North Carolina’s first significant roster move under new coach Michael Malone came fast, and it came from inside the league.
Virginia Tech transfer guard Neoklis Avdalas has committed to North Carolina, giving Malone an early portal addition less than a week after taking over in Chapel Hill and handing the Tar Heels one of the more versatile ACC players available this spring. The commitment was confirmed Monday, April 13.
For a program trying to steady itself after a messy finish and a coaching change, the timing matters. Malone was hired by North Carolina on April 7 after the Tar Heels moved on from Hubert Davis, and the transfer portal opened the same day, leaving the new staff almost no grace period to ease into the job. North Carolina turned quickly to portal work, and Avdalas became the first major piece to say yes.
Avdalas is a 6-foot-9 guard from Greece who spent his freshman season at Virginia Tech and showed enough as a first-year player to draw broad interest once he entered the portal. He averaged 12.1 points, 4.6 assists and 3.1 rebounds per game for the Hokies, started every game, and was viewed as one of the better backcourt-sized playmakers available this cycle. Reports on his recruitment said programs including Kentucky, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma State, Florida State, St. John’s and Michigan were among those connected to him before he chose North Carolina.
That production did not come without real moments. Avdalas scored 33 points in a win over Providence in just his second college appearance, going 5-for-8 from 3-point range, and later posted 19 points and five assists against North Carolina on Feb. 28. For a player still adjusting to ACC basketball and American college life, those flashes were enough to keep NBA attention in the background while also making him a clear portal target once he became available. He had previously gone through the NBA draft process before withdrawing.
His overall freshman numbers also came with some rougher edges, which is part of why this move is interesting for both sides. Avdalas shot 38.6% from the field, 31.4% from 3-point range and 67% from the free throw line, while also averaging more than two turnovers per game. So North Carolina is not adding a finished product. It is adding a big playmaking guard with size, proven passing ability and a real upside, while betting that Malone’s staff can clean up the inconsistency and sharpen the efficiency.
The recruiting profile helps explain why UNC was aggressive. Avdalas was a former four-star prospect in the 2025 class and was ranked No. 11 among shooting guards by 247Sports in one report. Other coverage described him as a top-50 overall recruit and one of the top international signees in his class. Before coming to Virginia Tech, he had already built a resume in Greece, including experience in the country’s top league and appearances on a larger European stage.
For North Carolina, the addition also lands in the middle of a bigger reset. Malone is stepping into a program that blew a 19-point lead to VCU in the first round of the NCAA tournament and then made a sharp turn away from the usual Carolina coaching tree by hiring a former NBA championship coach with no prior UNC ties.
His contract runs six years and is worth about $50 million, according to reports on the hire. That raised the stakes immediately, because nobody in Chapel Hill is interested in a long, philosophical rebuild while Duke keeps existing a few miles away and reminding everyone how quickly the temperature rises there.
Avdalas does not solve every roster question by himself, but he does give the Tar Heels a large guard who can handle, create and play multiple spots, which is not exactly a bad place to start when a new coach is trying to put his fingerprints on a roster in a hurry.
The early portal calendar does not leave time for ceremony. It demands answers. On Monday, North Carolina got one from a 6-foot-9 ACC transfer with three years of eligibility remaining and enough skill to make Malone’s first real portal win look like more than just a warm-up.