Henri Veesaar has not announced where he will play basketball in 2026-27, and North Carolina is waiting on a decision that could change the ceiling of next season’s team. If he comes back to Chapel Hill, he would likely open the year as an early All-American candidate and the Tar Heels’ de facto top offensive option.
That is a big possibility because Veesaar was one of the most productive frontcourt players in the country last season, averaging 17.0 points and 8.7 rebounds while shooting 61 percent from the floor and 43 percent from three-point range. Alongside Caleb Wilson, he formed one of the best frontcourts in the country, and he grew into a full-fledged star after arriving at North Carolina from Arizona, where he spent two seasons as a reserve with the Wildcats.
North Carolina needs that kind of production as it moves into a new era. Former head coach Hubert Davis was let go after the Tar Heels fizzled out in the first round of the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive season, and the program settled on former NBA champion Michael Malone to lead it forward even though he has not been in college coaching since 2001 and has never held a head coaching position at the college level.
The uncertainty around Veesaar is sharpened by the churn around him. Most of his teammates from last season have already entered the transfer portal, declared for the NBA Draft or exhausted their eligibility, leaving Chapel Hill in transition while Malone starts to build a roster. If Veesaar stays, he gives North Carolina a centerpiece. If he leaves, the Tar Heels will have to find someone else to carry a team that has already lost its coach and much of its core.