As the basketball world turns its eyes to EuroBasket 2025, a handful of college players will play for their home countries. Find out which will suit up. Playing for your school is quite different than representing your country. In the eyes of many, wearing your national colors means more because of the pride involved. You can choose a school but cannot select your nationality in most cases.

College Basketball Players Populate EuroBasket 2025 Rosters

From August 29 to September 14, some of the best basketball players from the European continent will compete for their respective countries to see who’s the best. Players from club teams to NBA teams and American universities will take the court. The list of college athletes heading over before their respective schools appears to be a cross-section of schools and players.

Amsal Delalic, DePaul (Bosnia and Herzegovina)

The six-foot-seven forward averaged 3.8 points and two rebounds in 13.4 minutes at Pitt last season. Now, he heads to DePaul, looking for more starting opportunities.

Kerr Kriisa, Cincinnati (Estonia)

The six-foot-three point guard averaged 9.3 points during his three previous stops at Arizona, West Virginia, and Kentucky. He is an elite basketball distributor with 4.6 assists per game.

Henri Veesaar, North Carolina (Estonia)

Vessaar is a seven-footer at Arizona who can rebound (five rebounds per game last season). He also converts near the cup with a .596 career field goal percentage.

Miro Little, UC-Santa Barbara (Finland)

Six-foot-four guard that provides limited offense (3.5 ppg) but excellent passing (1.8 apg) off the bench between stops at Baylor and Utah. He will challenge for a starting spot at UCSB.

Ethan Price, Washington State (Great Britain)

Mid-major standout post player at Eastern Washington (10.5 ppg, 4.4 rpg). Showed excellent touch behind the arc (38.5%) during the first season in Pullman.

Joshua Uduje, San Jose State (Great Britain)

Swingman who posted a breakout season for Spartans (16.4 ppg). Possesses 132 games of college experience throughout his career at Coastal Carolina, Utah State, and San Jose State.

Fedor Zugic, Creighton (Montenegro)

Zugic is a sophomore shooting guard. Shot 40% from the three-point line. Played exclusively from a bench for the Blue Jays. Now, he could figure into the starting rotation.

Luka Bogavac, North Carolina (Montenegro)

A combo guard who will be playing his first season in the NCAA. Will be a 21-year-old freshman. Led Montenegro to a bronze medal in the 2002 U20 European Championship. As a result, Bogavac could give UNC a steady playmaker in the backcourt.

Andrija Grbovic, Arizona State (Montenegro)

Six-foot-nine power forward with excellent fundamentals. Headed to play first NCAA season at ASU.

David Mirkovic, Illinois (Montenegro)

Six-foot-nine stretch four, owning excellent touch from the perimeter. We need to adjust to Brad Underwood’s Illinois pacing methods. Size fits Big Ten physicality, but shooting will get him onto the court faster than anything else.

Szymon Zapala, Michigan State (Poland)

Bruising center with a combination of starting experience (60 games since 2023) and overall court time (1,299.2 minutes, per Basketball Reference)

Kenny Pohto, UC-Santa Barbara (Sweden)

He is a low-block scorer, coming off a breakthrough season (11.8 ppg, 6.2 rpg) during his first season as a Gaucho after three seasons at Wichita State.

Spain is the most recent EuroBasket champion. They defeated France 88-76 to capture their fourth title since 2009. Four countries serve as hosts this year. Cyprus, Finland, Latvia, and Poland will share the honors. Which NCAA player will make the most significant impact?