Milan Momcilovic Offers Kentucky Fans A Confident SEC Reality Check

Milan Momcilovic highlights how the transfer portal has evened the playing field, reducing differences between college basketball's top conferences.

Milan Momcilovic didn’t sound like a player guessing at the moment. He sounded like someone who understands exactly how college basketball has shifted around him.

After speaking with the media on Thursday, the word that stood out was “smart.” Momcilovic is a smart player, sure, but he also comes across as someone who sees the bigger picture - especially when it comes to how the sport now works across the Power Four.

Asked whether playing in the Big 12 has prepared him for life in the SEC, Momcilovic pointed to the way conference lines have blurred in the transfer portal era.

“A couple of years ago, I feel like the conferences were a little different,” Momcilovic said. “Now, I feel like they’re a lot more similar with everybody transferring.

Obviously, the SEC is a little more faster and athletic. I would say just now with all of these transfers, it’s a little more closer together, the Big 12 and SEC.

I feel like the transition won’t be too hard.”

That’s the reality of the sport now. The rosters keep changing, the talent keeps spreading, and the gap between leagues doesn’t look as wide as it once did. The SEC and Big 12 both sit at 16 teams, while the ACC and Big Ten have 18, and every conference has become a monthslong battle from January through March - first for the regular-season crown, then for the conference tournament.

Momcilovic has lived through that shift. He’s played in 102 college games, and his first year at Iowa State came in the final season of the Pac-12. He’s seen the game before the realignment wave and after it, which makes his perspective especially useful for Kentucky.

The Big 12 has been one of the sport’s toughest leagues over the last three seasons, and last year was another reminder of that. Iowa State went into the Big 12 Tournament as the No. 5 seed even though it was ranked No. 8 in the country - only weeks after sitting at No. 2.

That kind of weekly grind is nothing new to Momcilovic. And if his read is right, the move to the SEC shouldn’t feel like a massive leap.

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