NC State basketball roster outlook for 2022-23: Mahorcic added
In the wake of news that NC State men’s basketball has added a key transfer portal pickup from Utah forward Dusan Mahorcic, the roster outlook for next season has changed again.
Dahorcic’s announcement is the third transfer addition for NC State. Ole Miss senior guard and leading scorer Jarkel Joiner is also coming to Raleigh, and La Salle forward/guard Jack Clark will be transferring into the program.
On the other side of the coin, incoming recruit Shawn Phillips Jr. from Dayton, Ohio received his release and will choose a new school,
Redshirt junior center Manny Bates decided to enter the transfer portal.
That followed sophomore guard Cam Hayes has chosing to leave NC State and sophomore forward Jaylon Gibson going into the transfer portal. Hayes has picked LSU as his new school while Gibson will head to Winston-Salem State.
Here is how the NC State basketball roster is currently configured for the 2022-23 season.
Guards
Hayes was the second known backcourt departure, joining that of fifth-year senior Thomas Allen, who played in 26 games and made six starts last season while averaging 3.8 points and 14.5 minutes per contest.
Allen also joined the transfer portal in pursuit of trying to use a super senior season elsewhere.
Hayes slumped from a promising freshman season. In 2020-21, Hayes averaged 7.8 points and 3.1 assists while making 36.4 percent of his threes (28 of 77). In his last eight games that year, Hayes averaged 11.0 points and 3.4 assists while helping the Pack go 6-2 in that span.
This year, Hayes averaged 7.0 points and 2.1 assists per game, while playing all 32 contests and making 13 starts. In ACC games, Hayes’ numbers dipped to 5.1 points and 1.7 assists, and he had just as many turnovers (33) as assists (33). Hayes also made just 25 of 100 three-pointers on the season.
Headlining the potential group of returning players for NC State are second-team All-ACC redshirt sophomore Dereon Seabron and ACC All-Freshman Team member Terquavion Smith. However, both of them have entered the NBA Draft while maintaining their eligibility status.
Seabron led NC State in scoring (17.3 points), rebounding (8.2 boards), assists (102) and steals (44) this past season. His 12 double-doubles were the second most in the ACC.
Smith averaged 16.3 points per game and set a school record for most threes made by a freshman with 96. That was also the third most made in a season overall for a NC State player, trailing the 104 that Scott Wood made in 2013 and Rodney Monroe had in 1991.
Smith shot 36.9 percent overall from long range, and he was NC State’s leading scorer in ACC games at 18.3 points. He shot 40.1 percent on three-pointers in league action (73 of 182).
Smith’s overall scoring average is technically the second highest by a freshman in school history behind Brandon Costner’s 16.8 in 2007. Dennis Smith Jr. had his average of 18.1 points in 2017 taken off the record books by the recent NCAA IARP ruling.
Junior Casey Morsell averaged 7.2 points per game in his first season after transferring from Virginia. Morsell missed two games with ankle sprain but seemingly took even longer than that to fully recover.
Freshman Breon Pass averaged 2.2 points and 0.7 assists in his debut season, playing in 24 games. Pass saw increased playing time late in the year, getting double-digit minutes in the final four contests.
Joiner’s addition could prove to be a significant one. He was the Rebels’ leading scorer last year, averaging 13.2 points per game and is considered a strong defender in the backcourt. Joiner averaged 3.0 rebounds and 1.2 steals per game along with 2.3 assists.
NC State also signed On3 Consensus three-star LJ Thomas, who previously played at Bull City Prep in Carrboro, N.C. Thomas averaged 18.5 points, 4.2 assists and 3.5 rebounds per game while shooting 44 percent overall from the field last year at Bull City Prep.
The On3 Consensus, a complete and equally weighted industry-generated average that utilizes all four major recruiting services, has Thomas rated at No. 149 nationally in the 2022 class.
Top 10
- 1New
AP Poll Top 25
Big movement in latest Top 25
- 2Breaking
Purdue fires HC
Ryan Walters out after 2 seasons
- 3
Coaches Poll shake up
New Top 25 is out after Rivalry Week
- 4
Portal QB
Virginia's Anthony Colandrea enters NCAA Transfer Portal
- 5Hot
SEC Title Game Odds
Texas favored over Georgia
NC State’s Backcourt Roster For 2022-23
Name | Year* | Height, Weight | Hometown | 2021-22 Stats |
Jarkel Joiner | R-Sr. | 6-1, 181 | Oxford, Miss. | 22 games, 13.2 ppg, 2.3 apg (at Ole Miss) |
Casey Morsell | Sr. | 6-3, 200 | Ft. Washington, Md. | 20 starts, 7.2 ppg |
Dereon Seabron^ | R-Jr. | 6-7, 180 | Norfolk, Va. | 32 starts, 17.3 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 3.2 apg |
Breon Pass | So. | 6-0, 175 | Reidsville, N.C. | 25 games, 2.2 ppg |
Terquavion Smith^ | So. | 6-4, 160 | Greenville, N.C. | 25 starts, 16.3 ppg |
LJ Thomas | Fr. | 6-2, 185 | Stone Mountain, Ga. | — |
* — Year is based on what their classification would be in 2022-23
^ — Seabron and Smith have entered the NBA Draft but are currently maintaining their eligibility.
