For the first two weeks of the portal, it was a stressful but ultimately incredibly fun time to be a Marquette fan. With glaring needs at the center position and a secondary wing ball-handler, the additions of Sananda Fru and Nolan Minessale seemed to be the perfect fits for a Marquette squad intent on getting back to the top of the Big East and the NCAA Tournament. But with just hours left for student athletes to enter the transfer portal, Marquette fans learned that while the portal giveth, it also taketh away.
Marquette big man Sheek Pearson has entered the transfer portal, source told ESPN. Former top-50 recruit reclassified into the 2025 class and redshirted this past season with the Golden Eagles.
— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) April 22, 2026
Marquette already seemed to have a need for a guard off the bench, with no experienced ball-handlers beyond Nigel James and Minessale. The departure of Pearson left Marquette without its top center option as well, as Caedin Hamilton was removed from the starting lineup and relegated to limited bench minutes by the end of this past season and Josh Clark struggled to establish a regular role in the rotation. Marquette is left with two open scholarships and two pretty clear needs.
With those needs in mind, we enter Portal Kombat. But instead of choosing between Kano, Sonya, and Sub-Zero, college basketball fans have options like Divine, Nzeh, Mack, and the secret unlockable character, Gold. The portal may be closed for new entrants (for now...more on that later) but there are players in the portal that Marquette could add to address those two bench needs. Today we'll take a look at some of those options to give Marquette fans an idea of how the roster could still be upgraded by addressing the bench, provided they have enough credits to select their character. Note that the year listed is what they will be in the 2026-27 season.
Combo Guards
Divine Ugochukwu, Michigan State (6'3", 195, Jr)
This guy looks like he was built in a lab to play in Shaka Smart's system. I don't know if Ugochukwu would be willing to come in for a role that wasn't as a starter, but if he did, it would be ideal. While he's just 6'3", he boasts a massive 6'8" wingspan, which gives him the ability to guard players bigger than his listed size. He's a high efficiency (120.3 Adj ORtg) guard who earned a starting role for the Spartans before being sidelined with a foot injury. He was also a late portal entry, so there's likely time to get involved. Ugochukwu was a positive player on both ends in both RAPM (2.3) and BPR (2.3). He's an excellent finisher, shooting 65.4% at the rim and 44.2% from three. While his passing isn't elite (17.0% assist rate) what's appealing is how he achieves that passing. He is elite hitting cutters and passing in pick and roll. It's exactly what Marquette needs in a ball-handler. In addition, he can shoot, drive, and get out in transition with high-level efficiency. This is a guy who could step in with confidence at any time and fill in for any of the starters 1-3 to give elite rotational coverage.
Christian Jones, George Washington (6'4", 200, Jr)
Jones would arrive with two years of eligibility after starting all 34 games against D1 opponents for the Revolutionaries and averaging 10.0 ppg/3.0 rpg/3.1 apg. Jones posted a 2.2 RAPM and 2.8 BPR, with positive scores in both on the offensive and defensive side. He is a proven provider (21.3% assist rate) and shooter (36.4 3PFG%). He doesn't stand out as a star in any regard, but he's good at a lot of things. Looking at his Hoop-Explorer Play Profile, he's an above average shooter both in catch and shoot and pull-ups, is a good pick-and-roll passer, and does well enough in transition. His driving may be a bit lackluster but at least he's willing and hopefully more coaching would help him improve in that regard.
Sebastian Mack, Missouri (6'3", 195, Sr)
Mack got off to a decent start at Missouri, averaging 10.6 ppg/1.8 rpg/1.0 apg/1.4 spg in his first 8 games. Then it all went south. His averages all sank, he had career lows in efficiency, three-point shooting, and assist rate. When I asked a Missouri fan what happened, he responded "Not a fit at all, and he made the court look like it was a slip 'n slide and spent as much time falling down as he did on his feet." While that's less than appealing, it might provide Mack as a buy-low option on a player that could be a really good fit if he regained his 2024-25 form when he was at UCLA. That season, Mack was efficient (105.1 ORtg), created for others (15.8% assist rate), and was at his best going downhill to the hoop. He's always been a good defender, particularly when it comes to generating turnovers. If the staff were looking for someone who has proven themselves before at the high-major level and were willing to take a chance on a reclamation project, Mack could be a good option.
Centers
Ben Defty, Boston University (7'0", 255, Jr)
If Marquette wanted a like-for-like Fru backup, they couldn't find someone with a closer statistical profile than Defty. He's a high-efficiency big man (121.7 ORtg) who is elite at the rim (72.3%), as a shot-blocker (7.0%), and on the glass (8.7% OR, 20.7% DR). While there's some risk with big men who anchored bad defenses (BU ranked #348 per kenpom) it's hard to blame Defty for that. Defty was the only player on BU with positive RAPM and DBPR scores, and there was a massive gap between him and the next best defender in both metrics. The biggest question is how he would handle the step up in competition. I would caution against those who criticize Defty because of his numbers against Tier A+B competition. In his career, he only had 3 games out of 63 against such opponents with two of the three outings over 100 ORtg. The sample size simply isn't large enough to draw any meaningful conclusions.
