Luke Loucks’ 2027 class took an early hit Sunday when four-star point guard Kevin Savage chose Purdue over Florida State, leaving the Seminoles without a commitment in that cycle.
Savage, a 5-foot-11 guard from Wheeler High School in Marietta, Georgia, picked Purdue after also considering Florida State, Auburn, Georgia, Georgia Tech, and UCLA. He’s ranked No. 42 nationally by 247Sports Composite and No. 11 among point guards.
For Loucks, the miss lands in the middle of a roster-building approach that has already leaned heavily on both the transfer portal and high school recruiting. In April, Michigan made history by winning a national title with an all-transfer starting five, and the portal has become a defining force across college basketball. Loucks has embraced that reality at Florida State, where much of next season’s starting lineup in Year 2 of his tenure is expected to come from this offseason’s portal additions.
At the same time, the youngest Division I coach in the country has put real work into high school talent. Florida State signed an eight-player recruiting class that ranked No. 16 nationally, giving him a mix of veterans for the ACC and younger pieces to grow into the program.
Savage would have fit a different lane. Loucks has generally favored length and athleticism from his NBA background, and a 5-foot-11 point guard is a clear departure from that mold. Still, Florida State did bring in another undersized guard in the 2026 class, Jason Lopez, and Loucks likely understands the value of a smart lead guard after his first season was slowed by poor shot selection and wasted possessions.
That’s the kind of player Savage projects to be. Purdue gets him now, and Matt Painter adds another undersized guard who drew his eye after Braden Smith’s decorated college run.
The concern for Florida State is what comes next. Loucks now has to reset in the 2027 class, where the Seminoles still have no commitments. It’s unclear exactly where their recruiting board stands, though the possibility remains that Loucks could keep taking big swings on elite prospects such as five-stars Isaiah Hamilton and Bamba Touray while leaning on the portal to fill the rest.
That plan only holds if Florida State can keep enough of its current talent in place, and that is never an easy job.
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Myron Rolles path has always been a little different from the usual football story, and now the former Florida State standout is bringing that background to the NFL Players Association. Rolle, a pediatric neurosurgeon and medical voice with deep ties to the game, has stepped into a strategic advisory role centered on player health, brain cognition and preventive care, giving him a new platform to shape how the league thinks about the long-term wellbeing of its athletes.
For Florida State fans, it is another reminder of how far Rolles career has traveled since his days in Tallahassee. His work will feed into NFLPA efforts, including the Mackey-White Health and Safety Committee, and it gives him a chance to help the sport from a different angle than the one he once played. Rolle called it a full-circle moment, and the appeal is obvious: few former Seminoles can speak with the same authority about both the game and the body that has to survive it. [Read more 🡒]
FSU Just Got Hit With A Brutal In-State Recruiting Warning
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The concern gets sharper when a prospect keeps visiting and still looks elsewhere. Kahmaree Crumity, one of the more watched in-state names in the 2028 cycle, recently trimmed his list and left Florida State out, a reminder that simply getting players on campus is no longer enough. For a program that needs to win more of those battles at home, moments like this raise bigger questions about credibility, relationships and whether the Seminoles are keeping pace in the NIL era. [Read more 🡒]
Three Florida State Legends Just Put The Program's Standard On Display
Florida States history has never been short on stars, but a recent ESPN look at the best players to wear certain jersey numbers offered a reminder of just how high the standard has been in Tallahassee. Deion Sanders, Charlie Ward and Peter Boulware all made the cut, a grouping that says as much about the programs tradition as it does about the individual brilliance each brought to the Seminoles.
Sanders remains one of the most electric players the school has ever produced, Ward paired rare poise with championship-level leadership, and Boulware became a defining force on defense with the kind of honors that follow a dominant career. Put together, they form a neat snapshot of Florida State excellence across eras, the sort of company that still shapes how the program measures greatness today. [Read more 🡒]
