Mason Williams knows the Kentucky standard. He also knows this recruiting class didn’t match it on paper, and he’s not pretending otherwise.
The Wildcats’ 2026 high school class was the first in 20 years without a top-100 prospect, and Williams is one of only two high school commits in the group. He’s the lone player in the class ranked as four-star or higher, which puts a little more attention on him whether he asks for it or not. But Williams is focused on the part he can control: showing up and earning his place.
His path to Kentucky had a built-in family connection, of course. His father, Mo Williams, the former NBA All-Star, joined the staff as an assistant coach this past April, and that “certainly” mattered in the decision. But Mason made it clear the program itself sealed it.
“It didn’t come up on my visit,” Mason said of his dad’s hire while on his UK visit. “They wanted it to be about me. Once I saw the wall of all the players, and walked into Rupp (Arena), it was a done deal.”
That visit also sold him on the style of play. Kentucky’s up-tempo offense, and the chance to play for Mark Pope, fit exactly what Williams had been looking for.
“I always wanted to play for a coach like Coach Pope,” Williams said. “The way he plays, how fast he plays, the shots I can take, the shots that everybody can take.
I love it. I’m loving everything about the way he coaches.”
Through the first two weeks of summer practice, Pope’s message has been simple: attack. Williams said the coach told him on his visit to go after it, and to stay true to himself.
“He told me on my visit that I got to go get it. Go get everything,” Williams said.
“He told me how he wanted to play, that I was fast. He wants to shoot the ball, wants to get in the paint, and he also told me to just be me,” Williams said.
“‘You didn’t come here to pass the ball or shoot the ball, come here to be Mason Williams.’”
That trust matters, but Williams says the bigger boost has come from the work he’s already put in since arriving on campus on April 30. He’s been around the returning players and in the gym constantly, trying to make sure he’s not just another freshman on the roster.
“I’ve been in here three, four, five times a day,” Williams said. “I just got to get it.
I got to take a spot. I got to put in the work.
I got to go extra reps in practice. Just got to go get my spot, go get what I earn.
I know that.”
He may not be expected to play a major role right away, but Williams has the kind of approach Kentucky can use. Injuries have already been something Pope has had to manage in his two seasons, and that could be part of the equation again.
A freshman who understands he has to earn everything, not just inherit it, gives the staff another option. Williams has also flashed some encouraging moments this summer, using his 6-foot-3, 210-pound frame to his advantage.
As for what he brings on the floor, Williams describes it in straightforward terms: pace, rebounding, and a growing shot.
“I can push the ball. I’m gonna go get a rebound.
I want to play fast,” Williams said of his playstyle. “My shot’s gotten way better.
I shot the ball pretty well last year, but I’ve been working on my shot a lot, so obviously I can shoot it. I like to get in the paint and work on my floater.
I want to shoot more floaters this year.”
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