Kentucky MBB among several schools reportedly spending over $10 million on 2025-26 roster

Last week, Travis Branham of 247Sports reported that there are at least eight men’s college basketball teams expected to spend over $10 million on their 2025-26 rosters. Branham didn’t list any specific programs, but it felt safe to assume that Kentucky would be in that group — or at the very least, not far from it.
As it turns out, Kentucky is in that group, according to a Thursday report from Matt Norlander of CBS Sports. Kentucky is one of 10 teams that Norlander reports will spend upwards of $10 million on next season’s team (or “are easily capable of reaching that total in roster-building efforts by the end of this year’s transfer cycle”).
Those teams include:
- Arkansas
- BYU
- Duke
- Indiana
- Kentucky
- Louisville
- Michigan
- North Carolina
- St. John’s
- Texas Tech
Going into his second season as Wildcats head coach, Mark Pope has landed four transfers (a group that On3 ranks as the third-best in the country) and one international prospect. He’s already up to 12 scholarship players for 2025-26 and could add one or two more before it’s all said and done.
Top 10
- 1Hot
Starting QB?
Stoops not ready to commit to Cutter despite big performance
- 2
Defense struggles
Brad White upset with "day one mistakes" vs. EMU
- 3Hot
Boley, Offense shine
Kentucky's offense takes flight in 48-23 win vs. EMU
- 4New
Fresh AP Top 25
Plenty of movement this week
- 5
New FPI/SP+ rankings
The numbers like Kentucky
Get the Daily On3 Newsletter in your inbox every morning
By clicking "Subscribe to Newsletter", I agree to On3's Privacy Notice, Terms, and use of my personal information described therein.
In today’s lawless college athletics landscape, schools can pay whatever amount they’re willing to.
Norlander adds there are even more schools going over the $8 million mark on next season’s rosters. That list includes Auburn, Connecticut, Florida, Houston, Kansas, Kansas State, Miami, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas, UCLA, USC, Villanova, Virginia, and possibly a few more. Over 2,000 players have entered the portal since it opened earlier this month, nearly all of them searching for a larger payday.
Until revenue sharing is finally implemented, these types of insane dollar figure numbers will continue to be floated around.
Discuss This Article
Comments have moved.
Join the conversation and talk about this article and all things Kentucky Sports in the new KSR Message Board.
KSBoard