Jeff Borzello, ESPN Staff Writer 1y

Men's transfer scorecard: Surprises, disappointments, standouts of 2023-24

Men's College Basketball, Tennessee Volunteers, Kansas Jayhawks, Memphis Tigers, Arizona Wildcats, Texas Longhorns, UConn Huskies, Wisconsin Badgers, Utah State Aggies, McNeese Cowboys, Houston Cougars, California Golden Bears, Xavier Musketeers, Indiana State Sycamores, San Francisco Dons, Illinois Fighting Illini, Kentucky Wildcats, Oklahoma Sooners, Florida Gators, Washington State Cougars, Kansas State Wildcats, Arkansas Razorbacks, Purdue Boilermakers, Butler Bulldogs, North Carolina Tar Heels, Wake Forest Demon Deacons, Indiana Hoosiers, Wright State Raiders, Akron Zips, UTSA Roadrunners, Tulsa Golden Hurricane, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Michigan Wolverines, Georgetown Hoyas, Florida State Seminoles, Missouri Tigers, NC State Wolfpack, LSU Tigers, West Virginia Mountaineers, Utah Utes, St. John's Red Storm, Arizona State Sun Devils, Ole Miss Rebels, Chattanooga Mocs, Cincinnati Bearcats, North Dakota Fighting Hawks, Siena Saints, UNLV Rebels, VCU Rams, Rhode Island Rams, Southern Miss Golden Eagles, Saint Louis Billikens, Grand Canyon Lopes, Richmond Spiders, High Point Panthers, UC Santa Barbara Gauchos, Green Bay Phoenix, Little Rock Trojans, Jacksonville Dolphins, Northern Colorado Bears, Jacksonville State Gamecocks, Southern Jaguars, Louisiana Tech Bulldogs, George Mason Patriots, Monmouth Hawks, New Mexico Lobos, TCU Horned Frogs, Iowa State Cyclones

Last season, when I wrote about the continuing shift in the balance of power between transfers and freshmen when it came to men's college basketball roster construction, the discrepancy in production was staggering.

Only 17 of the top 100 freshmen were averaging double figures, with 11 of those 17 ranked as top-25 prospects coming out of high school. On the other side, 62 of the top 100 transfers in ESPN's 2022 transfer rankings were averaging double figures.

The numbers tell a similar tale this season. Sixteen top-100 freshmen were averaging double figures when I did my freshman check-in at the midway point of the season; 63 of the top 100 transfers in ESPN's 2023 transfer rankings hit the mark.

To add to that, there are 11 first-year transfers in the starting lineups of the top 10 teams in this week's AP poll. Only Marquette and Duke don't have one. Meanwhile, there are only five freshmen across those 10 lineups -- two of whom come from Duke.

Transfers are making a bigger impact than ever before in college basketball, and at the highest levels of the sport, too.

So let's look at some of this season's notable impact transfers -- as well as some who haven't panned out just yet.


Best of the best

Dalton Knecht, Tennessee Volunteers

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