Almost exactly a year ago, Wesley Yates III left the University of Washington basketball team after a lower leg injury forced him to miss his entire freshman season.
He'd met with new coach Danny Sprinkle, they had a nice conversation, but it wasn't enough to prevent from entering the transfer portal.
The 6-foot-4 Yates would remain loyal to his cousin Quincy Pondexter and Will Conroy, former Husky assistant coaches and superlative players, who took jobs at USC on Eric Musselman's staff, and he joined the Trojans. He had advocated on social media for the UW to hire Conroy as the next Husky coach.
All went well for him in Los Angeles with Yates averaging 14.1 points and 2.9 rebounds per game, while shooting 47.8 percent overall and 43.9 from 3-point range.
Maybe too well.
On Saturday, Yates entered the transfer portal proving even family connections can't get in the way of today's player in testing the market, likely responding to the highest bidder and making a move.
NEWS: USC's Wesley Yates will enter the transfer portal, CAA Basketball's NIL division told ESPN. Yates becomes one of the best available wings in the portal, after averaging 14.1 points per game, shooting 44% for 3. Will have a "do not contact" tag. pic.twitter.com/tVq6oEsp3k
— Jonathan Givony (@DraftExpress) April 5, 2025
The guard reportedly has a "do not contact" directive on his portal application, meaning someone quite possibly negotiated a big-money carrot up front for him to encourage Yates to move on and and join his third college basketball program.
Don't hold your breath that it was the Huskies trying to summon him back to Montlake in order that he would get to play in some games at Alaska Airlines Arena for the home side.
In Los Angeles, they were bemoaning Yates' portal departure as a serious blow to Trojans basketball and coming totally unexpected.
People had envisioned him playing alongside touted incoming freshmen Desmond Claude and Alijah Arenas to form a high-powered USC backcourt.
It's possible Yates was discouraged after playing for a 17-18 Trojans team that expected to be much better with its new coaching staff.
At least he didn't finish in last place in the Big Ten Conference, the fateful outcome for his first former team.
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