July is about to get busy for Indiana basketball, and the Hoosiers are using June to make sure they’re ready for it.
IU has already held two open practices in Cook Hall as part of its prep for the FISU America Games in Lima, Peru, and those sessions offered a clearer look at what Darian DeVries has on hand heading into his second season in Bloomington. The roster still has questions, but it also looks a lot more functional than it did a year ago.
One of the biggest reasons for that is the frontcourt. Indiana went into last season with real issues around size and consistency inside, but Alabama transfer Aiden Sherrell and SMU transfer Samet Yigitoglu should change that fast.
Sherrell is expected to play the four, and he brings enough perimeter skill to stretch the floor while still being a problem around the rim. Yigitoglu, at 7-foot-2, gives the Hoosiers a true interior presence, one who can set hard screens and help on the offensive glass.
Indiana didn’t attack the boards much last season, but that should be different with Yigitoglu working in the paint. The only real question is depth, especially with incoming freshman center Clemens Sokolov not yet on campus.
Trent Sisley should be able to help at the four, and IU also added walk-on Ben Winker, who played at Cal State Fullerton last season.
The other major development from the open practices was Markus Burton looking like himself again. The former Notre Dame guard played only 10 games before ankle surgery, but in the two practices IU opened to the media, he looked fully recovered.
Burton’s game is built on pace, downhill pressure and a smooth midrange touch, and that part of his skill set was on display. The big task now is finding the right balance between scoring and setting up teammates, because the ball is going to be in his hands a lot.
Indiana’s staff has built around him, and the 2023 Indiana Mr. Basketball looks ready for that responsibility.
Darren Harris also stood out. He’s the one portal addition expected to be in the rotation who doesn’t come in with a proven high-major track record, after two seasons at Duke without consistent playing time.
Bloomington should give him a cleaner path to minutes. Harris has good size for a guard, gets his shot off quickly and has been knocking down shots this summer.
That said, the production still has to show up in games. He’s a career 30.8 percent 3-point shooter on more than 90 attempts, so the early signs are encouraging, but not yet the final word.
Trent Sisley, the lone returning scholarship player, has also made noticeable progress. His freshman year had its highs and lows.
He opened the season with a meaningful role off the bench, then faded from the rotation late as Tucker DeVries soaked up nearly all the minutes at the four. This offseason, Sisley has added 15 pounds, and that extra strength should help him handle Big Ten physicality better.
The biggest things to watch with him this month are defense and perimeter shooting. He struggled on the defensive end as a freshman, which is hardly unusual, but a year in the program should help.
He also has to shoot it better from deep after going 5-for-23 on 3s in Big Ten play last season.
Put it all together, and the roster just makes more sense. DeVries leaned hard on experience when he built last season’s team, and for a while it looked like that approach might work.
Indiana was in good shape for an NCAA tournament bid in mid-February before the late-season collapse knocked it out of the picture. There’s no promise next season will go cleaner, but on paper the 2026-27 group is better built.
Lamar Wilkerson’s graduation leaves a scoring hole that won’t be filled by one player, but Harris, Jaeden Mustaf and Bryce Lindsay each bring something different. The biggest upgrades should come at point guard and in the post.
Indiana got solid play from Sam Alexis at the five after the Reed Bailey experiment went sideways, but Sherrell and Yigitoglu should be a step up. And at point guard, Burton gives IU a proven scorer and playmaker, with career averages of 19.1 points, 3.8 assists, 3.4 rebounds and 1.8 steals in 69 games at Notre Dame.
That’s a major lift at one of the most important spots on the floor.
Before all of that, though, IU has an exhibition against Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf from Montreal on July 15 at 7 p.m. at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. A few days later, the Hoosiers head to Peru for the FISU America Games, where the schedule still hasn’t been finalized but is expected to be available to stream.
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