The Portsmouth Invitational Tournament is not only a place to discover new names. It is also a valuable checkpoint to verify which traits still translate outside the college season.
For scouts and clubs, the value is not just in the numbers, but in seeing which parts of a player’s profile remain convincing in a different setting.
These are six previously tracked prospects whose profile gained further support during PIT week.
Kowacie Reeves | Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets | 6’7 – 201 cm
Athletic wing with high-major pedigree and reliable perimeter scoring value. At PIT, he averaged 23 ppg on 56.8% FG and 42.9% 3P, reinforcing his transition impact, closeout attacking, and shooting profile. The scoring tools translated clearly, while half-court self-creation remains the main variable around his pro role.
Anthony Roy | Oklahoma State Cowboys | 6’5 – 196 cm
Confident scorer with deep range and real self-creation value. At PIT, he averaged 22.7 ppg and 4 made 3P per game, confirming the shotmaking aggression that makes him such an intriguing offensive profile. At the same time, 37.3% FG reinforced the usual concerns around efficiency and shot selection.
Rashaun Agee | Texas A&M Aggies | 6’8 – 203 cm
Physical forward with high-major experience and a strong frontcourt profile. At PIT, he posted 15.3 ppg, 9.7 rpg, and 69.2% FG, confirming the value of his physicality, interior touch, and rebounding presence. The production strengthened his case, while perimeter defensive translation still remains the key question.
Peter Suder | Miami (OH) RedHawks | 6’5 – 196 cm
Facilitating perimeter player with strong efficiency, floor spacing, and connective playmaking within structure. At PIT, he averaged 16.3 ppg, 3.3 apg, and 2 made 3P per game, again showing how stable his offensive game can be across contexts. He continues to look like a smart and efficient offensive piece, with enough handling and decision-making to keep expanding his offensive versatility at the next level.
Wyatt Fricks | Marshall Thundering Herd | 6’10 – 208 cm
Stretch big with inside-out utility and productive frontcourt value. At PIT, he averaged 14.3 points and 3.3 blocks per game, adding a stronger defensive dimension to a profile already built around scoring versatility and shooting range. The offensive skill set remains the main selling point, while physical upside and rebounding presence are still part of the evaluation.
Tavari Johnson | Akron Zips | 6’0 – 183 cm
Productive lead guard with scoring efficiency and playmaking control. In 19.3 minutes per game at PIT, he averaged 8.7 points while shooting 58.8% FG and 54.5% 3P, offering another efficient offensive sample in a smaller role. The size-related defensive limits remain part of the projection, but his offensive control and efficiency still look translatable.
This is the value of the service: not just identifying players early, but tracking them through the season and re-evaluating them when the context changes.
Full access to the NCAA database and all watchlists is available at the current membership price for one final week.
