
Alex Karaban Returns to UConn for Senior Season After Tough Year
Alex Karaban's first two college seasons couldn't have been scripted much better. The 6-foot-8 forward started all but one game as a freshman and sophomore and helped the University of Connecticut win back-to-back NCAA men's basketball tournament championships in 2023 and 2024. Still, Karaban didn't have the same success last season, as the Huskies finished third in the Big East Conference's regular season and lost in the second round of the NCAA tournament to eventual national champion Florida.
Karaban will now have an opportunity to close out his college career on a happier note. On Tuesday, he pulled out of the NBA draft and announced he would return to UConn for his senior season.
'I pride myself on accepting challenges and holding myself to the highest standard,' Karaban wrote on X. 'Last year, we didn't achieve what we set out to, and I am not running from a chance to make that right!'
Karaban's return will make UConn among the favorites to win the national title and solidify his place among the program's all-time greats. If he can replicate what he's done the past three seasons, Karaban should become UConn's all-time leader in games played (he needs to appear in 33 games to surpass Shabazz Napier) and 3-pointers made (he needs 62 to surpass Rashad Anderson) and in the top 10 in career points. He is currently second all-time among UConn players with a 57.4% effective field goal percentage, only trailing Emeka Okafor (59.0%).
Karaban averaged 14.3 points and 5.3 rebounds per game last season, both career-highs and third on the team, but he shot a career-low 43.8% from the field and 34.7% on 3-pointers. After playing the previous year with future NBA draft selections Donovan Clingan, Stephon Castle, Tristen Newton and Cam Spencer, averaging 13.3 points and shooting 49.5% from the field, Karaban struggled at times last season with a bigger role and with defenses aimed at stopping him.
UConn was also inconsistent. The Huskies were No. 3 in the preseason Associated Press poll, but they lost three games in three days in November at the Maui Invitational in Hawaii to fall to No. 25. UConn then won eight consecutive games and rose to No. 9 in the poll, but the Huskies were unranked for the season's final month even though they finished 14-6 in the Big East. They lost in the semifinals of the Big East tournament. And in the NCAA tournament, they led Florida by six points midway through the second half and tied it with less than two minutes remaining before the Gators pulled off the 77-75 victory.
Besides Karaban, the Huskies will also have back guard Solo Ball, who was second on the team in scoring (14.4 points per game) and shot 41.4% on 6.8 3-point attempts per game. Tarris Reed Jr., a 6-foot-10 center, is also returning. He led the team with 7.3 rebounds and 1.6 blocks per game and averaged 9.6 points in just 19.9 minutes per game while shooting 67% from the field. Forwards Jaylin Stewart and Jayden Ross will be back for their junior seasons, too.
UConn has added two transfers who should make immediate impacts, too, in Silas Demary Jr. (Georgia) and Malachi Smith (Dayton). Demary, a 6-foot-5 point guard, averaged 13.5 points as a sophomore last season. He is a big guard and two-way player in the mold of Newton, who was a first team All-American in 2024. Smith, a 6-foot guard, is much shorter than Demary, but he can also play point guard. He is coming off of a productive season (10.4 points and 5.3 assists per game) after only playing one game in 2023-24 due to a knee injury.
UConn will also have two talented freshmen in 6-foot-5 guard Braylon Mullins and 7-foot center Eric Reibe, who are No. 15 and No. 28, respectively, in the high school class of 2025, per the 247Sports Composite. Mullins was the top player in Indiana this past season, averaging 32.9 points, 7.2 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 3.7 steals per game while shooting 47.6% on 3-pointers. Mullins is the second UConn recruit in as many seasons to be named a McDonald's high school All-American, joining Liam McNeeley, a 6-foot-7 wing who averaged a team-high 14.5 points last season and recently declared for the NBA draft. McNeeley is ranked 15th in ESPN's list of top draft prospects.
Reibe, meanwhile, grew up in Germany and Switzerland and played the past two years at the Bullis School in Maryland. UConn coach Dan Hurley told Forbes contributor Adam Zagoria in December that Reibe is 'gonna have a huge impact on us' and praised his offensive game as a scorer and passer.
With the players returning and new additions, UConn could be the preseason favorite to win the Big East, although reigning regular season and tournament champion St. John's has reloaded, too. The Red Storm return 6-foot-9 forward Zuby Ejiofor and have several talented transfers such as guards Ian Jackson (North Carolina), Dylan Darling (Idaho State), Joson Sanon (Arizona State), Oziyah Sellers (Arizona State), forwards Bryce Hopkins (Providence) and Dillon Mitchell (Cincinnati) and center Handje Tamba (Tennessee).
