Bill Self may be trying to work one of his late recruiting-season tricks again, and this time the name to know is Mihailo Musikic.
The 7-footer from Serbia has been added to Kansas’ mix, but the path to actually seeing him on the floor is still a complicated one. Musikic is 24 years old and has spent multiple seasons playing professionally, which means NCAA eligibility is not a simple box to check.
Even so, the fact that Kansas pursued him suggests the staff believes there is at least a realistic route to getting him cleared. If that happens, he would give the Jayhawks another experienced frontcourt piece for the 2026-27 season.
The new NCAA rule on eligibility adds another wrinkle. Under the updated standard, athletes in all sports get five years of eligibility over five seasons once their college clock starts. That clock begins when a player first enrolls full time in college or at the start of the academic year after their 19th birthday, whichever comes first.
Another Kansas note making the rounds points to growing impatience in Lawrence, where season six could end up being his last.
Elsewhere, the sports calendar is already moving fast. The Open Championship begins tomorrow, and the setup at Royal Birkdale looks like a strong fit for Scottie Scheffler.
Even with that, the bigger story around him is the same one that has followed him all year: he remains the best golfer in the world, but he has not quite matched the standard he set over the past few seasons. Through 2026, going without a major would feel like a letdown for a player on a generational run.
Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game delivered a different kind of drama Tuesday night at Citizens Bank Park, where the American League beat the National League 4-0 behind a dominant pitching performance. Eleven AL pitchers combined to allow three hits and strike out 15 NL batters. It was the AL’s fourth shutout in All-Star history, and the 15 strikeouts finished one shy of the nine-inning record while the three hits allowed tied for second fewest.
The NBA is also waiting on answers. Adam Silver wants the investigation into Kawhi Leonard’s no-show paycheck situation wrapped up by the start of the season.
The league instructed a law firm in September to look into allegations that the Clippers funneled money to Leonard through his $28 million endorsement deal with the now-bankrupt green banking company Aspiration, which also had a $300 million, 23-year endorsement deal with the team. Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, who invested $60 million in Aspiration, has denied knowing about Leonard’s deal.
Back in Kansas, there’s also fresh reporting on a familiar political figure and a very comfortable-looking university paycheck. The Kansas City Star’s Matthew Kelly dug into the role of a likely next governor at Wichita State, where he served as director of “GoCreate, a Koch Collaborative” and collected $163,000 last year. The reporting says neither the university nor the candidate can really explain what he does, or whether he shows up all that often.
And in the latest twist tied to NCAA eligibility, a group of former athletes won a judgment against the organization in a case arguing they should be granted a fifth year of eligibility. An Ohio judge granted a preliminary injunction Thursday afternoon for 24 men’s and women’s college basketball players, directly challenging the NCAA’s new age-based model. In short, the players had completed their eligibility and wanted to be included in the NCAA’s new standard of five years to play five seasons of competition.
In Other News...
Kansas Fans Will Have The Same Reaction To Caleb Wilson And Darryn Peterson
Darryn Petersons first summer as a pro has already taken an odd turn, with the No. 2 overall pick by the Utah Jazz held out of recent NBA Summer League games and likely shut down for the rest of the summer. For Kansas fans, it is a familiar kind of frustration after a lone college season in Lawrence that never quite settled into a rhythm, especially with Peterson missing nearly half the games and leaving some supporters wondering how invested he really was.
The on-court part of the story has at least shown a different layer, because Peterson has been more active as a playmaker in Summer League than he was at Kansas. Even so, the bigger question for Jayhawks fans is less about the box score than the pattern around him, and whether this latest pause is just a summer precaution or another chapter in the same uneasy conversation that followed him through college. [Read more 🡒]
Kansas May Have Found The Size It Desperately Needs Inside
Kansas may have found a long, needed answer for its frontcourt in Mihailo Musikic, a seven-foot Serbian commit for 2026 who gives the Jayhawks a different kind of size to think about. For a program that always has to balance talent, depth and fit inside, a player with that frame naturally draws attention, especially when the roster picture can shift quickly from one season to the next.
The catch is that the path to campus still comes with questions because of the new NCAA rules affecting international players with professional backgrounds. Kansas has not officially announced his status, and the uncertainty around how those guidelines will apply leaves his arrival in a holding pattern for now, even as the commitment itself gives the Jayhawks something concrete to build around. [Read more 🡒]
