Mark Pope’s rotation has been a talking point in Lexington, and he made it clear this week that the way he handles minutes is tied directly to how he wants Kentucky to grow over the course of a season.
During an appearance on Kentucky Sports Radio, Pope addressed the criticism he’s faced from fans who have wanted a tighter rotation and more time for the top players on the floor. His answer centered on development, not just winning individual stretches of games.
“Developing guys is really important,” Pope said. “And you saw that, a great example is Collin Chandler.
Collin Chandler was the seventh most improved player in all of college basketball last season. That doesn’t happen by accident.
You have to kind of nurse guys and grow guys. You know, Jasper Johnson is a player that has tremendous upside and we needed him and kept trying to find the right situation for him, and he’s going to be a great player.
Some of that’s going to come from those developmental minutes.
“You look at Otega Oweh’s rise and us being able to continuously put him in new situations. That’s how guys grow.
Malachi Moreno, you know, early on in the season force feeding him some minutes helped him grow into the guy who had to carry the load for so much of last season. You kinda go down the list.
For us, we are developers of players. I think it’s one of the things we do better than anyone else in the country.
We help our guys get better.
“I’m really proud of the fact that Amari came in as a non-draft board guy. That Koby came in here as a non-draft board guy.
That Otega came here as a non-draft board guy. These are not guys that were predestined to be drafted players.
JQ was, but those other three weren’t and the fact that those guys came her and we were able to develop them, and they were able to develop themselves because it’s their hard work that does it, to earn themselves a chance to go play at the next level is really important to us.”
Pope pointed to Collin Chandler, Jasper Johnson, Otega Oweh and Malachi Moreno as examples of players who benefited from those kinds of opportunities, saying the process is part of Kentucky’s identity under his staff. He also said the program takes pride in helping players who were not expected to be draft prospects become legitimate next-level candidates, naming Amari, Koby and Otega as examples, while noting JQ was already viewed that way.
In Other News...
Mark Pope Is Chasing The Kind Of International Upside Kentucky Needs
Mark Popes international recruiting push has included a steady line of communication with French forward Cameron Houindo, a sign Kentucky is keeping close tabs on a long-term prospect with real upside. The Wildcats coach recently connected with Houindo on Zoom and also met him in person during an overseas trip, continuing a pattern of contact that suggests this is more than a passing check-in.
Houindo, who plays professionally for KK Cedevita Olimpija, has already built a strong rsum on the international circuit and has drawn attention as one of Europes more intriguing young frontcourt players. For Kentucky, the appeal is obvious: Pope is looking for talent that can grow into the kind of versatile, high-ceiling piece the program needs, and Houindo fits the profile of a player worth tracking closely as his game keeps developing. [Read more 🡒]