For Karaban and the rest of the Huskies, this past season was much different and frustrating than the previous two when UConn dominated in the NCAA tournament, winning each of its games by at least 10 points. It will be nearly impossible to replicate that dominance next season, but the Huskies on paper have a roster that should fit better together than last season and a coaching staff that is looking to get back to its winning ways in March.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
USC's DJ Wingfield, UCLA's Kaedin Robinson denied preliminary injunctions ahead of 2025 season
A judge in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California denied preliminary injunctions from offensive lineman and wide receiver on Monday night, which would have allowed the two to play the 2025 season. It is the latest eligibility ruling to come down after Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia won a preliminary injunction against the NCAA, granting him a fifth season of eligibility on the argument that the redshirt rule involving junior college eligibility violates antitrust law. Wingfield and Robinson challenged the legality of the NCAA's Five-Year Rule, which contends that players are eligible to play four seasons of competition across five years. The decision to file the lawsuit came after the NCAA denied waivers for a final season of eligibility. In a court filing, Wingfield stated he stood to make roughly $210,000 to play this season for the Trojans. Robinson's complaint stated he was offered an NIL contract by UCLA worth $450,000. 'This is another illustration of how inconsistent these rulings have been,' Boise State law professor Sam C. Ehrlich told On3. Judges are very clearly disagreeing with each other on a particular legal issue, whether the rules are commercial, and it's allowing some players to get an extra year and others not to, despite nearly identical relevant facts. This will be — hopefully — resolved in the next few months at the appellate level, but that won't help the players who justifiably feel like they're getting treated unfairly just because they unluckily drew the wrong judge.' With Monday's decision, it is unlikely the players will be able to play the 2025 season, Ehrlich said. The players can try to ask the Ninth Circuit for an emergency look, but 'that's a high, high, high bar,' he said. A 6-foot-4, 320-pound offensive lineman, DJ Wingfield started his career at El Camino Junior College, where he played 22 games. Wingfield transferred to as a junior but only appeared in one game before suffering a season-ending injury. After redshirting, Wingfield played in nine games with the Lobos as a redshirt junior before transferring to Purdue in December 2023. The offensive lineman started 12 games in 2024 at right guard for Purdue. Wingfield finished with a 64.3 overall Pro Football Focus grade last year, including a 65.2 run-blocking grade and a 61.5 pass-block grade. He gave up 22 pressures, including five hits on the quarterback and three sacks. He was expected to contribute to an offensive line that lost Emmanuel Pregnon and Mason Murphy to the transfer portal. Kaedin Robinson was an All-Sun Belt first-team selection last season. He began his career at ASA Brooklyn before transferring to . Robinson finished with 53 catches for 840 yards, two touchdowns and 15.8 yards per catch in 2024 at App State. After starting his career at UCF in 2021, he played the last three seasons at App State and has career totals of 148 catches for 2,194 yards and 15 touchdowns. He's averaged 14.8 yards per catch.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Judge's ruling effectively blocks two players from competing for USC and UCLA this season
When they chose to continue their college careers, both USC offensive lineman DJ Wingfield and UCLA wide receiver Kaedin Robinson thought the courts and NCAA had cleared the way for them to play a fifth season of football. USC had told Wingfield as much, offering him $210,000 in NIL to join the Trojans' offensive line. UCLA, meanwhile, offered Robinson $450,000 to be one of the Bruins' top wideouts. But after first seeing their waivers rejected in the spring, then suing the NCAA this summer, a U.S. District Court judge has now shut the door on either Wingfield or Robinson suiting up this fall. Both players had hoped to prove this week in court that they were deserving of a preliminary injunction that would allow them to play out the season at USC and UCLA. Their attorneys argued that the NCAA's Five-Year Rule, which limits athletes to four seasons in five years, violated antitrust laws by limiting athletes' eligibility — and thus, their NIL earning potential. To block Wingfield and Robinson from playing this season, their attorneys argued, would mean causing 'irreparable harm." But after a hearing was held for both Monday, a judge in California's Central District court quickly rejected those claims, denying the request for injunctive relief from both players, as well as San Diego linebacker Jagger Giles. Read more: Micah Banuelos works to make up for lost time as USC aims to build its strongest offensive line Either could appeal the decision, but it's unlikely that either player's case would be heard soon enough to play the 2025 season. Others who have challenged the NCAA's eligibility rules in court have had inconsistent results. But in the case of Wingfield and Robinson, Judge James Selna held that the NCAA's Five-Year Rule was not 'commercial in nature," but rather a 'true eligibility rule," and therefore was not beholden to antitrust scrutiny. Not every judge has come to the same conclusion, as a cascade of similar eligibility cases have been filed in the months since Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia won a preliminary injunction in his case against the NCAA. Pavia was granted a fifth season after challenging that the NCAA's rule counting his junior college tenure toward his overall NCAA eligibility would unfairly limit his ability to earn NIL compensation. The judge in Wingfield and Robinson's case was less swayed by that argument. 