Thought it was worth taking a look at some of the more highly touted transfers and seeing how they're doing this year. I grouped them into a few tiers, would love for others to add input:
Thriving and/or improving at new location:
Hailey Van Lith, TCU. Amazing what a new location has done for Hailey Van Lith, she's playing at an All American level and TCU's system is perfect for her game.
Raegan Beers, Oklahoma. She left the sinking ship of Oregon State and found a great home in Oklahoma. She's putting up All American numbers and has OU in the top 10. The real test begins in SEC play.
Lucy Olsen, Iowa. She found a great opportunity to be a go to player at a P4 program and is thriving at Iowa.
Deyona Gaston, Auburn. Her productivity has exploded at Auburn where she was getting lost in a deep front court at Texas.
Grace Van Slooten, Michigan State. She's putting up great numbers for a strong Michigan State team. I think this is a great fit for both parties.
Liatu King, Notre Dame. Scoring is down but she fits in perfectly at Notre Dame and is getting more exposure, putting up great numbers against a stronger schedule and is improving her draft stock.
A'jae Petty, Ohio State. Putting up good numbers for a much strong team at Ohio State and is fitting in well.
Saylor Poffenbarger, Maryland. She has similar numbers to her Arkansas days but Maryland is a much better team and Saylor is making a big impact.
Chance Gray, Ohio State. Much improved efficiency and scoring overall at Ohio State. Leaving Oregon to play in her home state was the right choice for her.
Teonni Key, Kentucky. Putting up really nice numbers after an underwhelming and injury plagued career at UNC.
Neutral, about the same productivity:
Kiki Iriafen, USC. She's doing well at USC and putting up good numbers but isn't solidifying herself as the #2 pick and is clearly option B after Juju Watkins. I don't think this is a "bad" transfer but I don't think this a slam dunk fit either.
Georgia Amoore, Kentucky. Another player who is doing fine but her efficiency isn't any better, and I don't think staying in college a 5th year is helping her draft prospects.
Aaronnette Vonleh, Baylor. Numbers are almost identical to what they were at Colorado a year ago.
Kaitlyn Chen, UCONN. Scoring is down but she performing well for UCONN and has been an efficient offensive player.
Deja Kelly, Oregon. Scoring is down, but I think she needed to leave UNC to have a fresh start and a chance to improve her game for the pros. I'm not sure she's making strides here at all but she has a lot of opportunity in Oregon.
Janiah Barker, UCLA. She joined a crowded front court but is carving out time and playing well. Numbers are similar to Texas A&M, but she's performing for the #1 team in the country now.
Underwhelming, probably should've picked a different destination or not transferred:
Laila Phelia, Texas. I think she's been injured but she just hasn't made a big impact at all in Austin yet. Texas has a loaded and deep roster,
Timea Gardiner, UCLA. Really talented PF with a smooth 3pt shot. She's doing fine this year but has talent to be an AA IMO, and is buried on a roster that's deep at the PF spot. Could be listed under neutral as well.
Talia von Oelhoffen, USC. Productivity is down and has the ball in her hands less than she did at Oregon State. Decent player but I don't think this was the best fit for her to improve her game and draft stock.
Maryam Dauda, South Carolina. She hasn't cracked the depth chart and is basically a 3pt specialist off the bench. Dawn develops bigs as well as anyone but I don't see her cracking the rotation this year or next with how strong SC is in the front court.
Shayeann Day-Wilson, LSU. Productivity has declined immensely despite getting playing time and facing a cupcake schedule.