Kansas May Have Found The Size It Desperately Needs Inside

Kansas basketball awaits NCAA decision on Serbian seven-footer Mihailo Musikic's eligibility as the team eyes reinforcements for its depleted center position.

Kansas may have found a late answer in the middle, but the biggest question is still hanging over the move: can Mihailo Musikic actually play?

The seven-footer has committed to Kansas for the 2026 season, according to Michael Swain on 247Sports, giving Bill Self a big body with real college experience. But the NCAA’s new international eligibility guidelines, outlined in May, could complicate everything. Kevin Sweeney of SI.com broke down how those rules may affect recruits from overseas, with age and earnings in professional leagues playing a role in whether they can suit up in the United States.

That matters here because Musikic is 24 and spent five years in the Serbia KLS, a pro league. For now, nobody knows exactly when the new rules will take effect or how strictly they’ll be enforced, which leaves Kansas in wait-and-see mode. The school hasn’t announced anything about Musikic, and it’s fair to assume Self and his staff have already checked in with the NCAA before moving forward.

If he does get cleared, Musikic would give KU size, experience and some badly needed insurance up front. Christian Reeves is recovering from surgery, and that leaves Paul Mybya and Davion Adkins as the only players who can handle the five. Grant Mordini is also on the roster, but he’s viewed more as a developmental piece than someone ready for meaningful minutes in big games.

Swain reported that Musikic averaged 11.7 points, 5.9 rebounds, 2.0 assists and .7 blocks during his time in the Serbia KLS. Those numbers don’t jump off the page as dominant center production, but his age and experience change the equation. He’s likely more physically developed than many of the players he’d be battling in college, and that can matter plenty in the paint.

If he ends up on campus and eligible, Musikic looks like a depth move first and foremost. Mbiya would appear to be the likeliest starter if Reeves remains out, especially with a year already in Self’s program and a better grasp of the system. Adkins should still get minutes behind Keanu Dawes and Mbiya, while Musikic would be the next man in line.

Kansas would be asking him to do the dirty work: protect the rim, clean the glass and give the Jayhawks another body inside while Reeves works his way back. The rebounding help matters, but with Reeves sidelined, someone has to help anchor the front line.

For now, though, the whole thing comes back to eligibility. Until the NCAA gives a clear answer, Self probably isn’t going to say much. And with limited scouting material or highlight clips available, there’s only so much excitement to build around a player whose status is still unresolved.

Still, if Musikic is cleared, Kansas may have landed something valuable this late in the recruiting cycle: a workable interior option when depth is hard to find.

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Bill Selfs Latest Kansas Gamble Hinges On One NCAA Decision

Kansas is taking another swing in the international market, this time on 7-foot Serbian big man Mihailo Musikic, whose path to college basketball runs through the NCAAs eligibility process. The Jayhawks are interested enough to keep pushing, and the appeal is obvious: a player with size and experience who could eventually become a frontcourt piece if the paperwork and rulings break the right way.

Musikics background makes this a trickier evaluation than a standard recruiting chase, with his age and prior professional seasons adding layers to the process. Still, Kansas staff members see a realistic route forward, and if he does get cleared, the payoff would come in the 2026-27 season, when the Jayhawks could use a seasoned interior presence to bolster the roster. [Read more 🡒]

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 🡒]