Kentucky Basketball 2022-23 Roster Tracker: New Transfer Portal Options

On3 imageby:Tyler Thompson03/25/22

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Stay-or-Go season is upon us and there is never a dull moment as players consider their futures and Kentucky’s staff tries to assemble next year’s roster. Yesterday, we debuted our 2022-23 Roster Tracker. Today, two new names popped up as potential additions from the transfer portal: LSU guard Xavier Pinson and Texas Tech guard Terrence Shannon Jr. You’ll find info on them at the bottom of this post.

Important Dates/Deadlines

  • April 24: NBA Early Entry Deadline
  • May 1: Transfer Portal deadline (Date by which players must tell their school they’re leaving)
  • May 16-22: NBA Draft Combine
  • June 1: NCAA “Stay or Go” Deadline
  • June 23: 2022 NBA Draft

Staying

Daimion Collins (F, Fr.) – On March 20, 247 Sports’ Travis Branham reported that Daimion Collins will return to Kentucky for a sophomore season. On his final radio show of the season, John Calipari said he believes Collins can be “one of the best players in the country” next year because “the things he does, normal players can’t do.”

  • 2021-22 season: 2.9 PPG, 2.0 RPG, 0.7 BPG, 7.5 MPG

Leaving

Dontaie Allen (G, R So.) – Allen announced he was entering the transfer portal on March 24, ending his career at Kentucky. In two seasons, he averaged 3.9 points off 35.8% shooting and 1.4 rebounds in 10.5 minutes per game.

  • 2021-22 season: 2.2 PPG, 1.2 RPG, 6.4 MPG
  • 2020-21 season: 5.4 PPG, 1.5 RPG, 14.0 MPG

Davion Mintz (G, Gr.) – Mintz used his sixth year of eligibility to return to Kentucky for the 2021-22 season. From here, he will explore professional options.

  • 2021-22 season: 8.5 PPG, 2.2 RPG, 1.8 APG, 24.7 MPG
  • 2020-21 season: 11.5 PPG, 3.2 RPG, 3.1 APG, 30.7 MPG

Kellan Grady (G, Gr.) – Grady was a grad transfer this season and has no eligibility remaining. Kentucky’s third-leading score will now pursue his professional options.

  • 2021-22 season: 11.4 PPG (44.6% FG, 41.7% 3PT FG) , 2.1 RPG, 1.3 APG, 32.9 MPG

Coming In

Chris Livingston (SF, HS) – The five-star small forward committed to Kentucky on Sept. 15, 2021, and signed on Nov. 11. Livingston plays for Oak Hill Academy, whose season will conclude at the 2022 GEICO Nationals in Florida (March 31-April 2). He is one of three finalists for the 2021-22 Gatorade National Boys Basketball Player of the Year award. He and Wallace will represent Kentucky at the McDonald’s All-American Game on March 29 and the Jordan Brand Classic on April 15.

  • 2021-22 season (high school): 18.2 PPG, 9.1 RPG, 3.9 APG, 1.9 SPG

Cason Wallace (CG, HS) – The five-star combo guard from Dallas, TX committed to Kentucky on Nov. 10, 2021, and signed on Nov. 11. His high school career at Richardson recently came to an unfortunate end in the Texas state championship quarterfinals, when Richardson fell to McKinney High School 54-52 on a game-winning bucket. He and Wallace will represent Kentucky at the McDonald’s All-American Game on March 29 and the Jordan Brand Classic on April 15.

  • 2021-22 season (high school): 19.9 PPG, 7.4 RPG, 6.1 APG

Unknown

Keion Brooks (F, Jr.) – In his junior season, Brooks was Kentucky’s fourth-leading scorer and started 33 games. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 10.8 PPG, 4.4 RPG, 24.5 MPG
  • 2020-21 season: 10.3 PPG, 6.8 RPG, 23.6 MPG
  • 2019-20 season: 4.5 PPG, 3.2 RPG, 15.1 MPG

CJ Fredrick (SG, R. Jr.) – Fredrick underwent surgery to repair a left hamstring injury in November and spent the 2021-22 season rehabbing. By the end of the season, he was occasionally seen shooting threes during Kentucky’s warm-ups.

Bryce Hopkins (F, Fr.) – Hopkins played in 28 of Kentucky’s 34 games this season. His best performance came against LSU when he scored 13 points and pulled down 4 rebounds in 16 minutes to help the Cats beat the Tigers without TyTy Washington or Sahvir Wheeler. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 2.1 PPG, 1.4 RPG, 6.4 MPG

Pilgrim’s Insider Notes: Hopkins has been a rumored transfer since the start of the spring semester and the ongoing expectation has been that he will explore his options in the portal. A final decision could come sooner rather than later.

Shaedon Sharpe (SG, Fr.) – Sharpe enrolled at Kentucky in January. Prior to reclassifying, he was the No. 1 recruit in the 2022 class. When he arrived in Lexington, Sharpe said his plan was to practice with the team this season and play next season. In February, John Calipari ended speculation that Sharpe would play in 2021-22 but doubled down on him being on next year’s squad. On his final radio show of the season, Calipari said he sat down with Sharpe and his family and they decided it would be in his best interest to test the NBA Draft waters to receive feedback, but there has been no official announcement. He is currently No. 6 in ESPN’s latest NBA Mock Draft.

