Washington may be closing in on its final opening for the 2026-27 roster, and the name drawing the most attention right now is Slovenian guard Urban Kroflic.
The Huskies have 14 players signed or committed for a possible 15-man group, and the program has already started practice as it tries to end a six-season NCAA tournament drought. Danny Sprinkle’s roster already blends returners, transfer additions, one Class of 2026 commitment and a handful of international pieces, and Kroflic appears to be the next target on the board.
According to various reports, Sprinkle is in Slovenia trying to land the 6-foot-6 combo guard. Washington has been tracking Kroflic for months, but the decision has been on hold while he plays for his native country in the FIBA U20 Eurobasket tournament. Another international addition from last season, Washington forward Nikola Dzepina, is also in the event, representing Serbia.
That setup could produce a championship-game showdown. Dzepina and Serbia face Spain in one semifinal, while Kroflic and Slovenia meet France in the other.
Washington is not alone in the chase. The Huskies are battling Iowa and Rutgers for Kroflic, though his play in the tournament may have widened the circle of teams paying attention.
Through five games, Kroflic has looked like one of the best players in the field. He’s averaging 16 points on 61.5% shooting, along with 6.8 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 1.6 steals per game. In Thursday’s quarterfinal win over Turkey, he posted 26 points, seven rebounds and five assists in 25 minutes.
That kind of production is part of what makes him such an intriguing fit for Washington. His size, passing and rebounding give him the kind of flexibility to play point guard, shooting guard or small forward, and he could share ball-handling duties with San Francisco transfer Ryan Beasley. That would mirror how Zoom Diallo, who transferred to Kentucky, and JJ Madaquit, who transferred to Arizona, worked together for the Huskies last season.
The question, as always with international prospects, is how smoothly that game will carry over to college basketball. But if it does, Sprinkle may have found another under-the-radar gem in international waters, much like 2026 NBA lottery pick Hannes Steinbach last season.
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Eernissees path stood out for the way it blended football with academic recognition, while Dean Kirkland and Jaxson Kirkland each added their own family-linked chapter to the Huskies history before moving on to the next level. Rogers story, meanwhile, remains one of the most complicated in the programs memory, with the article revisiting his rise, his attempts at professional comebacks and the long shadow that followed him afterward. [Read more 🡒]
