Indiana Athletic Director Scott Dolson isn’t hiding where he stands on Darian DeVries after a chaotic first year in Bloomington: he’s all in.
With DeVries entering his second season and Indiana coming off a missed NCAA Tournament, Dolson said the Hoosiers now have something they didn’t have a year ago - a real base to build from. That matters even more after IU tore down and rebuilt its 2026-27 roster through the transfer portal.
“I think going into year two, it almost feels like year one, to be honest with you,” Dolson said in an interview on Big Ten Network. “Year one, in reality, was such a quick turnaround - and it sounds like an excuse and I don't mean it to - but it was a little bit of a challenge, with the portal as crazy as it was, to get things solidified. I feel like now we've got a firm foundation to build on, and I'm super confident in the future.”
That foundation includes a heavy portal haul. Indiana landed the No. 5-ranked transfer class in the country, according to 247Sports, and brought in top-25 transfers Aiden Sherrell and Markus Burton as part of a seven-player class. The Hoosiers return only one scholarship player from last season, sophomore forward Trent Sisley, which makes the overhaul even more dramatic.
Dolson also pointed to the continuity on DeVries’ staff as another reason for optimism. Every assistant coach stayed in place this offseason, and Indiana added former Pacers scout Ryan Carr in a general manager-type role - a move Dolson sees as important in the current college basketball environment.
“We've got a foundation, a blueprint, just like we do with football and really all of our sports,” Dolson said. “And I think Darian really did a good job of assembling staff, evaluating throughout the year what are our needs. We added a GM towards the end of the year, which was a big move for us.”
Indiana’s recent tournament drought still hangs over the program. The Hoosiers haven’t played in the NCAA Tournament since 2023, and that means three straight seasons without hearing their name on Selection Sunday. Dolson made clear that both he and DeVries expect more than that moving forward.
“I think we put the foundation in,” Dolson said. “Certainly we all have, including Darian and I, probably more than anyone, the highest of expectations for our program, and when you fall short at the end, it is disappointing.”
The timing could work in Indiana’s favor, too. The NCAA voted this offseason to expand the tournament field from 68 teams to 76, a change that would have lifted Indiana into the field last season rather than leaving the Hoosiers among the “Last Four Out.” If approved, the new format would begin with the 2026-27 season.
Dolson, who has worked with Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti and other league athletic directors, said he hasn’t been strongly for or against expansion. His focus, he said, is on Indiana and making sure the Hoosiers put themselves in position no matter how the bracket looks.
“I've been kind of ambivalent on that. I haven't really been passionate one way or another,” Dolson said.
“We want to earn our way every year. Part of it is, is that you never want to take for granted making an NCAA Tournament, but you also want it to be an achievement that your program really strives to do.
Then once you get in there, certainly you can make noise and advance.
“I've really been so focused on our program that whatever the outcome is and wherever it ends up, and obviously with expansion, we just got to play that card as best we can. Still, it comes down to us controlling what we can control.”
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