Rutgers Has One Transfer Fans Need To Watch Closely In 2026-27

How Rutgers's new transfers could reshape their basketball season amidst challenges and expectations.

Rutgers brought in five transfers, and after a first look on the practice court last week, the picture is starting to come into focus. Some of these newcomers look like rotation pieces right away.

Others are still fighting to carve out a role. Here’s how the group stacks up by potential impact for the 2026-27 season.

At the top of the list is Christian Gurdak, the Virginia Tech transfer who looks like Rutgers’ best bet to anchor the middle. As a true freshman last season, he played in 31 games and started 10, putting up 5.6 points and 4.4 rebounds in 17.2 minutes per game while shooting 63.2 percent from the field and 69.6 percent at the line.

Rutgers is clearly hoping those numbers climb with a bigger role. Gurdak gives the Scarlet Knights size, rim efficiency, and high-major experience in the paint.

The offensive package is there. The question is whether the defense catches up, because that part of his game still needs work.

Even so, the former four-star and No. 19 center in the class of 2025 has the look of a player who can matter in a big way.

Will Sydnor comes next, and the early buzz around him is strong. He missed practice last week with a sprained ankle, but the expectation is that he’ll be a major piece this season.

Rutgers sees him filling a role similar to Dylan Grant’s from last year, only with more juice. Sydnor is supposed to bring more energy, more aggression, and a better ability to attack the rim.

That kind of skill set is exactly what Rutgers needs, and it’s why he stands out as one of the more intriguing additions in the group.

Darin Smith Jr. lands third, and his résumé is hard to ignore. The Central Connecticut State transfer was the Northeast Conference Player of the Year in 2025-26 after averaging 20.7 points and 5.4 rebounds while shooting 45.6 percent from the field, 37.6 percent from deep, and 89.8 percent from the free-throw line.

He piled up 621 points, the third-highest single-season total in CCSU history. Smith also scored 21 against Rutgers in a 67-54 CCSU win last season.

He was an All-NEC First Team and All-ECAC First Team selection, won USBWA Oscar Robertson Trophy National Player of the Week honors twice, and was a five-time NEC Player of the Week. The scoring is real, but the bigger question is whether that production translates against stronger competition.

Rutgers has seen that story go both ways before.

Rasheed Jones checks in fourth. The Coastal Carolina transfer started all 32 games last season and averaged 14.8 points, 4.6 rebounds, 2.9 assists, and one steal per game while playing 36.3 minutes a night.

He shot 39.8 percent from the field, 36.7 percent from three, and 80.7 percent from the foul line. Jones brings length, athleticism, and some defensive value, but the jump to the Big Ten is no small thing.

He’s lean, so the physical side of the league will be a real test. Even with his experience bouncing through junior college and multiple stops, he hasn’t played on a stage this big.

Dorin Buca rounds out the group. The 7-foot-2, 237-pound center from Perugia, Italy, spent last season at Kansas State, where he averaged 3.2 points, 3.3 rebounds, and 1.3 blocks in limited minutes on a team that finished 12-20 and won just three Big Twelve games.

Rutgers has size in Buca, but he looked behind Christian Gurdak and Gevonte Ware on the practice court last week, and Steve Pikiell also mentioned bringing in a couple more frontcourt players. That could make minutes hard to find.

Buca is 23 and in his final year at the college level, with the hope that things finally click before time runs out.

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Francis also sounds ready to take on more of a guiding role for the next wave of Scarlet Knights, especially as new faces settle in and learn the system. He spoke about helping newcomers adjust and praised the way his teammates have attacked the offseason, with early-morning and post-practice work showing a group that is not waiting around for progress to arrive on its own. [Read more 🡒]