Florida State Is Finally About To Show What This Rebuild Looks Like

Florida State's revamped basketball team, led by Coach Luke Loucks, is set to make a statement at the Ballin at Boutwell tournament, testing their promising new roster against tough competition.

Florida State’s men’s basketball team is headed back to Birmingham for another early test, and this one comes with plenty of intrigue.

The Seminoles will face Auburn in the Ballin at Boutwell basketball tournament on Oct. 14, giving Luke Loucks another chance to measure a revamped roster against a high-level opponent. It will be the second straight season Loucks has brought Florida State to Birmingham. Last year’s trip ended with a 109-105 loss to Alabama in the tournament opener.

Florida State is trying to move on from a frustrating 18-15 season that ended with an 80-79 loss to eventual No. 1 overall seed Duke in the second round of the ACC Tournament. Loucks made it clear he sees this event as more than just a tune-up.

When the tournament was announced, he said, “It's a tremendous event with a great atmosphere, and it's exactly the kind of preseason challenge we're looking for. We want to compete against the best teams possible because those games prepare us for what's ahead.

Opportunities like this help us evaluate where we are, expose areas we need to improve, and get our team ready for the start of the season."

The bigger story around Florida State is how much the roster has changed. The Seminoles lost 11 players to the transfer portal and have added five so far as Loucks works to rebuild the group. Those additions include Cooper Schwieger from Wake Forest, 6-foot-11 Sebastian Rancik from Colorado, Anthony Robinson II from Missouri, Kameron Taylor from UNC Asheville, and Shon Abaev from Cincinnati.

This offseason also looks very different from the one that came before it. Florida State missed out on key recruits last year because, as the source says, the program did not have its NIL together. This time, the Seminoles are in a much stronger position thanks to legislation allowing for revenue sharing, and Loucks has already landed a major piece in Marcis Ponder, a four-star center who stands 7 feet tall.

He’s not the only one. Florida State also signed four-star point guard Collin Paul and four-star shooting guard Brandon Bass Jr., who is 6-foot-5. Ponder, Paul and Bass Jr. are all top-100 players, a sign of how quickly the Seminoles’ new NIL and revenue-sharing setup is changing the talent level in Tallahassee.

That recruiting momentum has pushed Florida State’s 2026 class into the top ten in most publications.

There’s still plenty to sort out, though. Loucks is set to lose six seniors from a team that won 10 of its last 12 games and pushed the No. 1 team in the country to the brink in the ACC Tournament. The late-season surge suggested Florida State finished stronger than it started, and it also hinted that Loucks may already have the program moving in the right direction.

Even so, the roster picture is still crowded with uncertainty. Florida State will open with eight freshmen and five transfers, and the Ballin at Boutwell Tournament will be the first real look at what that mix can become.

Loucks went 10-8 in ACC games in 2025, a school record for a first-year coach with that many conference wins. Now he gets to see how far this new version of the Seminoles can go.

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Daniels also walks into a roster that looks very different from the one fans remember, with more than half the team new and only two returning offensive starters. Even so, he has sounded encouraged by the culture he found and by the talent around him, especially a group that is still sorting out its identity. For Daniels, the challenge is bigger than simply settling in at quarterback. It is about proving he can meet Florida States standard while helping a new-look offense come together quickly. [Read more 🡒]

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The latest reminder of how sharp the spotlight has become came from CBS Sports analyst Danny Kanell, who put a clear standard on Norvells future. Florida State has a demanding 2026 slate ahead, and the conversation around the season is no longer just about improvement or momentum, but about how many wins it will take before the school feels comfortable keeping the staff in place for another year. [Read more 🡒]

Florida State Finally Honors One Of The Most Beloved Voices Ever

For more than four decades, Gene Deckerhoff was part of the soundtrack at Florida State, calling football and mens basketball through some of the programs biggest moments and becoming one of the most familiar voices in Seminoles history. The university has now chosen to recognize that run in a way that fits the setting, with head coach Mike Norvell delivering the news to Deckerhoff during a ceremony and praising what he meant to the program.

Deckerhoff retired from Florida State broadcasts after the 2022 spring game, but he is not done behind a microphone just yet. He will continue calling Tampa Bay Buccaneers games in what he says will be his final season there, while FSU makes room for his name in the stadium where so many of his calls lived. [Read more 🡒]