Tennessee basketball has its full roster and held its first preseason practice on Sept. 23 as the 2025-26 season approaches.
Coach Rick Barnes, who is entering his 11th season, has nine newcomers on the roster along with a handful of key returners from UT’s second straight Elite Eight team.
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Here is a first impression from each of the 13 players competing for minutes:
Amaree Abram
Abram looks like a high-floor, low-ceiling guy. Tennessee can count on him to be a three-and-D shooting guard and his experience will make sure he’s getting minutes.
Nate Ament
The most physically gifted player that Barnes has had at Tennessee, but the freshman forward doesn’t act like a superstar outwardly and that is an attribute that can take a team up a notch just like his immense basketball talent.
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Bishop Boswell
Where Boswell fits is hard to figure out. He could get lost in the shuffle a bit on a roster with a lot of talented guard options, but defense gives him a shot to get on the court.
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DeWayne Brown II
Brown is in a deep group of old post players but he’s commanding attention now by hustling, playing hard and showing good basketball IQ.
Ethan Burg
Burg is clearly still learning Tennessee’s playing style, which is valid since he arrived on Sept. 8. There are moments that make Burg look like he might be the best two-guard option by March because he’s athletic and can score but he has to cut down turnovers as he learns.
Jaylen Carey
Carey needs to be an imposing force offensively for Tennessee, but the little things like screening and effort will dictate his minutes at forward.
J.P. Estrella
Tennessee’s early X-factor. Estrella is the team’s best post scorer and he has the ability to play the four or the five well.
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Amari Evans
Evans screams future fan favorite for his defense and approach to the game at guard. There will be Jahmai Mashack comparisons eventually, but his offense is probably more developed than Mashack’s was as a freshman.
Ja’Kobi Gillespie
Gillespie should be Tennessee’s leading scorer. He’s cut from the cloth of the current high-level point guards in college basketball as an elite shooter who can score 30 points in any game.
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Troy Henderson
Henderson has that savvy and moxie that make a smaller guard into a big presence. He’s going to have a role between the two guard spots.
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Clarence Massamba
Massamba is as athletic as he is raw. The former gives him future upside, while the lack of polish makes a defined role as a freshman a question mark at guard.
Felix Okpara
Okpara finished last season playing his best basketball and he has picked back up well. The senior forward is stronger, still elite defensively and should be a better version yet.
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Cade Phillips
Phillips is the ultimate flex player for the Vols given he can play the three, four or five and can defend any spot. He probably is the leader of this team.
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Mike Wilson covers University of Tennessee athletics. Email him at michael.wilson@knoxnews.com and follow him on X @ByMikeWilson. If you enjoy Mike’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that will allow you access to all of it.
This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel: Tennessee basketball: What to know about Vols’ roster in 2025-26