Utah Basketball Lands Commitment From JUCO C/F Josh Hayes
SALT LAKE CITY—Alex Jensen and his Utah basketball program have landed a commitment from Northwest Florida State College big man Josh Hayes.
Coach Raphael Chillious led the way in this recruitment, and the Runnin’ Utes added his pledge on Wednesday. The 6-foot-10 Hayes adds some size and length to the roster, as well as some versatility.
Utah has landed the commitment of JUCO prospect Joshua Hayes (@joshuahayes53), his agent Larry Hall of @HofSportsGroup tells @On3sports.
The 6-foot-10 power forward/center from Northwest Florida State averaged 9.9 points and 5.2 rebounds per game this season, while shooting… pic.twitter.com/JdtvKQPNKQ
— Joe Tipton (@TiptonEdits) July 2, 2025
RELATED: Utah Basketball: Alex Jensen’s Staff Built, Focus Shifts To Recruiting
This is a valuable addition for Utah, as Hayes brings much-needed size and length to the roster. At 6-foot-10, Hayes has the length to play forward and center, which helps the depth in the frontcourt. He’s a good athlete but is lean at 220 pounds, and will need to add some mass as he moves up to the Big 12.
Hayes averaged 9.9 points and 5.2 rebounds this past season, while shooting 57.8% from the field, and connected on 9-of-19 shots from 3-point range. On the defensive end, Hayes averaged 1.4 blocks per game.
After starting his career at Appalachian State, Hayes transferred to Northwest Florida State this past season. He’ll join the program this summer and have two seasons of eligibility remaining.
Josh Hayes 6’ 10 forward Recruit is open!!!
24-25 season highlights
Sophomore Juco Transfer
Northwest Florida State pic.twitter.com/fCQhtKnZJl
— Joshua Hayes (@joshuahayes53) March 16, 2025
Hayes joins Jacob Patrick, Elmeri Abbey, Babacar Faye, Don McHenry, Seydou Traore, Jakhi Howard, Elijah Moore, James Okonkwo, Kendyl Sanders, and Terrence Brown as Utah’s offseason additions.
That brings Utah’s roster to a total of 14 players, leaving one open spot. The Runnin’ Utes have added some solid pieces, and Hayes addresses a need in the frontcourt. Now that the roster is mostly complete, the focus shifts to actual practice.
Jensen and his staff have been rebuilding the program from the ground up. That begins by establishing an identity, and for Utah, that identity will start on the defensive end.
“I want to build something, I don’t want to build a new team every year, but build some continuity that way,” Alex Jensen said in an interview with NCAA reporter Andy Katz.
“Watching Houston make their run, Kelvin [Sampson] does such a good job, he gets his guys to play so hard,” Jensen shared. “That’s something the assistants I’ve hired talk about. That’s who we measure ourselves to and we’ve got to get kids that are tough like that and compete like them.”
In Jensen’s vision, the Runnin’ Utes will be a disciplined, gritty, tough, defensive-minded program. Think closeouts with purpose. Rotations with urgency. Contests without fouling. Utah isn’t going to outgun everyone—they’ll out-tough them.