The atmosphere in Rochester Hills shifted the moment the final buzzer sounded on Oakland University’s heartbreaking 85-84 loss to Northern Kentucky. In the modern era of college athletics, the offseason no longer begins with a slow period of reflection; it begins with a sprint toward the transfer portal.
For the Golden Grizzlies, the speed of this year’s roster turnover has been jarring. Decisions regarding player futures were made almost immediately, and the subsequent floodgates opened for the portal. This is simply the new name of the game, a reality that the Oakland athletic department must navigate.
The college landscape now reflects a professional model, where players are essentially signed to one- or two-year deals. Even after a hypothetical standout 2026-27 campaign, the possibility remains that an entire starting lineup could enter the portal to pursue offers from high-major programs.
The NIL dilemma and the mid-major reality
While this volatility creates a constant challenge for coaching staffs, there is a positive dimension to the shift. Players are finally earning money for their own name, image and likeness (NIL), which represents a significant milestone for student-athletes.
This trend extends beyond basketball into football, track and field, and soccer, allowing athletes who were previously restricted to finally see financial returns on their labor. However, for a mid-major program like Oakland, this creates a structural disadvantage.
Lacking the donor-driven NIL budgets of institutions like Duke, Indiana, North Carolina or Michigan, Oakland cannot simply buy its way out of a roster crisis. For schools without seven-figure war chests, every season becomes a complex puzzle of filling multiple positional and structural needs while competing against programs that offer life-changing financial incentives.
Analyzing the defensive deficit: The 34.4% glass problem
The statistical reality of the 2025-26 season identifies the specific issues that need to be addressed before the next tipoff. According to BartTorvik, Oakland’s defensive rebounding rate sat at 34.4%, ranking 324th in the country.
This means opponents were allowed to grab their own misses over a third of the time — an inability to box out effectively that became a legitimate concern. Giving up such a high volume of second-chance opportunities forces a defense to work twice as hard for every stop.
This “second-chance tax” is a burden that cannot be carried into next season if the goal is to remain at the top of the Horizon League standings.
The interior gate: Fixing the 57% two-point allowed rate
The interior defense was another significant weakness highlighted by advanced data. The two-point percentage allowed reached 57%, placing Oakland at 334th in the nation and signaling a lack of rim deterrence and defensive instincts near the basket.
These struggles were often the result of poor navigation off screens, miscommunication during rotations and a general lack of size and verticality. Without a true rim protector capable of altering shots without fouling, the paint becomes a high-efficiency zone for opposing offenses.
Consequently, there is a clear team need for bigs with elite anthropometrics — not just height, but length, frame and functional size at the four and five positions. Replacing the motor and two-way versatility of a veteran like Tuburu Naivalurua is difficult, especially when players with that skill set command six-figure deals in the open market.
Identifying functional length in the transfer portal
Given the glaring need for interior stability, the team should look for established rim protectors who can dominate the glass. Notable names have recently entered the transfer portal that fit this description, including Ben Defty and Christian Reeves.
Defty, a 7-foot center from Boston University, is coming off a monster sophomore season where he averaged 15.1 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.7 blocks per game. His elite finishing — nearly 70% from the field — and Patriot League All-Defense honors make him an ideal anchor for a zone.
Similarly, Reeves offers a level of size rarely seen at the mid-major level. Standing 7-foot-2, the redshirt senior broke out at the College of Charleston after stints at Duke and Clemson, averaging 11.1 points, 7.8 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game. His frame and defensive instincts would immediately elevate Oakland’s interior presence.
For a program that allowed 57% on two-point attempts, adding a player with the size of Reeves or the productivity of Defty would transform the defensive identity and solve the rebounding crisis.
Offensive explosiveness: Replacing the free throw vacuum
On the offensive end, the free throw rate is another area of necessary improvement. Last year, Oakland ranked 101st (per BartTorvik) in this category, but a large portion of those attempts came from the departing Brody Robinson.
His exit leaves a vacuum in terms of paint touches and foul generation. The solution is to recruit high-energy, explosive guards or wings who can consistently pressure the rim and draw whistles.
The TJ Nadeau sweepstakes: A case study in competition
TJ Nadeau has emerged as a primary target in the portal conversation. Oakland is among a long list of programs that have contacted the Detroit Mercy transfer, but the competition underscores the NIL arms race defining the sport.
Nadeau has reportedly been contacted by USC, South Florida, UAB, Loyola Chicago, Nevada, San Diego, Furman, Old Dominion, Toledo, Western Michigan, Ohio, Indiana State, College of Charleston and UC Santa Barbara. It’s a reminder of the uphill battle mid-majors face.
Oakland offers a proven system and a legendary head coach, but it is competing against schools with significantly deeper financial resources.
The leadership bridge: Relying on the foundation five
If veteran experience cannot be sourced entirely from the portal, it must come from internal growth. Nassim Mashhour and Warren Marshall IV have now ascended to the role of program veterans — Mashhour entering his junior season and Marshall his redshirt sophomore year.
Mashhour averaged over 9 points per game and shot nearly 38% from deep last season, showing flashes of becoming a potential All-League player. Marshall has proven to be a two-way asset with the hustle and athleticism required for the defensive zone.
William Kassi possesses the length and mobility to spearhead the offense if he adds muscle. Camden Thompson remains an elite athlete with high upside, and Hamoudy Mashhour is a wild card coming off a redshirt year with anticipation surrounding his debut.
A future defined by adaptation and identity
The current era of college basketball dictates that rosters will remain in a constant state of flux. The idea that every April will feel like a total program reset is the new standard.
Success depends on the ability to fill structural needs in a market where every player is effectively a free agent every year. The goal for the upcoming season is to secure the veteran experience and interior size necessary to fix the 57% defensive gate and the 34.4% rebounding crisis.
Whether the solution comes from a high-upside JUCO player like Nate Ahner or a high-profile target like TJ Nadeau, the identity of Oakland basketball must return to physicality and discipline.