Jacob Toppin (F, Jr.) – Toppin was Kentucky’s seventh man this season, appearing in all but five games. He transferred to Kentucky from Rhode Island in 2020 and received a waiver to play immediately. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 6.2 PPG, 3.2 RPG, 17.7 MPG
  • 2020-21 season: 5.2 PPG, 3.5 RPG, 17.1 MPG

Oscar Tshiebwe (C, Jr.) – Oscar is the frontrunner for National Player of the Year and had a record-setting season in Lexington. He led Kentucky in scoring (17.4), rebounding (15.1), steals (1.8), and blocks (1.6). Oscar is currently projected to be a mid-second-round pick in the NBA Draft by ESPN. His decision is complicated. If he returns to Kentucky and his NIL situation is resolved (he’s currently on a student visa and therefore can’t “work”), he could make more money than he might if he was drafted in the second round; however, that’s a big if given his current situation.

  • 2021-22 season: 17.4 PPG, 15.1 RPG, 1.8 SPG, 1.6 BPG, 31.9 MPG

Pilgrim’s Insider Notes: Tshiebwe’s decision will come down to NIL. If federal legislation is passed or a clear loophole is found — one all parties involved are comfortable signing off on — that will allow him to make money with zero restrictions, the expectation is that he strongly considers a return to Kentucky. If not, he will almost certainly go pro. It’s a complicated decision, one out of the standout center’s hands at this point in time.

Lance Ware (F, So.) – In his second season at Kentucky, Ware took a backseat to Oscar Tshiebwe in the frontcourt but flourished as the Cats’ enforcer. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 1.5 PPG, 1.9 RPG, 6.3 MPG
  • 2020-21 season: 2.0 PPG, 3.0 RPG, 12.1 MPG

TyTy Washington (G, Fr.) – TyTy Washington shined in his freshman season in Lexington, even breaking John Wall’s single-season record with 17 assists, but was hampered by a leg injury throughout the second half of the year. Currently, he is projected to go 14th in the NBA Draft by ESPN, but Jonathan Givony notes that his stock is falling after an underwhelming postseason. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 12.5 PPG, 3.5 RPG, 3.9 APG, 29.2 MPG

Pilgrim’s Insider Notes: The expectation from the start has been that Washington is a one-and-done. Injuries and inconsistent shooting hurt his draft stock a bit, but he’s still seen as a consensus first-round prospect. NIL has been good to the freshman guard, but it’s not expected to keep him in school. Washington is expected to test the draft waters and ultimately go pro.

Sahvir Wheeler (PG, Jr.) – After transferring in from Georgia, Wheeler became Kentucky’s primary point guard, ranking third in the country in assists (6.9). Like Washington, he missed time due to injuries, initially to his neck vs. LSU and later his wrist at Tennessee. He has yet to announce any plans regarding his future.

  • 2021-22 season: 10.1 PPG, 6.9 APG, 2.6 RPG, 31.2 MPG

Pilgrim’s Insider Notes: Before NIL, Wheeler had one-year dreams in Lexington, looking to play his way into draft status or at the very least build his brand as a potential pro in one season. With NIL, the door has opened for a second year at Kentucky — depending on John Calipari’s vision for the 2022-23 roster, of course. The UK head coach hit reset on the team after a historically poor 2020-21 campaign, and after suffering a brutal opening-round loss to Saint Peter’s in the NCAA Tournament, he could decide to shake things up again this offseason. If shooting and ball security outweigh playmaking in Calipari’s vision of next year’s team, a parting of ways could be on the table.

Transfer Portal Options

Fardaws Aimaq, Utah Valley (C, Gr.) – The WAC Player of the Year entered the transfer portal on March 18. According to 247 Sports’ Travis Branham, Kentucky is among the many programs that have already expressed interest. The 6’11” 245 lbs. center averaged 18.9 points and 13.6 rebounds per game and ranked second in the country in double-doubles behind Oscar Tshiebwe this season. He has two years of eligibility remaining.

  • 2021-22 season: 18.9 PPG, 13.6 RPG, 1.7 APG, 1.3 BPG

Trevon Brazile, Missouri (SF, Fr.) – Brazile had a promising freshman season at Missouri, averaging 12.0 points, 8.2 rebounds, and 2.0 blocks per game over the Tigers’ last five games. He entered the transfer portal on March 22 and has already heard from Kentucky, according to Blake Smith of Recruits Zone.

  • 2021-22 season: 6.6 PPG, 5.1 RPG, 1.9 BPG, 21.5 MPG

Xavier Pinson, LSU (G, Sr.) – On March 24, Pinson entered the transfer portal and by that night, had already heard from Kentucky, Michigan State, Xavier, and Arizona State, according to Mac Irvin Fire, which was once coached by current Kentucky assistant Chin Coleman. Despite transferring a year ago from Missouri to LSU, Pinson is expected to be granted another immediate eligibility waiver due to the recent firing of LSU head coach Will Wade. He will have one year of eligibility remaining. At LSU, he faced Kentucky twice, dropping 11 points, four rebounds, four assists, and three steals in a win before posting 26 points and eight rebounds on 12-13 shooting from the free-throw line in a loss. Additionally, he went 1-2 against Kentucky during his time with Mizzou.

  • 2021-22 season: 9.8 PPG, 4.8 APG, 2.4 RPG, 28.1 MPG

Terrence Shannon Jr. (G, Jr.) – Shannon reportedly entered the transfer portal on March 25, the day after his team’s loss to Duke in the Sweet 16. So far, he has heard from Kentucky, UConn, Illinois, and Michigan. Like Pinson, he’s a Chicago native and also played for Mac Irvin Fire, which was once coached by current Kentucky assistant Chin Coleman. Kentucky and Illinois are considered the favorites but he’s also not ruling out a returning to Texas Tech, he told Jon Rothstein.

  • 2021-22 season: 10.4 PPG, 2.6 RPG, 2.0 APG, 25.0 MPG

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2024-04-25