Will Stein’s early run at Kentucky is already turning heads, but not nearly enough for the people putting together SEC coaching rankings.
On3 and Crain and Cone recently released their conference head coaching list, and Stein landed at No. 15 out of 16 SEC coaches. The only name below him was Arkansas’ Ryan Silverfield. That placement has raised eyebrows, especially for a coach whose first Kentucky roster may not be loaded on paper, but whose future outlook is starting to look a lot brighter.
The biggest reason for that optimism is Stein’s 2027-28 recruiting class. Kentucky’s group is already trending toward a potential preseason ranking, and it has given the Big Blue Nation plenty to feel good about when it comes to the direction of the program. According to 247Sports’ 2027 class rankings, Kentucky sits eighth among SEC teams and No. 21 nationally.
That class already stacks up ahead of Missouri, Vanderbilt, Tennessee and Arkansas, among others. It’s led by No. 2 overall quarterback Jake Nawrot, and it gives Kentucky a chance to look like a fast-rising team in the season after this one, especially once expected returners are folded into the mix.
Stein’s reputation also matters here. Before arriving in Lexington, he built a name for himself as one of the nation’s best offensive minds while serving as an offensive coordinator at Oregon. That background, paired with the early recruiting momentum, makes the No. 15 spot feel awfully low.
There’s also outside validation for his coaching stock. On3’s Alex Byington noted ESPN’s rankings of every college football coaching hire from the most recent cycle, and Stein landed in the top 10 of 30 candidates with an A-/B+ grade.
Nobody is arguing Stein should already be treated like a top-five coach in a conference packed with proven winners. But dropping him all the way to No. 15 still feels out of step with what he has already started to build at Kentucky.
For now, Stein may be getting the kind of treatment that comes with being the new guy in a rebuild. Still, the early signs suggest he’s earned a little more credit than that.
In Other News...
Anthony Davis Is Suddenly At The Center Of A Massive NBA Rumor
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The intriguing part is how quickly one domino can change the conversation around a player of Davis stature, especially when multiple recent deals have already shown how aggressive teams are willing to be. For now, it is only talk, but with Golden State, Washington and a few big names all floating through the same rumor mill, this is the sort of situation that could keep developing before anything becomes official. [Read more 🡒]
Mark Pope May Be Losing Another Recruit To A Blue Blood Rival
Recruiting season has a way of reshuffling plans in a hurry, and Kentucky is again feeling that tug around the edges of its roster. Nikola Kusturica, a 17-year-old international prospect making noise at the FIBA U17 World Cup, has been one of the names tied to Mark Popes last available scholarship as the Wildcats try to finish out their group for next season.
For Kentucky, the interest goes beyond one player because the final roster spot carries real weight for how Pope wants to build depth and flexibility. Recruiting analyst Travis Branhams updated read on Kusturica adds another layer of urgency to that pursuit, with UCLA now sitting at the center of the conversation and another blue blood looming where Kentucky had hoped to land. [Read more 🡒]
Kentucky Recruiting Takes An Unwelcome NCAA Turn At Worst Time
Kentuckys recruiting operation took an awkward hit this spring when the program self-reported an NCAA rules issue tied to social media contact with one of the nations top prospects. The violation came at a time when every high-end recruiting move matters, and the Wildcats had to sort through the paperwork and fallout while continuing to build toward next season.
The NCAA response included a temporary restriction on contact with the recruit involved and a short freeze on written or digital communication with recruits for the staff, a reminder of how quickly a small misstep can ripple through a major program. Kentucky has since moved on in roster planning, but the timing made the episode an unwelcome detour for a staff trying to keep momentum on the trail. [Read more 🡒]
