In a shocking turn of events, legendary head coach John Calipari is headed to Arkansas after 15 seasons at Kentucky.
The move comes after the No. 3 seed Wildcats were bounced in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, marking three consecutive seasons without reaching the second weekend. Despite consistently bringing in top recruiting classes during Calipari’s tenure, Kentucky only has one national championship ring to show for it.
Rumors started to leak late Sunday that Calipari was nearing a deal to fill the Razorbacks’ head coaching vacancy. This is the latest domino to fall in a series of moves that began with USC head coach Andy Enfield leaving for SMU and former Arkansas head coach Eric Musselman filling Enfield’s spot in Los Angeles.
Calipari’s departure from Big Blue Nation will have a ripple effect across all of college basketball. The 65-year-old became an icon during his time at Kentucky, establishing himself as one of the best recruiters in the country as a pioneer in the one-and-done era.
MORE: Who is Mark Pope? Meet Kentucky’s new head coach and John Calipari replacement
The Wildcats were set to bring in the No. 2 ranked recruiting class in 2024, but that could all change with Calipari’s exit. Remember, when Calipari left Memphis for the Kentucky job back in 2009, he took top recruits John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins with him.
What does Calipari’s move from Kentucky to Arkansas mean for the Wildcats’ current players and incoming recruits? The Sporting News has you covered with the latest updates below.
With one five-star recruit and two four-star recruits, Kentucky only trailed Duke for the best incoming class in the country. The Wildcats had more 2024 McDonald’s All-Americans than any other program, headlined by center Jayden Quaintance, forward Karter Knox, and guard Boogie Fland.
But how many of these top recruits will stick with Kentucky now that Calipari is gone? That question remains answered for now.
Take a look at the Wildcats’ incoming recruiting class below, along with the latest information on their decision to stay with Kentucky or re-open their recruiting.
National Rank: 8
Position: Center
Recruiting status: Decommitted
Quaintance has requested a release from his National Letter of Intent to Kentucky, his father told 247Sports. Quaintance was Kentucky’s highest-rated recruit in the high school class of 2024.
National Rank: 20
Position: Forward
Recruiting status: Decommitted
Knox was the first player to re-open his recruiting. Given that Knox’s family has a close relationship with Calipari that dates back to the recruiting of his brother, NBA player Kevin Knox, it would not be a surprise if Karter follows Cal to Arkansas.
National Rank: 22
Position: Guard
Recruiting status: Decommitted
Richmond was the only player in the group who had a “hard commit” to Kentucky, but he has also decided to re-open his recruiting following the Wildcats’ head coaching change.
National Rank: 26
Position: Guard
Recruiting status: Decommitted
Fland requested a release from his National Letter of Intent to Kentucky and will re-open his recruiting. The No. 2-ranked point guard in the class of 2024 had over 20 other scholarship offers, headlined by high-major powerhouses like UConn and North Carolina.
National Rank: 46
Position: Center
Recruiting status: Decommitted
Cyril joined his Overtime Elite partner, Knox, in receiving a release from his National Letter of Intent to Kentucky.
Cyril will re-open his recruiting, where he previously had offers from Cincinnati, Florida, Georgetown, Indiana, Kansas, Memphis, Oklahoma State, Ole Miss and Tennessee.
National Rank: 73
Position: Guard
Recruiting status: TBD
Perry is the lone recruit in this incoming class who is from Kentucky. It will be interesting to see if he re-opens his recruitment or decides to stay home and play for Big Blue Nation.
In addition to a top-tier recruiting class, Kentucky’s current roster could also see a shake-up with players entering the transfer portal following the Calipari news.
Take a look below for the latest information on the decisions made by key contributors from this year’s Wildcats roster.
Freshman center Ivisic was the first player to follow Calipari to Arkansas, announcing his commitment to the Razorbacks after entering the transfer portal. He was soon joined by Wagner, who inked a letter of commitment with Calipari’s new side in May, per the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette’s Richard Davenport. Freshman center Bradshaw announced he is transferring to Ohio State.
Nothing should change for top prospect Sheppard, who was expected to declare for the 2024 NBA Draft no matter what. Freshman guard Dillingham and freshman forward Edwards already declared for the draft. Sophomore forward Onyenso surprised some by also declaring for the draft.
In a major (but not shocking) development, freshman guard Wagner entered the transfer portal. Sophomore guard Thiero already put his name in the transfer portal before the Calipari news.
More people thought Kentucky would blow out Ohio State than vice versa, but that’s exactly what happened Saturday at Madison Square Garden. The Buckeyes comp
The most common refrain Kentucky fans could hear from other Kentucky fans after and even during the loss to Ohio State last night was an annoying fact that Aubu
“We are breaking camp after the game on December 21 — if we win.” Those were Mark Pope’s final words ahead of Kentucky’s trip to New York City for th
For the first time since November 19, Aaron Bradshaw jogged over to the scorers table for Ohio State, checking in at the 17:46 mark of the first half. As his n