Milan Momcilovic didn’t need a campus visit to get comfortable with Kentucky. He made his call from a driveway, while Mark Pope was on the beach, and the moment fit the way Momcilovic says he approaches big decisions: straight, private, and built on trust.
“When I committed to Kentucky, I was on my driveway,” he said. “I don’t like talking in the house because my parents eavesdrop, so I went to the driveway while coach (Mark Pope) was on the beach and let him know I was coming. The rest is history.”
That commitment made Momcilovic Kentucky’s biggest offseason addition, and arguably Pope’s most talented addition so far. His recruitment had plenty of moving parts, with updates and suspense along the way, but he told UK Sports Network that he had a strong sense early that Lexington was where he wanted to land.
“I knew Kentucky was where I wanted to play kind of early in the process,” Momcilovic said.
He was still working through the NBA Draft process until the withdrawal deadline, but when he decided to return to college, Kentucky was in the final mix with Arizona and Louisville. What separated the Wildcats for him wasn’t the name on the jersey. It was Pope and the fit.
“I just kind of had a gut feeling that Coach Pope’s offense and his system was kind of built for me,” he said. “He (Pope) told me that if there was one guy in the world to play for his system, it was me.”
Momcilovic’s confidence in that fit came from watching Pope’s teams at BYU, including matchups against his own Iowa State team. The two programs split their games in the 2023-24 season, BYU’s first year in the Big 12, and that gave Momcilovic a close look at how Pope wants his teams to play.
“It helped watching Pope’s teams at BYU, when we played them at Iowa State,” he said in his media availability earlier this month.
“I loved the way his teams played, moving the ball, sharing it. A lot of shooting. That stuck in my mind in the recruiting process.”
Kentucky’s brand mattered, but not nearly as much as the relationship. Momcilovic called the program “a blue blood” and “one of the biggest brands in college basketball, if not the biggest,” but he made it clear that the logo alone wasn’t enough to sway him.
“At the end of the day, that didn’t matter to me. I’m more of a relationship type guy, and I gotta trust you.”
In Other News...
This Transfer Could Change Everything For Mark Pope At Kentucky
Mark Pope is heading into his third season at Kentucky with the kind of roster churn that has become routine in college basketball, but this summer has still carried real stakes. The Wildcats lost several players to the NBA draft and the transfer portal, then started piecing things back together with returning contributors and new additions, all while trying to keep pace in a league where continuity is never guaranteed.
One of the more intriguing pieces is Milan Momcilovic, a 6-foot-8 forward who brings a proven scoring track record from Iowa State after three seasons there. He averaged 16.9 points and 3.1 rebounds per game last season and was a regular starter for a Sweet Sixteen team, which gives Kentucky something it has needed as the frontcourt picture comes into focus. The question now is how quickly that production translates in Lexington, and whether this move ends up being the one that steadies the offseason and changes the ceiling for Popes team. [Read more 🡒]
Kam Williams Is Already Selling New Wildcats On Rupp Arena
Kam Williams is already doing part of the onboarding work for Kentuckys newest faces, and the message starts with Rupp Arena. The sophomore forward knows what it sounds like when the building gets rolling, and he has been making sure teammates understand that the home-court edge in Lexington is not just a talking point. Williams described the place as exceptionally loud and unlike the other venues Kentucky will see, which is exactly the kind of detail newcomers need before they experience it for themselves.
For Mark Pope, that atmosphere is only part of the bigger picture as he shapes the roster for the upcoming season. Kentucky is trying to blend more shot-making, more versatility and more depth into a team that can play the style Pope wants, and Williams early role has been as much about helping the group settle in as anything on the floor. The Wildcats still have plenty to sort out, but the combination of a demanding home environment and a roster built to stretch the floor gives this group a clear identity to chase. [Read more 🡒]
