Kentucky’s latest brush with the NCAA didn’t involve a major recruiting scandal or a roster-altering penalty. It came from a tweet.
A Wildcats assistant coach, Mo Williams, ran afoul of a rule that bars college coaches from mentioning a recruit by name before that player has officially committed. The issue surfaced when former No. 1 overall recruit Tyran Stokes was preparing to announce his decision in late April and posted a reminder for fans to tune in. Williams replied on Twitter, and plenty of people took that as a sign Stokes would be choosing Kentucky.
He didn’t. Stokes committed to Kansas.
Williams later deleted the tweet, and Kentucky self-reported the incident as a Level III NCAA violation. Jon Hale of The Herald-Leader obtained the violation report, which says the assistant coach mistakenly believed coaches were permitted to interact with recruits’ social media posts. The report kept the names anonymous, but the details make the situation clear.
The penalty package was modest. Kentucky was hit with a 45-day ban on any in-person contact with Stokes, though that never mattered because he ended up headed to Lawrence. If Stokes were to ask out of his NLI, Kentucky would face a 14-day ban from recruiting him off campus.
The NCAA also handed the Wildcats’ staff a one-week timeout that barred any written or digital contact with recruits.
Williams, a veteran of nearly eight years in the NCAA coaching ranks, should have known better. But the episode is now closed, with Kentucky and Stokes moving on in different directions. The Wildcats have since added a strong transfer-portal class and continue building out the roster for Mark Pope’s third year in Lexington.
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