Kansas State Finally Has Its First 2027 Commit And Fans Will Care

Kansas State basketball kickstarts its 2027 recruitment class by securing a talented four-star pledge, setting the stage for potential future commitments.

Kansas State has its first commitment in the 2027 class, and it comes with a familiar last name.

Four-star forward Kameron Cooper, who picked up an offer from the Wildcats on June 28, committed on Tuesday. Cooper attends Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, Nevada, and his other offers included Oregon State, TCU, and Utah Tech.

There’s also an obvious family connection here: Cooper is the son of Kansas State assistant John Cooper.

The Wildcats are getting one of the more highly regarded players in the class. Cooper is the highest-ranked program recruit since David Castillo and one of the top-rated shooting guards in his class.

Kansas State will hope Cooper’s decision helps create some momentum with other 2027 targets still weighing their options. A few of the recent names on the board include forward David Cochran, guard Malik Olajuwon, and center Teke Deng.

Cochran, a four-star power forward at Brentwood High School in Brentwood, Tennessee, has Kansas State among his top eight schools. Tennessee, Cincinnati, and Virginia are also in that group. Last season, Cochran put up 22 points, 10 rebounds, two assists, 1.9 blocks, and one steal per game.

Olajuwon plays at Fort Bend Clements High School in Sugar Land, Texas, and averaged 21.7 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks last season, according to MaxPreps. He also has offers from Texas Tech, TCU, and SMU.

Houston is expected to join the list as well, given that his father starred for the program before becoming the top Draft pick in 1984. Shooting guard remains a key piece for Casey Alexander’s offense, which leans heavily on the 3-point shot.

Deng, meanwhile, is a center at Olathe North High School in Olathe, Kansas, and has been one of the Wildcats’ main priorities. In three state tournament games, he averaged 19 points, 13 rebounds, and five blocks. He also has an offer from UNLV.

Kansas State’s frontcourt is mostly made up of underclassmen, so immediate size isn’t the biggest issue. Even so, adding depth there matters, especially after injuries left that group exposed for much of last season.

In Other News...

K-State Legend Michael Bishop Just Landed A Fascinating New Big 12 Role

Michael Bishops football journey has taken him from Kansas State stardom to a new stop in the Big 12, where he has joined Houston as an assistant coach working on offense. It is a notable next step for one of the most recognizable quarterbacks in Wildcats history, and it puts him in a program led by Willie Fritz, who has known Bishop for a long time and has seen his coaching rise up close.

Fritzs confidence in Bishop is rooted in a relationship that dates back to Bishops playing days for him at Blinn Junior College, giving this hire a familiar feel even as it opens a new chapter. For Kansas State fans who remember Bishop as a program legend, the move is another reminder that his influence in the game has kept growing, now in a role that could matter well beyond Houstons own locker room. [Read more 🡒]

Big 12's Latest Money Move Could Change How Kansas State Looks

The Big 12 is taking another step deeper into the sponsorship era, and the ripple effects could eventually reach Manhattan. The conference has struck a multiyear deal with Monster Energy that will put the brand across football and basketball, with its name attached to league events and its logo showing up in places fans will notice right away, from broadcasts to courts and fields. Reportedly worth $20 million a year, the agreement underscores how aggressively college sports is leaning into new revenue streams.

For Kansas State, the larger significance may be less about the conference label itself and more about what kinds of commercial opportunities keep opening up around it. As the Big 12 continues to expand its corporate footprint, schools have more reason to explore how far they can go with branding of their own, and that includes the kind of jersey and uniform space that once felt off-limits. The next move may not come from the league office, but from the campuses trying to keep pace. [Read more 🡒]