It’s official: five-star Trey McKenney, and four-stars Winters Grady and Oscar Goodman, have all signed with Michigan during the early signing period for the 2025 class:
Three recruits in the 2025 class have officially signed with the Michigan Wolverines during the early signing period — five-star guard Trey McKenney from Flint, Michigan, four-star guard Winters Grady from Napa, California, and four-star forward Oscar Goodman from New Zealand.
The commitments for all three players had previously been reported, with McKenney committing earlier in November , and Grady and Goodman committing within five days of each other in October.
“I am excited to have Trey, Winters, and Oscar join our program,” head coach Dusty May said in a press release. “All three are highly competitive players who come from great families. Each of them has a unique skill set which will allow us to continue playing the way we believe is best. They’ve all been coached, and developed, by some of the most respected and accomplished teachers of the game. We look forward to them getting to Ann Arbor.”
At 6-foot-4, McKenney is the first five-star to commit to Michigan under May. He’s everything you’d want in a modern-day guard — he can score at all three levels, is money in transition, can dominate undersized guards, and is truly the straw that stirs the drink on offense thanks to his passing ability and the sheer attention opposing defenses give to him.
As I touched on after his commitment, May landing McKenney has local and national implications, and does wonders for the program’s recruiting prowess in the near and immediate future.
“Trey embodies everything it means to be a Michigan Man,” said May. “He comes from a family of strong faith and high character. He has been taught how to play the game the right way and values competition. His versatility as a big, strong guard is going to be a tremendous asset to our program.”
Goodman currently plays for the NBA’s Global Academy in New Zealand. Representing his home country, he shined at the 2024 FIBA U17 World Cup where he averaged 17 points, 6.3 rebounds and three assists per game. He earned honors on the tournament’s All-Star Five team.
“Oscar arrives in Ann Arbor as an accomplished international player and prospect, who was just named to the New Zealand senior national team,” May said. “He comes from a tight-knit family that values everything that we want our program to be about. His training at the NBA Academy, as well as his eagerness and ability to compete, will allow him to affect our program positively from day one.”
Winters is the last of the three to officially sign, even though he was the first to commit to the class. He’s the seventh-highest ranked player from the state of California, recently averaging nearly 20 points per game on the Adidas 3SSB Circuit playing for Jalen Green Elite. After playing high school basketball in Oregon, Grady transferred to Prolific Prep, the same academy Nimari Burnett attended .
“Winters is a flat-out competitor,” May said. “He is tailor-made for how we want to play at Michigan. His ability to shoot the ball is one of the reasons he’s an ideal fit. His versatility and physicality, on both the offense and defense end, will allow him to be a factor for us right away. The more we dug in and got to know him and his family, the more we realized that this a guy that we need to have in our program.”
There’s a lot to like about this trio, who we at Maize n Brew are excited to cover. Until then, we’ll have breakdowns on what to expect from each player and keep you filled in on what they’re up to before they head to Ann Arbor.