Forwards And Centers
Senior Jericole Hellems is not using the extra year afforded him by the NCAA pandemic ruling, and Bates, Hellems and Gibson mark the known departures from the front court.
Hellems concluded his career at NC State as a 1,000-point scorer. He averaged 13.7 points and 4.6 rebounds per game this past season, and joined Seabron as the only player to start all 32 games.
Gibson played in 29 contests and made four starts, averaging 2.7 points and 2.7 rebounds per contest.
The biggest loss may be Bates, who missed all but 57 seconds of the season with a shoulder injury. The prolific shot blocker (147 rejections in his first two seasons) averaged 9.8 points and 5.9 boards per game in 2020-21.
In Bates’ absence, Gibson and sophomore Ebenezer Dowuona played most of the minutes. Dowuona started 27 of 31 games he played and averaged 4.1 points and 4.1 rebounds while leading the team with 54 blocked shots.
NC State also inked Phillips, an On3 Consensus three-star center from Dayton, Ohio. But in April, Phillips announced he had received his release and will choose a new school. He played this past season at Dream City Christian in Glendale, Ariz. Phillips is rated as the No. 129 prospect in the country by the On3 Consensus.
To help make up for the losses of Bates and Phillips, NC State grabbed Mahorcic from the transfer portal. While stats were a modest 5.5 points and 4.1 rebounds per game in 13 contests for Utah last year, Mahorcic also played just 14.4 minutes per contest. The 6-foot-10, 226-pounder averaged 9.9 points and 7.2 rebounds in 24.4 minutes a game at Illinois State the year before.
Two players likely more ideally suited to play power forward expected back are sophomore Ernest Ross and junior Greg Gantt. Both would be returning from injuries.
Ross was averaging 1.6 points and 1.6 rebounds in 14 games before breaking his ankle. Gantt missed all season with a sports hernia after transferring from Providence, where he averaged 4.0 points and 3.1 rebounds as a sophomore.
NC State also added Clark via the transfer portal. This past year, Clark, a 6-foot-8, 200-pounder from Cheltenham, Pa., contributed 12.0 points and 5.8 rebounds per contest. He had three games of at least 20 points, including in two of his last three contests. He had a season-high 30 points to go with eight rebounds in a win over Duquesne.
Clark may also have the versatility to play guard.
NC State’s Frontcourt Roster for 2022-23
Name | Year* | Height, Weight | Hometown | 2021-22 Stats |
Jack Clark | R-Sr. | 6-8, 200 | Cheltenham, Pa. | 30 games, 12.0 ppg, 5.8 rpg (at La Salle) |
Greg Gantt | R-Jr. | 6-8, 215 | Fayetteville, N.C. | Injured |
Ebenezer Dowuona | Jr. | 6-11, 225 | Accra, Ghana | 27 starts, 4.1 ppg, 4.1 rpg, 1.7 bpg |
Dusan Mahorcic | Sr. | 6-10, 226 | Belgrade, Serbia | 13 games, 5.5 ppg, 4.1 rpg (at Utah) |
Ernest Ross | So. | 6-9, 190 | Alachua, Fla. | 14 games, 1.6 ppg, 1.6 rpg |
* — Year is based on what their classification would be in 2022-23
NC State Scholarship Count
Due to the NCAA’s ruling from the IARP committee on the case involving the recruitment of Dennis Smith Jr., NC State basketball will lose one scholarship next year. That brings the maximum allowed down from 13 to 12.
With Bates, Hayes and Gibson leaving via the transfer portal, Phillips receiving his release and the trio of Clark, Joiner and Mahorcic transferring in, NC State now has one more scholarship to add a player for next season. That number could go up depending on Smith and Seabron’s respective decisions.
——
Talk about NC State basketball inside The State of Basketball
Subscribe to our YouTube channel
Learn more about our print and digital publication, The Wolfpacker
Follow us on Twitter: @TheWolfpacker
Like us on Facebook