Maryland junior forward Jake Layman is seriously considering skipping his senior year and entering the NBA Draft, sources close to the situation told InsideMDSports.com

Per the sources, Layman is undecided and still in the process of receiving feedback on his draft stock. A decision isn't expected to be made this week. The deadline for NCAA players to pull their name out of NBA Draft consideration is April 26th this year.

The 6-foot-9, 205 pound Massachusetts native averaged 12.5 points, 5.8 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game for the Terps this past season and was named a third-team all-Big Ten choice by the media. He’s ranked No. 37 overall in DraftExpress’s Top-100 board and No. 50 overall by ESPN’s Chad Ford. Both currently project him to be drafted in the second round.

RELATEDTerps Hoops Scoop: Who's Coming, Who's Going? (VIP -- FREE Trial)

Layman is expected to transition back to small forward in his senior season at Maryland due to the additions of McDonald’s All-American center Diamond Stone and former Georgia Tech big man Robert Carter if he returns. Layman played power forward almost exclusively last season for the Terps after beginning his career on the wing, his projected NBA position.

Layman started off the 2014-15 season strong, scoring in double-figures in his first 13 games leading up to conference play in January. He shot above 50 percent from the field in eight of those games. But once conference play rolled around, which coincided with the return of Dez Wells, Layman’s numbers dipped dramatically. He averaged just 10.9 points on 41.7 percent shooting in 20 games against Big Ten foes.

Scouts love Layman’s length, athleticism and shooting ability but his slender frame, ball handling ability and questions about his toughness remain question marks. He could return next year to address those weaknesses -- and possibly help the Terps make a deep NCAA Tournament run -- but for now his future remains undecided.