'There is a subtle difference between a rule that retrains NIL compensation and a rule that limits one's potential to negotiate a NIL agreement,' the judge wrote. 'Putting aside the NIL agreements, the question of whether a player's time has run remains in full force. The eligibility question is not tethered to the question of compensation or commercial transaction.' In Wingfield's case, the judge also found that the five-month delay in Wingfield requesting a temporary restraining order after being ruled ineligible in March weakened the urgency of Wingfield's claims of 'irreparable harm." Losing Wingfield will undoubtedly deal a significant blow to USC, which had been counting on Wingfield to step into a starting role along the offensive line. Without him, the Trojans will enter the season perilously thin on the interior. Read more: UCLA's training camp a real tearjerker as players, coaches open up to bond Wingfield's collegiate career began in 2019 at El Camino College, a junior college in Torrance. He left El Camino during the 2020 season because of the pandemic, then returned in 2021 before transferring to New Mexico in the spring of 2022. An injury ended his first season with the Lobos before he finished a single game, but he returned to play in nine games in 2023 before transferring to Purdue, where he started along the Boilermakers' line as a fifth-year senior in 2024. Robinson took a very similar path as Wingfield through junior college, spending one season at ASA College in Brooklyn before the pandemic, then redshirted for a season at Central Florida in 2021 before spending the next three years at Appalachian State. Robinson was an All-Sun Belt selection at receiver last season with 53 catches for 840 yards and two touchdowns. He was expected to be one of the Bruins' top receivers this season. Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
5 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Judge's ruling block two players from competing for USC and UCLA this season
When they chose to continue their college careers, both USC offensive lineman DJ Wingfield and UCLA wide receiver Kaedin Robinson thought the courts and NCAA had cleared the way for them to play a fifth season of football. USC had told Wingfield as much, offering him $210,000 in NIL to join the Trojans' offensive line. UCLA, meanwhile, offered Robinson $450,000 to be one of the Bruins' top wideouts. But after first seeing their waivers rejected in the spring, then suing the NCAA this summer, a U.S. District Court judge has now shut the door on either Wingfield or Robinson suiting up this fall. Both players had hoped to prove this week in court that they were deserving of a preliminary injunction that would allow them to play out the season at USC and UCLA. Their attorneys argued that the NCAA's Five-Year Rule, which limits athletes to four seasons in five years, violated antitrust laws by limiting athletes' eligibility — and thus, their NIL earning potential. To block Wingfield and Robinson from playing this season, their attorneys argued, would mean causing 'irreparable harm'. But after a hearing was held for both Monday, a judge in California's Central District court quickly rejected those claims, denying the request for injunctive relief from both players, as well as San Diego linebacker Jagger Giles. Either could appeal the decision, but it's unlikely that either player's case would be heard soon enough to play the 2025 season. Others who have challenged the NCAA's eligibility rules in court have had inconsistent results. But in the case of Wingfield and Robinson, Judge James Selna held that the NCAA's Five-Year Rule was not 'commercial in nature,' but rather a 'true eligibility rule,' and therefore was not beholden to antitrust scrutiny. Not every judge has come to the same conclusion, as a cascade of similar eligibility cases have been filed in the months since Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia won a preliminary injunction in his case against the NCAA. Pavia was granted a fifth season after challenging that the NCAA's rule counting his junior college tenure toward his overall NCAA eligibility would unfairly limit his ability to earn NIL compensation. The judge in Wingfield and Robinson's case was less swayed by that argument. 'There is a subtle difference between a rule that retrains NIL compensation and a rule that limits one's potential to negotiate a NIL agreement,' the judge wrote. 'Putting aside the NIL agreements, the question of whether a player's time has run remains in full force. The eligibility question is not tethered to the question of compensation or commercial transaction.' In Wingfield's case, the judge also found that the five-month delay in Wingfield requesting a temporary restraining order after being ruled ineligible in March weakened the urgency of Wingfield's claims of 'irreparable harm.' Losing Wingfield will undoubtedly deal a significant blow to USC, which had been counting on Wingfield to step into a starting role along the offensive line. Without him, the Trojans will enter the season perilously thin on the interior. Wingfield's collegiate career began in 2019 at El Camino College, a junior college in Torrance. He left El Camino during the 2020 season because of the pandemic, then returned in 2021 before transferring to New Mexico in the spring of 2022. An injury ended his first season with the Lobos before he finished a single game, but he returned to play in nine games in 2023 before transferring to Purdue, where he started along the Boilermakers' line as a fifth-year senior in 2024. Robinson took a very similar path as Wingfield through junior college, spending one season at ASA College in Brooklyn before the pandemic, then redshirted for a season at Central Florida in 2021 before spending the next three years at Appalachian State. Robinson was an All-Sun Belt selection at receiver last season with 53 catches for 840 yards and two touchdowns. He was expected to be one of the Bruins' top receivers this season.