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How IU basketball’s 2026 transfer portal recruiting class stacks up nationally

IU basketball’s 2026-27 roster is currently at 10 players and the Hoosiers are not expected to have more than 13 scholarship players when the roster is finalized.

The current roster for next season includes Trent Sisley, Aiden Sherrell, Samet Yigitoglu, Darren Harris, Bryce Lindsay, Markus Burton, Jaeden Mustaf, Vaughn Karvala, Prince-Alexander Moody and Trevor Manhertz.

Here’s a look at how Indiana’s transfer portal recruiting class ranks nationally and in the Big Ten:

247Sports

Indiana transfer portal class rank: No. 3

Players ranked in the top 200: Sherrell (No. 12), Burton (No. 24), Yigitoglu (No. 37), Mustaf (No. 88) and Lindsay (No. 190).

Notes: With 27.91 points, Indiana is behind Louisville (30.79 points) and Texas (29.04) in the 247Sports transfer team rankings.

The top ten teams are Louisville, Texas, Indiana, Tennessee, North Carolina, Providence, Miami (FL), Texas A&M, Michigan and Arizona State.

Rankings for other Big Ten programs:

Michigan (No. 9) – 3 commits
USC (No. 20) – 3 commits
Maryland (No. 24) – 6 commits
UCLA (No. 25) – 4 commits
Oregon (No. 32) – 8 commits
Ohio State (No. 41) – 4 commits
Washington (No. 42) – 4 commits
Nebraska (No. 49) – 6 commits
Penn State (No. 61) – 5 commits
Wisconsin (No. 63) – 3 commits
Northwestern (Tied for No. 64) – 5 commits
Minnesota (Tied for No. 64) – 4 commits
Iowa (No. 70) – 2 commits
Rutgers (No. 81) – 4 commits (ranking excludes one of their signees)
Illinois (No. 88) – 1 commit
Michigan State (Tied for No. 96) – 1 commit
Purdue (Tied for No. 111) – 1 commit

On3

Indiana transfer portal class rank: No. 1

Players ranked in the top 200: Sherrell (No. 15), Burton (No. 21), Yigitoglu (No. 37), Mustaf (No. 97)

Notes: With an index score of 42, Indiana sits atop the On3 transfer team rankings. The top 10 teams are Indiana, Xavier, Louisville, Florida State, Texas A&M, UCLA, Vanderbilt, Kansas State, Houston and Nebraska.

The rankings are a bit different than a typical team ranking as On3 attempts to “measure a team’s production during the transfer process, compared relative against its roster and not a comparison against other schools. This proprietary algorithm determines if a school has improved its overall team talent, stayed the same, or declined in talent during the transfer window.”

Rankings for other Big Ten programs:

UCLA (No. 6)
Nebraska (No. 10)
Michigan (No. 11)
Ohio State (No. 13)
Maryland (No. 19)
Rutgers (No. 25)
USC (No. 30)
Oregon (No. 32)
Michigan State (No. 45)
Purdue (No. 52)
Penn State (No. 59)
Northwestern (No. 60)
Iowa (No. 61)
Washington (No. 64)
Illinois (No. 67)
Minnesota (No. 69)
Wisconsin (No. 73)

EvanMiya.com

Indiana transfer portal class rank: No. 5

Notes: The top 10 teams in Miya’s transfer portal team rankings are Louisville, Texas, Miami (FL), Marquette, Indiana, Villanova, Xavier, USC, UConn and Kansas.

Rankings for other Big Ten programs:

USC (No. 8)
UCLA (No. 12)
Nebraska (No. 27)
Oregon (No. 32)
Illinois (No. 36)
Maryland (No. 39)
Michigan (No. 44)
Washington (No. 47)
Ohio State (No. 49)
Purdue (No. 64)
Wisconsin (No. 76)
Iowa (No. 83)
Northwestern (No. 106)
Rutgers (No. 108)
Penn State (No. 120)
Minnesota (No. 134)
Michigan State (No. 151)

List of current Big Ten transfer portal recruiting classes by school

Illinois: Stefan Vaaks (from Providence)

Indiana: Bryce Lindsay (from Villanova), Aiden Sherrell (from Alabama), Darren Harris (from Duke), Markus Burton (from Notre Dame), Samet Yigitoglu (from SMU), Jaeden Mustaf (from Georgia Tech)

Iowa: Ty’Reek Coleman (from Illinois State), Andrew McKeever (from Saint Mary’s)

Maryland: Tomislav Buljan (from New Mexico), Robert Jennings II (from Oklahoma State), Bishop Boswell (from Tennessee), Maban Jabriel (from Queens), DJ Wagner (from Arkansas), Michael McNair (from Boston University)

Michigan: J.P. Estrella (from Tennessee), Moustapha Thiam (from Cincinnati), Jalen Reed (from LSU)

Michigan State: Anton Bonke (from Charlotte)

Minnesota: Winters Grady (from Michigan), Malick Kordel (from Michigan), Nolan Groves (from Texas Tech), Kyan Evans (from North Carolina)

Nebraska: Sam Orme (from Belmont), Trevan Leonhardt (from Utah Valley), Kadyn Betts (from Montana), Boden Kapke (from Boston College), Taj DeGourville (from San Diego State), Damon Wilkinson (from South Dakota State)

Northwestern: Jack Karasinski (from Bellarmine), Luke McEldon (from Mount St. Mary’s), Colin Smith (from UC Santa Barbara), LA Pratt (from Northeastern), Okku Federiko (from Drake), Aleksej Kostic (from BYU)

Ohio State: Justin Pippen (from Cal), Andrija Jelavic (from Kentucky), Jimmie Williams (Duquesne), Curtis Givens III (from Memphis)

Oregon: Tyrone Riley IV (from San Francisco), Andrew Meadow (from Boise State), Pharaoh Compton (from San Diego State), Jasper Johnson (from Kentucky), Taylor Bol Bowen (from Alabama), Jerry Easter II (from USC), Fred Payne (from Boston College), Dwayne Aristode (from Arizona)

Penn State: Jay Rodgers (from Central Connecticut), Brant Byers (from Miami OH), Roberts Blums (from Davidson), Tim Oboh (from Buffalo), Thomas Allard (Alabama Huntsville)

Purdue: Caden Pierce (from Princeton)

Rutgers: Lewis Duarte (from New Mexico State), Darin Smith Jr. (from Central Connecticut State), Christian Gurdak (from Virginia Tech), Will Sydnor (from Manhattan)

UCLA: Filip Jovic (from Auburn), Sergej Macura (from Mississippi State), Jaylen Petty (from Texas Tech), Azavier Robinson (from Butler)

USC: KJ Lewis (from Georgetown), Eric Reibe (from UConn), Jalen Cox (from Colgate)

Washington: Parker Friedrichsen (from Davidson), Steele Venters (from Gonzaga), Ryan Beasley (from San Francisco), LeJuan Watts (from Texas Tech)

Wisconsin: Trey Autry (from George Washington), Victory Onuetu (from Hofstra), Eian Elmer (from Miami OH)

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