Kam Williams didn’t need a stage, a hat table, or a camera crew to make his college decision. His return to Kentucky came together in a pizza drive-thru, with a FaceTime from Mark Pope and a quick answer from Williams while he was trying to pay for his food.
“I was actually in a drive-thru, about to get some food,” Williams told in an interview with UK Sports Network. “I was about to use Apple Pay to pay for my food, and Coach Pope, he FaceTimed me.
He was like, ‘What’s going on?‘ Asking how I’ve been, how the work I was doing was, and stuff like that.”
The conversation didn’t take long to get to the point. Williams said that as he was in the middle of paying, he told Pope he was coming back.
“As I was tapping to pay for the food, I got the phone back, and I was just like, ‘Yeah, I’ll be there in June.’ He was just like, ‘Let’s go, baby, let’s go.‘
Just screaming at my phone, and it was just a funny moment. I wish I had it on screen recording.”
Williams signed his paperwork to return on April 7th, but he said the decision was already made in his mind as soon as last season ended. In a video posted on social media, he put it plainly: “I knew I wanted to be at Kentucky right after the season was over,” he said. “There was no other place I would rather be.”
His parents, Greg and Kelen, were just as happy to hear it. Williams said they were glad he would stay put in Lexington instead of moving again.
“They were excited because they wanted me to be in the same spot. They didn’t really like moving to multiple different places. So when I let them know it wasn’t even a decision, that I was coming back here, they were just super happy.”
Now heading into his junior season, Williams is one of only five players back from Kentucky’s roster last year, which gives him a unique place in the locker room. He’s also still working his way back to 100% after a foot injury in January, and he knows his role will stretch beyond just his own game.
“Pope, I feel like he definitely created this team, not really just a on-paper kind of thing,” he said of this year’s team. “He went out and looked for the right pieces, guards, bigs, and just everything.
I definitely feel like I can contribute in multiple different ways. Really, whichever way he wants me to do so.
I’m always willing to do it.
“I wanted to come back and prove myself. I had an injury and didn’t get to finish the season. With a full season, I can reach my max potential.”
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Kroger Field Is Getting Disrespected In A Debate Kentucky Fans Know Well
A familiar Kentucky argument has flared up again after SEC Unfiltereds Chris Phillips slotted Kroger Field near the bottom of his latest Toughest Places to Play in the SEC list. It is the kind of ranking that always lands hard in Lexington, especially when fans can point to a stadium that still drew well even through a down year and kept the building full enough to make visiting teams feel it.
Kroger Field has not exactly been an easy road environment to dismiss, either, with three sell-outs in 2023 and a crowd that showed up in meaningful numbers even as the on-field results dipped. Now the conversation shifts to whether Will Stein can help change the perception around the place, with early recruiting momentum and a more fan-friendly feel around the program offering Kentucky a chance to make the next few seasons sound a lot different from this debate. [Read more 🡒]
