai Ames from California as its first transfer portal addition for the 2026-27 season on April 11. The 20-year-old, 6-foot-2 guard averaged 16.9 points per game in a breakout junior year with the Golden Bears. Ames joins a Vols roster rebuilding after several departures.

Tennessee's roster now features seven confirmed players, including Ames, Belmont graduate transfer Tyler Lundblade, freshmen Troy Henderson and DeWayne Brown II, and high school recruits Ralph Scott, Manny Green, and Marquis Clark. Sophomore Ethan Burg has yet to announce his plans. The team faces a lineup overhaul with freshman Nate Ament expected to enter the 2026 NBA Draft, J.P. Estrella transferring to Michigan, Bishop Boswell in the portal, and Ja'Kobi Gillespie and Felix Okpara out of eligibility due to exhausted eligibility. Dai Dai Ames, whose full name is Darrin Ames Jr. and was born June 2, 2005, began at Kansas State, starting 16 of 31 freshman games. He moved to Virginia for his sophomore year, averaging 8.7 points across 31 games with 26 starts. At Cal in 2025-26, he boosted to 16.9 points on 46.4% field goal shooting, nearing 40% from three on 4.4 attempts per game, aiding a 22-12 record and 9-9 ACC mark before a second-round tournament loss to Florida State on March 11. A Chicago native from Kenwood Academy class of 2023, Ames was a four-star recruit, ranked No. 13 point guard nationally and No. 2 in Illinois by 247Sports Composite. He chose Kansas State over offers from Illinois, Michigan State, Nebraska, and Oklahoma.

Relaterte artikler

Dynamic illustration of top 2026 NBA Draft prospects AJ Dybantsa (BYU), Darryn Peterson (Kansas), and Cameron Boozer (Duke) in action on the court.
Bilde generert av AI

2026 NBA mock drafts highlight talented prospect class

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

As the NCAA regular season ends, mock drafts for the 2026 NBA Draft spotlight a deep class of freshmen prospects. AJ Dybantsa of BYU leads projections with his scoring prowess, while Darryn Peterson of Kansas and Cameron Boozer of Duke round out the top trio. A SB Nation poll names Dybantsa the most exciting future NBA player to watch.

Tennessee basketball's freshman forward Nate Ament has been ruled out indefinitely due to a right leg injury sustained against Alabama. He will miss the upcoming game against South Carolina on March 3. The team announced the update on March 2, with no clear timetable for his return.

Rapportert av AI

Tennessee Volunteers freshman Nate Ament, a 6-foot-10 lottery pick prospect averaging 17.9 points and 6.5 rebounds this season, exited Saturday's game against Alabama early with a right leg injury, raising concerns for the team's postseason hopes. Coach Rick Barnes indicated possible involvement of both a knee issue and an aggravated prior ankle injury.

The Kentucky Wildcats overcame a 17-point deficit to secure an 80-78 victory over the Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxville on January 17, 2026. Trailing 42-31 at halftime, Kentucky rallied in the second half, leading for just the final 34 seconds. Denzel Aberdeen led the Wildcats with 22 points in the thrilling road win.

Rapportert av AI

As the college basketball season nears its end, CBS Sports has released a mock draft for the 2026 NBA Draft, projecting BYU's AJ Dybantsa as the No. 1 overall pick. The draft class is described as one of the strongest in recent years, particularly at the top with talents like Duke's Cameron Boozer and Kansas' Darryn Peterson. Dybantsa edges out the competition due to his national-leading scoring and star potential.

Following the NCAA's clearance of 2023 NBA draftee James Nnaji to join Baylor midseason—as detailed in prior coverage—the decision has sparked intense debate. NCAA President Charlie Baker clarified limits on eligibility, while coaches like Tom Izzo and John Calipari criticize loopholes, and executives eye similar moves for other prospects.

Rapportert av AI

Dylan Mingo, a five-star combo guard ranked No. 8 in the class of 2026, announced his commitment to the University of North Carolina on Tuesday during ESPN's First Take. The 6-foot-5 prospect from Long Island Lutheran High School in New York chose the Tar Heels over Baylor, Washington and Penn State. Mingo becomes UNC's second top-25 recruit in the class of 2026, joining Maximo Adams.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis