Indiana’s roster is built around transfers, but Vaughn Karvala is the freshman who could force his way into the conversation.
Darian DeVries loaded up through the portal this offseason, and that group will go a long way toward shaping what Indiana looks like in 2026-27. Still, if the Hoosiers are going to make a real jump in Year 2 of the DeVries era, they’ll need some help from the incoming freshmen too. Karvala has already started to make a strong first impression in Bloomington.
The 6-foot-7, 190-pound forward arrives with plenty of buzz. He started his prep career at Oregon High School in Wisconsin, where he broke the school’s all-time scoring record, and finished at Bella Vista Prep in Arizona. This spring, he helped Bella Vista Prep win multiple championships, including the Nike EYBL Scholastic Conference Championship and the Chipotle Nationals at Hamilton Southeastern High School in Fishers, IN.
Karvala comes to Indiana as the No. 23 power forward and No. 62 overall player in the country in the 247Sports Composite Rankings. He committed to the Hoosiers on November 1 and signed on November 15.
What stands out right away is the athleticism. Karvala gets off the floor, moves with ease, and looks comfortable handling the ball in space. He can make plays above the rim on both ends, and that showed up plenty during his high school career.
He’s not just an athlete, though. Karvala can score, attacks the basket with an aggressive mindset, and has the range to stretch the floor. He’s confident in that part of his game, too.
“I know my athleticism catches the eye a bunch,” Karvala said when speaking to the media last week. “But I can still shoot it.”
For all the upside, there’s one obvious area he has to address if he wants to earn minutes as a true freshman: strength. Karvala said that’s been a major focus as he gets ready for the college game.
"The biggest thing for me is just putting on weight,” Karvala told Inside The Hall. “That’s my biggest thing, getting stronger, trying to play with these guys that are three, four years older than me. I have to get stronger, I have to get faster and everything.”
That’s the reality for freshmen in today’s college basketball landscape. Indiana’s roster reflects that, with six incoming transfers who bring multiple years of high-major experience. That makes it tougher for newcomers to break through right away.
Even so, Karvala gives Indiana something to work with. He has size, athleticism and a versatile offensive package, and if he keeps adding strength while continuing to impress the staff, he could earn a real role this season.
In Other News...
Indiana Just Landed A Massive National Spotlight Moment
Indiana has a fresh national-stage reminder that its recent rise has reached beyond Bloomington. ESPNs early 2026 ESPY nominations put multiple Indiana-connected figures in the spotlight, with former Hoosiers quarterback Fernando Mendoza drawing notice in two separate individual categories and the football program earning a place among the nations top teams. Add former IU basketball standout OG Anunoby to the list, and it becomes a pretty strong showing for an athletic department that has been pushing itself back into bigger conversations.
Mendozas double nomination speaks to how quickly his profile has grown, while the football teams presence in the Best Team field gives the program another platform after a perfect championship run. Indiana will have plenty of company among the nominees, with the category crowded by recent winners and title teams, but just getting into that mix says plenty about where the Hoosiers stand right now. The only real question is how much more hardware this burst of attention can bring back to Bloomington when the awards are handed out. [Read more 🡒]
Indiana Just Lost Another Experienced Arm To The Portal
Indianas pitching depth took another hit this offseason as an experienced arm moved on after one year in Bloomington. The left-handed reliever had already bounced from Delaware to Indiana, and he entered the portal after his latest stop with the Hoosiers, part of the wider roster churn that has become a constant for programs trying to keep veteran bullpen pieces in place.
His departure adds another layer to Indianas search for reliability on the mound, especially with a pitcher who had already logged a few seasons of college baseball and could give a staff some stability. Instead, he is headed to USC for his fifth collegiate season, while the Hoosiers are left to sort through another turnover point as the roster continues to take shape. [Read more 🡒]