Kachi Nzeh, Little Rock (6'8", 225, Sr)
Nzeh had by far his most productive season so far at Little Rock after stints at Xavier and Penn State, posting 11.7 ppg/4.8 rpg/1.3 apg. He rated as a negative RAPM and BPR player on both ends of the court, but that's likely more because Little Rock was a sub-300 team and poor on both offense and defense. He was a positive contributor per RAPM in his previous high-major seasons. Nzeh can play both front court positions, has consistently been over 60% at the rim for his career, and last year added 40.4% three point shooting (on 114 attempts) to his offensive arsenal. He also does a bit of everything on offense, even if not at elite levels. He'd likely be worth taking a flyer as someone who has high-major experience and has been a positive contributor in low to moderate minute loads.
Devin Williams, Florida Atlantic (6'10", 210, Jr)
Williams played both the 4 and the 5 for FAU. Williams isn't a great offensive player, but he's at least serviceable. He converts 62.7% of his shots at the rim and has the ability to step out to the three-point line a couple times per game, making 33.3% from deep mostly on pick-and-pop actions like what Ben Gold used to get looks at Marquette. He's an excellent offensive rebounder (10.2% OR) but does turn it over a bit more than you'd like. The defensive end is where he really shines, with a monster 11.1% block rate (9th nationally), 1.1 DRAPM, and 1.58 DBPR. When he was on the floor, teams were 3.2% less likely to attempt shots at the rim and 8.1% worse on those attempts (50.2% on to 58.3% off). As long as Williams offensive usage stayed low, he looks like a capable complement to either Royce Parham or Sananda Fru.
There's also one more wrinkle worth discussing. Recently, NCAA President Charlie Baker came out in support of allowing college athletes five years to complete five seasons. If this were to pass with immediate effect, players like Chase Ross and Ben Gold would be eligible to plan an additional season. There are still many questions to be answered around this. If it passes, will returning fifth year players be given the option to enter the portal, or will they have to have entered the portal before this went into effect, like North Carolina's Seth Trimble? Will extra scholarships be allowed so teams that filled their roster spots can retain graduate seniors? If they create an additional portal entry period, will this only be open to graduate seniors to enter the portal or will it give the chance for all current players to enter again?
If Marquette is to bring back one of their graduates, the most likely would seem to be Ben Gold. The staff does not want any questions about the leadership of this team, which makes it more likely that Gold would return over Chase Ross, who frequently had the ball in his hands in late game situations that went awry (Dayton, Oklahoma, Villanova, to name a few). In addition, it's pretty clear that Nolan Minessale fills the Chase role but the third big man role that Sheek Pearson was expected to fill is still vacant and it seems unlikely the staff would be comfortable with the current options as opposed to someone like Gold who thrived in a reserve big role in the past.Later this year, college sports could be ready to vote on the biggest change to eligibility since 1972. Five in five isn’t just a concept limited to a committee room anymore, it’s something the NCAA president is actively pushing hard for. https://t.co/VrSYgeNs3x
— Bryan Fischer (@BryanDFischer) April 22, 2026
F Ben Gold, Marquette (6'11", 235, Gr)
In many ways, Gold seems ideal for this spot. He's always been a high-efficiency, low usage big that is capable of playing in the middle, where he started for the bulk of the past two seasons, or in more of a stretch-four role that he slid into when paired with a more traditional down low player like Caedin Hamilton. Offensively, Ben has been over 63% at the rim every season at Marquette and he showed consistent three-point progress until last year's backslide. His rebounding improved significantly over his time here. He has been a positive contributor on both the offensive and defensive end in both RAPM and BPR each of the past three years. Gold knows the system and would be able to play in the middle alongside Parham as he did most of last year or step in alongside Fru as more of a pick-and-pop player. In addition, he was a higher efficiency shooter when he was at lower usage, and with the roster as constructed he would almost certainly be a bench option since Fru was specifically brought in to man the middle and Ben was significantly behind the returning big three (James, Stevens, Parham) in conference play minutes last year. For Gold's play profiles, I'm including each of the past two years to see not just what he looked like last year but also what he looked like when he was in a reduced role, more similar to what would be expected if he returned.
Whether Marquette stays with the roster as constructed, looks to add through the current portal, holds off for the fifth year ruling, or considers adding reclassified 2027 recruits as 2026 freshmen remains to be seen, but if they opt for the portal, there are still some good options out there that would improve the team. One website I've been playing around with lately is ShootyHoops.com that allows you to see where they project teams with portal additions made. Currently, Marquette ranks #22 on that site, but adding Ben Defty and Christian Jones brings them up to #13. It's just one site and just one projection, but improving the bench will make the team better while improving the floor, guarding against injuries, and helping a player like Nigel James to not get burned out by February as we saw with Kam Jones in 2024-25.




















