Men's Basketball
If You Can’t Beat Him, Recruit Him: Kentucky Stars Expect Big Things From Mouhamed Dioubate
Otega Oweh and Brandon Garrison are excited on what Mouhamed Dioubate can bring to Kentucky
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Published
1 day agoon

Last season, Mouhamed Dioubate embodied everything Kentucky lacked to get over the hump.
The 6-foot-7 forward, then a sophomore at Alabama, helped lead the Crimson Tide to a three-game sweep of the Wildcats—twice during the regular season and again in the SEC Tournament.
Mark Pope’s first Kentucky team leaned on finesse, spacing and technical skill. Dioubate, meanwhile, was all grit, energy and relentless physicality—the very traits that made Nate Oats’ Alabama squad so dangerous.
In those three meetings, Dioubate routinely exposed Kentucky’s athletic limitations. He recorded eight points, eight rebounds and three assists in just 18 minutes during the first clash at Rupp Arena. In the return game in Tuscaloosa, he added four points and five boards in another 18-minute outing. And in the SEC Tournament rout, he tallied 13 points and eight rebounds in 22 minutes.
But it was Dioubate’s defense that proved most disruptive, particularly in Alabama’s second win. Kentucky star guard Otega Oweh, riding a 26-game double-digit scoring streak at the time, was held to just two points on 1-for-9 shooting.
“I know what he brings, and I didn’t like playing against him,” Oweh said Tuesday. The senior guard initially declared for the NBA Draft but ultimately returned for another season in Lexington.
Dioubate struck again in the SEC Tournament, limiting Oweh to just eight points—only the third time all season he failed to reach double digits. His effort earned him Alabama’s coveted “Hard Hat” award in both the Jan. 18 and March 14 victories over Kentucky.
Now, Oweh and Dioubate are teammates.
Dioubate averaged 7.2 points, 5.9 rebounds and 1.1 assists in just 16 minutes per game as a sophomore. His impact went beyond the box score, earning the respect of Brandon Garrison.
“I feel like me and him are going to connect really well,” Garrison said. “Physicality, great defender, fast, mobile—but I’d say really just his physicality is going to help this team out.”
Despite his success at Alabama, Dioubate didn’t feel fully appreciated. After the Tide were eliminated by Duke in the Elite Eight, he told the Tuscaloosa News, “I know what I deserve,” when asked if he hoped to start next season.
That may still be up for debate in Lexington, but what isn’t in question is how valued he is by his new coaches and teammates. They’ve already seen what he can do—up close and personally. And now, they’re just glad he’s on their side.
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Before his decision to transfer to Ole Miss, Travis Perry had long been considered one of Kentucky’s most iconic high school basketball players.
“I was devastated when Travis left,” Mark Pope told reporters. “I think he was on his way to becoming a legend here at Kentucky.”
As a junior at Lyon County High School in Eddyville, Kentucky, Perry broke the state’s all-time scoring record, eventually reaching 5,481 career points, a milestone that was just the beginning of his growing legacy.
He capped his historic high school résumé in 2024 by leading Lyon County to a state championship, earning Sweet 16 MVP honors, being named Kentucky’s Mr. Basketball and claiming his second Gatorade Kentucky Player of the Year award, solidifying his place among the greats to come out of the Bluegrass State.
As a freshman for the Wildcats, Perry took on a limited role, primarily serving as a shooter off the bench. Eventually, he decided he wanted something for his game that Kentucky wasn’t offering.
“Whenever I got in the portal, I felt that Coach Beard’s vision for me was exactly what I was looking for,” Perry said in his first media appearance as a Rebel.
Perry emphasized that one of the main reasons for choosing Oxford was the opportunity to grow beyond the label of a pure shooter, something he felt had limited him at Kentucky.
In his lone season as a Wildcat, Perry averaged 2.7 points, 0.8 rebounds and 0.6 assists in 9.8 minutes per game, and despite shooting efficiently, he rarely had plays run for him.
“Travis and I share a vision for his game that he’s much more than a shooter. He’s a guy who can play multiple positions,” Rebels head coach Chris Beard said.
For one of Kentucky’s most accomplished high school players, the move to Oxford is less about leaving home and more about finding the right fit to unlock his full potential.
With a fresh opportunity under Coach Beard, he’s focused on expanding his game, helping the team win and proving he’s more than just a shooter off the bench.
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Men's Basketball
Otega Oweh On Kentucky’s Incoming Roster: “I see 14-15 guys that can play”
Otega Oweh spoke on the Wildcats’ newfound depth following his much anticipated, senior year return to the program.
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Published
6 hours agoon
June 12, 2025
While last year’s team arguably brought life back into Rupp Arena for the first time in a long time, it wasn’t a flawless experience for Mark Pope’s first team.
Among the occasional ailment and plague, easily the most crippling were the injury issues that seemed to constantly plague the team. As a result, Pope was forced to dig to a level of depth on the roster that simply wasn’t quite ready for the roles they were forced to play.
Undoubtedly, every player did the best with the situation they were given — but when you find yourself three/four players down at once, it’s hard for any squad to turn things around.
But that doesn’t mean you can’t try and prevent it. According to Otega Oweh, Kentucky has done exactly that ahead of the 2025-26 season, fostering an extensive roster of talent from top to bottom.
Deeper than the Holler
During a recent stint of media availability following his official return to Lexington, Oweh said of the roster, “I see 14-15 guys that can play.”
“We have multiple guys at each position,” he continued. “I feel like those are the teams that do best in March and throughout the whole season. We have a lot of talent.”
“It’s gonna be really fun.”
With varying talent on every level and expectations slowly rising, this Kentucky team appears to be equipped for everything last season’s unit managed and more. Mark Pope’s complete roster overhaul – comprised of returnees, transfers from competitive schools, and freshman commitments – is built for March.
Transfer players like Denzel Aberdeen, who just won a championship at Florida, and Mohamed Dioubate, who played a crucial role in numerous March Madness runs with Alabama, lend themselves perfectly to the cause. Mixing veterans, those two and Oweh included, in with the team’s wide breadth of younger talent under the roof of one banner-based aspiration should, on the surface, create the perfect storm.
“Fun” looks to be a massive understatement.
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Blue Blood Showdown: Kentucky to Host North Carolina in 2025-26 SEC/ACC Challenge
Tar Heels set to visit Rupp Arena for the first time since 2014-15
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Published
21 hours agoon
June 11, 2025
It will be a clash of blue bloods at Rupp Arena as Kentucky hosts Hubert Davis and North Carolina in the 2025-26 SEC/ACC Challenge, marking the Tar Heels’ first visit to Lexington since the 2014-15 season.
Kentucky’s nonconference schedule already featured several marquee matchups, and now adds even more firepower with one of the sport’s premier programs heading to Rupp Arena.
Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports was first to report the matchups Wednesday afternoon, listing the full slate of SEC/ACC Challenge games:
2025 SEC/ACC Challenge Games
- North Carolina at Kentucky
- Florida at Duke
- Virginia at Texas
- NC State at Auburn
- Clemson at Alabama
- Louisville at Arkansas
- Oklahoma at Wake Forest
- SMU at Vanderbilt
- Texas A&M at Pitt
- Mississippi State at Georgia Tech
- Miami at Ole Miss
- LSU at Boston College
- Virginia Tech at South Carolina
- Tennessee at Syracuse
- Missouri at Notre Dame
- Georgia at Florida State
Kentucky traveled to Clemson for last season’s challenge, falling to the Tigers 70-66.
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