Kentucky finds new life in the transfer portal with international forward commitment welcome
Kentucky finds new life in the transfer portal with international forward commitment
Mark Pope and Kentucky finally caught a break in the transfer portal with the commitment of a highly sought after international big.
After a painfully quiet week on the recruiting front, Kentucky swung on the recruiting front in a way that nobody fully expected. As news regarding forward Justin McBride ground to a complete halt, Mark Pope pivoted behind the scenes to the international front for frontcourt help.

BBN, welcome Ousmane N’Diaye to Lexington. Per KSR, the Senegalese big has officially committed to Kentucky!
Above all else (a win is a win at this point), N’Diaye will bring much-needed balance to Kentucky’s current roster makeup as a compliment to the (expected to return) Malachi Moreno down low. He’s a stretch big that can score on multiple levels, and should click into Pope’s offensive system with ease.
Ousmane N’diaye is a Perfect System Fit
As a member of Vanoli Cremona in the LBA, the now-Cat averaged 10 points and nearly seven rebounds per contest. He’s appealing on both sides of the basketball, but the big’s ability to dribble and move like a guard is likely what drew the Kentucky staff to him above all else.
Given Coach Pope’s longtime tendency to run his offense through bigs – N’Diaye, at six-foot-11, is an especially compelling choice – this addition should help push his system in Lexington back to the efficiency it bore prior to this past season.
What’s more? On an average of five attempts per game, N’Diaye shot just above 32% from distance. Not outlandish, sure, but for a big that can blow right past a defender just as easily as he can shoot over them?
Well, it changes the Cats’ outlook entirely, especially on offense. The big also nabbed about one steal per contest, too, suggesting a well-rounded professional game that should have no problem translating to the collegiate level.
Transitioning to College Basketball
International players can prosper or falter when making the jump to the NCAA but, at their best, a team like Illinois can make a Final Four almost entirely due to talent from that path.
That’s clearly what Kentucky is banking on with this recruiting win and, whichever way you spin it, it’s nice for the BBN to be able to celebrate a win during a week defined by worry and controversy.
Pope and his third-year roster are getting back on track. While not fully formed, you’d be hard pressed to find a forward with higher upside to click into the frontcourt as it currently stands.
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