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Texas Has Contacted John Calipari in Coaching Search, Per Report

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UK Athletics

Last week, the Texas Longhorns fired head coach Chris Beard following a domestic violence arrest in December. As a tradition at this point, John Calipari’s name has been mentioned as a candidate. However, there may be some credible smoke this go round.

247 Sports National Recruiting Insider Travis Branham reports Texas has made contact with John Calipari “through back channels“. Additionally, Branham believes Calipari will jump at a “competitive offer”.

This report comes as Calipari is facing the most criticism of his Kentucky tenure. After being ranked in the preseason top five with a roster that features reigning National Player of the Year, Oscar Tshiebwe, the Wildcats are currently 10-5 and still searching for a marque win.

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However, the criticism is a culmination of the past two-and-a-half seasons. Prior to this season, the Wildcats notoriously lost to a 15-seeded Saint Peter’s team in the 2022 NCAA Tournament and went 9-16 in a shortened COVID season in 2021.

With the retirement of Mike Krzyzewski, John Calipari inherited the title of the highest-paid coach in college basketball, set to make $8.5 million this year. This salary is a part of a “lifetime contract” that Calipari signed back in 2019, which carries through the 2028-29 season. However, Calipari could step down in an ambassador role following the 2023-24 season and earn just shy of $1 million a year as an ambassador for the university.

While the contract offer was made to keep Calipari at Kentucky for the remainder of his career, Calipari could break it at any time with little to no repercussions financially. The contract features no buyout if Calipari were to retire or leave for another school, only a buyout for Kentucky if they chose to ever fire him.

With more than $53 million dollars left to be paid on his contract, it is highly unlikely he is ever fired. However, he could leave Texas for nothing, saving them a lot of money in their coaching search.

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This past summer during his radio rounds, Calipari talked about being at Kentucky but wanting to finish out his contract. “I’ve been here a long time for a coach at one place,” Calipari said. “I’m going to live out this contract. I’ve committed to it and I’m going to do it.”

Men's Basketball

National Reporter Matt Norlander Chooses Kentucky as Landing Spot for Star Forward Milan Momcilovic

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Photo via Imagn Images

The Milan Momcilovic sweepstakes is underway, with multiple teams involved in the No. 2 overall transfer player’s recruitment. It is believed that Kentucky and Louisville are the top candidates after his decision to pull out from the 2026 NBA Draft on Wednesday, May 27.

Along with the in-state rivals, Arizona and St. John’s are both very well still in the mix, but the Red Storm are slowly falling out of contention after landing Baylor’s Tounde Yessoufou.

On May 28, national reporter Matt Norlander cleared the air on CBS Sports’ Eye On College Basketball podcast, stating that he believes Kentucky will land Momcilovic by the end of the weekend or Monday.

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“My prediction right now is that Milan Momcilovic will go to Kentucky,” Norlander said. “My understanding is that decision is going to come in the next one, two, three days, four days max.”

He would go on to talk about the other top programs involved, stating why he thinks they will be working in an uphill battle in this bidding war.

“My forecast is that it’s Kentucky, but you know, we’ll see if Louisville can get in there,” he continued. “Arizona I don’t think has the money to contend, like I think Kentucky and Louisville just have more money to play with.”

For the worried members of the Big Blue Nation, this is certainly good news to be put out by one of the most trusted college basketball reporters at the national level.

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Going by this report and Adam Zagoria’s from NYT Sports, it shouldn’t be long until a commitment decision for Momcilovic is announced publicly.

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Men's Basketball

BREAKING: No. 2 Ranked Transfer Milan Momcilovic Removes Name From 2026 NBA Draft

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Kamil Krzaczynski | Imagn Images

Milan Momcilovic has officially removed his named from the 2026 NBA Draft and will return to college for his senior season.

Kentucky leads in his recruitment, followed closely by St. John’s, Louisville and Arizona. A backdoor to Iowa State is also still open.

The No. 2 ranked transfer would be a huge addition to Kentucky’s 2026-27 roster if he committed, averaging 16.9 points per game on 50.6/48.7/87.8 shooting splits last year. Funny enough, in the current world of college athletics that we live in, Momcilovic was responsible for eliminating the Wildcats from the NCAA Tournament, dropping 20 points in the Round of 32.

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He would go on to lose to Tennessee in the Sweet 16 with Iowa State, so at least we know that there’s some inner-hatred for a long-standing rival if he ends up a Wildcat.

He made the most three-point shots in Division I basketball and is a versatile 6-foot-8 wing, which would fit perfectly into Mark Pope’s offensive system. He completed workouts with the Chicago Bulls and Minnesota Timberwolves during the draft process.

Now, the bidding war for the top dog begins, with some of the most prestigious programs in the sport placing their bets on the star forward.

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Men's Basketball

BREAKING: Malachi Moreno Set to Return to Kentucky for Sophomore Season

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Tristan Pharis | KY Insider

One of the biggest pieces of the 2026-27 roster has officially made a decision. Malachi Moreno, the Georgetown, Kentucky native, will forgo the 2026 NBA Draft and return to the Wildcats for his sophomore season!

As time went on, Moreno proved through personal workouts and in-gym drills that he could play the game of basketball at the next level, eventually drawing interest from teams slated with the first 20 picks of the draft. The 7-foot big had eyes on him from teams such as the Atlanta Hawks, New York Knicks, Los Angeles Lakers and the Boston Celtics.

Ultimately, the former state champion and his camp felt that the deal offered from Mark Pope and his staff was just too sweet, with the idea of developing even further and potentially becoming a lottery pick in next year’s draft making logical sense for both sides.

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In his freshman season, Moreno averaged 7.8 points per game, 6.3 rebounds per game and 1.5 blocks per game, all on 58.2% shooting. As many assume, this was just a trial for what he can become on the court.

Videos circulated on social media of Moreno hitting jump shots from deep range, visibly looking stronger and more confident in his decision making. Although he decided to not participate in the NBA Combine, a strong indicator for his return to college, it would’ve certainly been interesting to see what type of statline he could’ve produced against the league’s future stars.

Nonetheless, Moreno is back in the blue and white for one more go at No. 9 with Pope and his new teammates. This time, he won’t be predicted as the third best center on team, or plagued with the freshman tendencies – he’ll be ready to start at the five from the moment he arrives in Lexington.

No. 24 is back.

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