Jeff Nwankwo completes the OU basketball transfer class
And breathe that sigh of relief, OU basketball fans. All the searching, all the visits, all the transfer portal work is officially in the books.
The Sooners add the final piece, a very familiar name to OKPreps fans in Jeff Nwankwo. The former Cal signee announced his commitment to OU, marking the sixth and final transfer for the Sooners this cycle.
Nwankwo played at Oklahoma City Putnam City North before taking the long road to Norman. After an outstanding junior college season, he was in high demand. Nwankwo originally chose Cal before decommitting last weekend and visiting OU to start this week.
It came together pretty quickly after that. The class, the roster is done.
Jeff Nwankwo, F, Cowley County (juco) (2 years)
The line: 18.6 ppg, 7.0 rebs, 1.1 assts, 1.4 steals, 0.2 blocks, 49% FG, 37% 3-pt, 74% FT
Now this is a journey to OU basketball. Starting as a local product at Putnam City North and going the football route to Tulane. Leaving the sport and going junior college to play basketball. Becoming a star in that department to committing to Cal last month. To coming back home to play the Sooners. That is a journey for Nwankwo, and OU is glad to have him be the final piece to the puzzle. Head coach Porter Moser tried incredibly hard to bring a local kid home, turned out to be Nwankwo. His athletic ability should be a huge addition to the squad.
OU portal commitments
Mohamed Wague, F/C, Alabama (1 season)
The line: 3.1 ppg, 2.5 rebs, 0.5 assts, 0.5 blocks, 0.5 steals, 63% FG, 50% 3-pt, 75% FT
Now you know the combo. It’s going to be Sam Godwin and Wague at the center position for OU to go along with Luke Northweather and Jalon Moore. Size and athletic ability has clearly been what OU has been aiming for in the portal. Wague gives them both if he can play at a high level. Wague was a three-star recruit by On3 for the transfer rankings. A legitimate 6-foot-10, it will be interesting if OU can get more offensive production from Wague than what he has shown.
Duke Miles, G, High Point (2 seasons)
The line: 17.5 ppg, 2.4 rebs, 3.5 assts, 0.2 blocks, 1.3 steals, 53% FG, 36% 3-pt, 80% FT
This is the type of win OU fans had been waiting for, hoping for. The kind of portal win that resonates and gets people fired up. Miles is a top-100 transfer prospect, and the way it came together? Just didn’t sound like OU. He’s an Alabama kid, who had just finished his Auburn visit Wednesday. Here comes OU in from like the backdoor in the 11th hour to steal someone else’s hometown kid. The Sooners had certainly seen that a time or two or three during this cycle. Miles is a perfect combo guard and brings a lot to the table.
Brycen Goodine, G, Fairfield (1 season)
The line: 13.9 ppg, 3 rebs, 1.4 assts, 0.3 blocks, 0.8 steals, 50% FG, 47% 3-pt, 76% FT
That is not a misprint. Goodine shot 47 percent from 3-point territory and is a volume shooter. You can see how OU is attempting to spread the floor a lot more. Goodine averaged more than five 3-pointers attempted per game and shot at that clip. He had scoring games of 40 points and 37 points last season. Goodine had four games of making at six 3-pointers. From Syracuse to Providence to Fairfield now to OU. Definitely will bring the experience, and OU fans will be hoping he’ll bring that type of shooting one more season. Goodine is now signed.
Jadon Jones, G, Long Beach State (1 season)
The line: 12.1 ppg, 3.3 rebs, 1.6 assts, 1.8 steals, 1.0 blocks, 42% FG, 38% 3-pt, 85% FT
OU is focusing hard on two-way players. Looking for the 3-and-D type of player. Jones checks those boxes (now signed), a former Defensive Player of the Year in the Big West. Jones connected on 77 3-pointers last season, shooting the 38 percent rate. The 77 makes? That’s 23 more than the most by an OU player last year (Javian McCollum, 54). Jones is one of nine players ever in the NCAA in the last 30 years to have at least 60 steals, more than 30 blocks and make at least 75 3-pointers in a season. He joins the likes of Shane Battier, Kevin Durant, Danny Green, among others.
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Kobe Elvis, G, Dayton (1 season)
The line: 9.4 ppg, 2.4 rebs, 3.5 assts, 0.6 steals, 38% FG, 37% 3-pt, 85% FT
If nothing else, Elvis becomes the first player on the team with NCAA Tournament experience. Elvis was part of a Dayton squad that reached the second round of the Big Dance last month. He has plenty of experience and averaged nearly 30 minutes per game. Elvis is someone who knows how to operate in a ball-screen offense. A solid, complementary piece.
OU portal outlook
The Sooners worked the portal well last season, earning the 20 wins in the regular season for the first time in eight years. It just turned out to be not enough, being named the dreaded First Team Out of the NCAA Tournament.
So it’s back to the transfer portal. OU has had four players transfer out (Otega Oweh, John Hugley, Milos Uzan, Javian McCollum), meaning five open scholarships initially remained. Then it was two after Elvis and Jones and Goodine came into the fold. And then it went back to three after Kaden Cooper hitting the portal on the final day. Back to two after the big-time win picking up Miles.
And now? We wrap it up with the additions of Wague and Nwankwo this week. Breathe.
Forward Jalon Moore also announced his intention to go through the NBA Draft process, but he will keep his NCAA eligibility with OU. Moore could absolutely return to the Sooners. Sources believe Moore is expected to be the OU leader in 2024-25.
“There’s gonna be no less acceleration on our efforts for Oklahoma basketball,” said Moser last month. “We’ve got competitors. My staff, myself. Faith, family, friends, togetherness, this awesome University of Oklahoma. The outpouring of people. I’ll say this. My good friend that I’ve really developed a great friendship in the last three years and a friend to everybody here, Bob Stoops. He uses the term OUDNA a lot. We’ve talked about it.
“The OUDNA just doesn’t talk about at the top of the hill. The OUDNA is really strong as you’re climbing the hill. That’s where this staff, these players, this program is going to rely on that OUDNA to fight through this adversity. That OUDNA never has to be more relevant – it’s almost more important on the way up than it is at the top. That’s what we’re going to lean on moving forward.”