Miami transfer Paul Djobet has drawn interest from multiple ACC schools since entering the Transfer Portal

Trinton Breeze

Senior
Premium
Joined
Aug 21, 2024
Messages
2,526
Miami transfer small forward Paul Djobet has attracted attention from several Power Five programs, particularly within the ACC.



Djobet has attracted interest from ACC teams such as Louisville, Syracuse, Clemson, California, and Georgia Tech. He has also drawn attention from other Power Five schools, including Missouri, Utah State, Nevada, and Oregon State, according to Sam Kayser on Twitter.

Djobet is a 6-foot-7, 210-pound small forward from France. After...

Continue reading...
 
Last edited:
Advertisement
Miami transfer small forward Paul Djobet has attracted attention from several Power Five programs, particularly within the ACC.



Djobet has attracted interest from ACC teams such as Louisville, Syracuse, Clemson, California, and Georgia Tech. He has also drawn attention from other Power Five schools, including Missouri, Utah State, Nevada, and Oregon State, according to Sam Kayser on Twitter.

Djobet is a 6-foot-7, 210-pound small forward from France. After graduating from West Oaks Academy in Florida, he received offers from Kennesaw State, Chicago State, Northern Illinois, and others.

Djobert played for the Hurricanes for two years, during which he averaged 5.5 points, 2.6 rebounds, and 0.9 assists for the ACC program in the 2024-25 season.

Who Cares Judge Judy GIF by Lifetime Telly
 
Djobet is the kind of guy that if he would have gotten a legit redshirt and wasn't forced into big minutes before he was ready, could have developed nicely. That said, he brings energy, and solid physical tools to the table, so he should find a home as a bench guy. Don't expect him to be an offensive threat, ask him to play D and rebound. That's what he can do.
 
Djobet is the kind of guy that if he would have gotten a legit redshirt and wasn't forced into big minutes before he was ready, could have developed nicely. That said, he brings energy, and solid physical tools to the table, so he should find a home as a bench guy. Don't expect him to be an offensive threat, ask him to play D and rebound. That's what he can do.
His offense wasn't non-existent. Showed he had an ability to score more easily than the much higher-regarded Casey, Watson, et. al. did. I think, though, we saw his ceiling.

Decent defender, as you say. Played hard.
 
His offense wasn't non-existent. Showed he had an ability to score more easily than the much higher-regarded Casey, Watson, et. al. did. I think, though, we saw his ceiling.

Decent defender, as you say. Played hard.

I wouldn't mind Paul and Divine back, even if it's at the end of the bench as developmental players. They are both willing defenders who can already get downhill and are both a jumpshot away from being decent college players.
 
Back
Top