Baylor Basketball

Baylor Adds Midseason Transfer, James Nnaji, to Help Bolster Big Man Rotation

Baylor’s men basketball has received a commitment from Nigerian center James Nnaji.
December 24, 2025
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Photo by Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

Baylor men’s basketball has received a commitment from Nigerian center James Nnaji, a 7-foot-0, 250-pound big man who will be a midseason transfer. He is expected to be able to play for the Bears either in their final non-conference game on Dec. 29 or at the start of the second semester in January.

It’s an unprecedented move considering that Nnaji was selected 31st overall by the Detroit Pistons in the 2023 NBA Draft. Nnaji’s draft rights were traded to Charlotte, as he played on the Hornets’ Summer League Team. In 2024, his rights were traded to the New York Knicks, along with star big man Karl-Anthony Towns, as part of a three-team trade. Nnaji played on the Knicks’ Summer League team in 2025.

Nnaji, however, has never played in an NBA game, but is another case study in pushing back the curtain on the NCAA’s powers, especially after it was determined that G-League players could return to play college basketball.

As Yahoo Sports put it, “The trend is a byproduct of the NCAA’s definition of amateurism loosening as college athletes have gained economic freedom. The line between pro and college athlete has blurred with the NCAA permitting athletes to profit from NIL deals.”

Nnaji spent time with FC Barcelona from 2020 to 2024 before being loaned to Girona of the Spanish Liga ACB, where he averaged 5.3 points, 4.1 rebounds and 0.8 blocks per game across 14 games.

He then finished the 2024-2025 season with Merkezefendi of the Basketbol Super Ligi in Turkey, averaging 7.5 points, 4.0 rebounds and 1.3 blocks in eight contests.

Baylor was forced to explore a midseason transfer because it had just one healthy big man on the roster, senior Caden Powell. Nnaji, who boasts a 7-foot-7 wingspan, should be another impactful big man as conference play heats up.

High Point transfer center Juslin Bodo Bodo was injured in the offseason and is now expected to redshirt. True freshmen bigs Maikcol Perez (ACL) and Mayo Soyoye (redshirt) are both out for the year as well.

Nnaji is just 21 years old, and will have four years of eligibility. He has no relation to former Arizona star and current Denver Nugget Zeke Nnaji.

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Baylor Adds Midseason Transfer, James Nnaji, to Help Bolster Big Man Rotation

11,858 Views | 39 Replies | Last: 28 min ago by Crawfoso1973
Hotsauce
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boognish_bear said:

Reading through the comments…the haters are coming out.

I can't really say that I blame them... if it happened with another team besides BU I would be thinking this doesn't really sound right.

Don't hate the playa, hate the game!
BluesBear
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boognish_bear said:




Let's be real. 1 player isn't going to immediately take this team from .500 middle of the pack conference team to the Top of the pile. Just isn't happening.
Bearsalwayswin
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you wanna bet?
Crawfoso1973
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If he was another guard or wing player I would agree. But Nnaji fills such a vital need for our team: rim protection, rebounding, setting screens, 5 hard fouls to give. His presence will create a cascade effect in our rotation, allowing Rataj and Skillings to play to their strengths on the wing instead of in the post. Carr and Tounde will look that much bigger going against opposing guards instead of opposing post players. It's kind of like in football when you bolster your offensive line your skill position players suddenly look so much better. By platooning Nnaji with Powell who is playing at an elite level, we will have a true post player in the game at all times instead of mixing/matching with Rataj and Skillings. With the Powell/Nnaji combo anchoring the 40 minutes in the post the rest of our team will look so much better especially defensively and on the glass. I also don't think integrating him will be too hard because we won't be featuring him offensively. Just setting screens and getting dunks on lobs and offensive rebounds.
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