Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsFriday, June 19, 2026

Oregon basketball commit Lin Wei is immediately eligible, and makes Ducks even better

CHINA-URUMQI-BASKETBALL-CBA LEAGUE-PLAYOFFS-XINJIANG VS NANJING (CN)
CHINA-URUMQI-BASKETBALL-CBA LEAGUE-PLAYOFFS-XINJIANG VS NANJING (CN)
Ricky O'Donnell
Ricky O'Donnell has covered basketball at all levels for more than a decade at SB Nation. He’s currently the Associate Director of Programming.

The Oregon Ducks already felt like a men’s college basketball sleeper in both the Big Ten race and the wider national picture entering the 2025-26 season. Oregon returns its two leading scorers — point guard Jackson Shelstad and center Nate Bittle — from a 25-win team a year ago that won a game in the NCAA tournament. On Thursday, the Ducks’ roster got even stronger with a late addition who was playing professionally earlier this year.

Chinese guard Lin Wei committed to the Ducks, his agency announced. The 6’2 guard played this past season in the Chinese Basketball Association for the Nanjing Monkey Kings, averaged 21 points, five assists, 3.3 rebounds, and 1.4 steals in 34 games. Wei is 21 years old, and he’s immediately eligible for play for Oregon this upcoming season.

Wei played alongside former college stars Kendric Davis (SMU, Memphis), Tacko Fall (UFC), Jalen Harris (Nevada), and T.J. Leaf, the former UCLA star who became a first-round NBA Draft pick in 2017. He spent the summer playing hitting the international circuit at events like Adidas EuroCamp, and garnered enough interest to be selected No. 8 overall in the G League Draft by the Texas Legends.

He measured at 6’1 ¾“ barefoot, 191 lbs with a 6’2” wingspan and 7’11 ¼” standing reach, according to Jon Chepkevich of Draft Express. He flashed pull-up shooting ability and quickness off the bounce during his run at Eurocamp this year. You can watch his highlights here:

College basketball is often all about guard play, and Oregon suddenly has a loaded backcourt. Shelstad is one of the best guards in the sport, and should be primed for a fantastic junior year with his gifted creation ability off the dribble. TJ Simpkins also transfers in from Elon as a 6’5 guard who can get to the foul line on offense and likely depends the other opposition’s best ball handler. Now Wei comes in as another shot-creating guard who put up big numbers against solid competition as a pro in China. When you pair that perimeter with a stud big man like Bittle, Oregon suddenly looks really good.

Wei’s arrival to Oregon marks the first time a former Chinese pro has ever played college basketball. He follows fellow Chinese star Yang Hansen, the big man who was drafted No. 16 overall by the Portland Trail Blazers. We named Hansen has one of Cooper Flagg’s five biggest challengers for 2026 NBA Rookie of the Year.

I think Oregon looks like an Elite Eight team right now with Wei on board. The Ducks are going to be tested every night in the Big Ten. It’s going to be a great college season.

NBA
Caleb Wilson is chasing greatness in the NBA Draft, and he’s ready to save your franchiseCaleb Wilson is chasing greatness in the NBA Draft, and he’s ready to save your franchise
NBA

Inside the making of Caleb Wilson, the NBA Draft’s ultimate upside swing

By Ricky O'Donnell
Men's College Basketball
College basketball top-25 rankings for men’s 2026-27 season updated after NBA Draft withdrawalsCollege basketball top-25 rankings for men’s 2026-27 season updated after NBA Draft withdrawals
Men's College Basketball

Here’s our updated men’s college basketball top-25 for next season.

By Mike Rutherford
Men's College Basketball
St. John’s massive NIL payment revealed after Tounde Yessoufou chooses transfer portal over NBA DraftSt. John’s massive NIL payment revealed after Tounde Yessoufou chooses transfer portal over NBA Draft
Men's College Basketball

The money in men’s college basketball is stunning right now.

By Ricky O'Donnell
NBA
NBA Draft college withdrawal deadline winners and losers after 2026’s biggest decisionsNBA Draft college withdrawal deadline winners and losers after 2026’s biggest decisions
NBA

Here are the biggest winners and losers from the 2026 NBA Draft college withdrawal deadline.

By Ricky O'Donnell
Men's College Basketball
The 10 biggest NBA Draft stay or go decisions remaining before the deadlineThe 10 biggest NBA Draft stay or go decisions remaining before the deadline
College Football
NAACP urges black athletes to reject recruiting in racially gerrymandered statesNAACP urges black athletes to reject recruiting in racially gerrymandered states
College Football

The NAACP is asking athletes to take up the fight for voting rights.

By James Dator

Comments
Loading comments
Getting the conversation ready...