Kentucky basketball is spending part of its summer in a very different kind of classroom.
Instead of the foreign tour that had been on the calendar, Mark Pope’s Wildcats are in Las Vegas this week, using the NBA Summer League as the backdrop for a broader reset of how the program wants to handle the offseason. The trip is doing a little bit of everything: bonding, practicing, recruiting and reconnecting.
The on-court work comes early. Kentucky will hold morning practices at a facility in Las Vegas as the new roster tries to build chemistry in a new setting. Just as important, the Wildcats are making a point of putting current players around former Kentucky standouts who are now in the NBA, a connection Pope sees as a major part of the program’s identity.
“This connection between Kentucky and the NBA is like no other, and this makes a lot of sense for us,” Pope said on KSR, adding that seeing that future firsthand matters for the players on the roster now.
The timing also lines up neatly with recruiting. Summer League week in Vegas has become a hub for high school talent, and Kentucky’s staff can move between team work and scouting without much friction.
Games involving teams from the Nike EYBL, EYCL and Jr. EYBL, along with two other NCAA-sanctioned events, are part of the scene.
Back home, some familiar summer staples are being put on hold. Pope said the program is pausing its annual father-son and daddy-daughter camps for at least a year while it rethinks the summer structure amid the changes sweeping college athletics.
“That’s kind of a bummer; I really always enjoyed those. But I also understand the importance of getting this year right.”
Kentucky is also not taking the overseas trip that had previously been planned. Pope pointed to NCAA rule changes that doubled the allowed summer practice time from four hours, making the old foreign-tour bonus of 10 extra practices less important than it used to be.
There may still be something else coming, though Pope didn’t spell it out. He said the program is seeking NCAA waivers for an alternative project, but he kept the details to himself.
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