Mark Pope Is Chasing A Massive Future Target With Kentucky Ties

Coach Mark Pope pulls out all the stops in his pursuit of Marcus Spears Jr., aiming to secure the future superstar for Kentucky.

Mark Pope is putting serious energy into one of the biggest recruiting prizes in the 2027 class: Marcus Spears Jr.

247Sports has Spears Jr. ranked as the No. 1 player in the class, and Kentucky already has a built-in connection working in its favor. Spears Jr. is the cousin of five-star Kentucky commit Ryan Hampton, which gives the Wildcats a family tie that could matter as this recruitment develops. For Big Blue Nation, that link is the kind of detail that can swing a chase for the best player in the class.

Pope and Kentucky have already been through a similar battle with another elite prospect. The last time around, the push for No. 1 recruit Tyran Stokes went back and forth between Kentucky and Kansas before Stokes chose Bill Self. That outcome left frustration behind, especially since some around Big Blue Nation felt the Wildcats may have missed out on other five-star targets while going all in on Stokes.

Lately, though, Pope has started to build some recruiting momentum. He landed Milan Momcilovic, then a few weeks later picked up 2027 five-star Hampton. Kentucky is hoping that stretch is the start of something bigger, and Spears Jr. is the next name at the top of the board.

Pope was in Texas this weekend to watch Spears Jr. play, which is the kind of in-person attention that signals how hard Kentucky is pushing. The next step would be getting Spears Jr. to Lexington for an official visit, and that would give the Wildcats a real shot to keep building on the family connection with Hampton already in the fold.

Spears Jr. also comes from a standout athletic family. His father, Marcus Spears, played football at LSU, was an elite player there, and was selected 20th in the NFL Draft.

His mother, Aiysha, was an All-SEC basketball player at LSU and was taken No. 7 in the WNBA Draft. With that background, it is no surprise that Spears Jr. shows off the kind of athleticism that jumps out right away.

At 6’9 and 210 pounds, Spears Jr. can handle the ball, get to the rim, knock down the midrange jumper, and hit the three. The athleticism is what stands out most, but it is also what makes him dangerous in so many different ways. The evaluation here is simple: he looks like a pro, and he looks like a player built for one-and-done college basketball.

Pope is clearly making Spears Jr. a major priority, and Kentucky is off to a strong start in the chase for the top player in the 2027 class.

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