Badgers Just Missed On Another Elite In-State Name Fans Know

Duke basketball lands a promising recruit in Kager Knueppel, who brings a family legacy of success and standout performances to the Blue Devils' future roster.

Kager Knueppel is headed to Duke, and the Blue Devils just added the first piece of their 2027 class.

The Wisconsin Lutheran forward announced Monday night that he is committed to Duke, setting up a familiar family storyline in Durham. Kager is the younger brother of Kon Knueppel, the former Blue Devils standout now with the Charlotte Hornets.

Duke landed a highly regarded prospect in the process. 247Sports lists Knueppel as the No. 28 overall player in the 2027 cycle and the No. 5 power forward. His recruitment surged this spring after a major growth spurt lined up with strong play on the Nike EYBL circuit with Team Herro.

At 6-foot-10, Knueppel offers a different look than his older brother, even if the shooting gene clearly runs deep. He averaged 16.5 points, 5.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists this spring while hitting better than 50% from 3-point range on high volume. That production helped make him one of the biggest risers in the class.

Basketball is very much a family business for the Knueppels. Kager is the second of five brothers - Kon, Kager, Kinston, Kash and Kidman.

Their mother, Chari Nordgaard Knueppel, was a star at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, where she became the program’s all-time leading scorer with 1,964 points, won Horizon League Player of the Year in 1999 and had her No. 33 retired. Their father, Kon Sr., was also a scoring machine at Wisconsin Lutheran College, finishing with 2,064 career points and the school’s all-time scoring mark.

CBS Sports Director of Basketball Scouting Adam Finkelstein sees a frontcourt piece with real long-term value. "At his size, he projects as a classic stretch-four at first glance, but there's budding two-way versatility that has started to come to the surface in recent months," Finkelstein said.

"Offensively, he's comfortable putting the ball on the floor in either direction, albeit not a true creator just yet. He's also heady in offensive structure and a bit of a throwback passer the way he snaps fundamentally sound chest-passes.

Defensively, he owns a deceptive first step laterally and underrated long-term switchability.

"His immediate impact will likely be tied to the gains he's able to make in his overall strength. While his frame is still a work in progress, he's already more adept at holding his line, on both ends of the floor, than you might expect."

Knueppel chose Duke over Michigan, Purdue and Wisconsin, though Duke had long looked like the team to beat as his recruitment picked up steam. The family connection certainly helped, but so did what Kon did in Durham.

During his lone season at Duke, Kon Knueppel averaged 14.4 points and 4.0 rebounds while helping the Blue Devils reach the Final Four with Cooper Flagg. His shooting and polished offensive game carried over immediately to the NBA, where Charlotte took him No. 4 overall and he made the NBA All-Rookie First Team.

Now the Blue Devils get a chance to see whether the younger Knueppel can make his own mark.

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