The Kentucky Wildcats added the top remaining men’s college basketball player in the transfer portal on Monday, landing former Iowa State Cyclones sharpshooter Milan Momcilovic.
It’s a major get for beleaguered coach Mark Pope, who is coming off a disappointing second season at Kentucky, which ended in a second-round NCAA Tournament loss to Momcilovic’s former team.
The 6-foot-8 senior forward scored 20 points on 6-of-12 shooting for Iowa State in the 82-63 win, and he’ll now be tasked with helping Pope’s squad break through in Year 3 under his command.
Milan Momcilovic signing a major transfer portal win for Mark Pope
Per 247Sports, Momcilovic is the No. 2 overall transfer portal prospect and best available entering Monday. Last season, the 2025-26 All-Big Ten selection averaged 16.9 points on 50.6 percent shooting, including a Division I best 48.7 percent from beyond the arc on 7.5 three-point attempts per game.
He joins a Kentucky team coming off a 22-14 record and seventh-place SEC finish. Leading scorer Otega Oweh is headed for the NBA Draft, while the team’s second-leading scorer, Denzel Aberdeen, transferred back to the Florida Gators, who he played for from 2022-25.
The Wildcats also lost starting guard Collin Chandler and forward Mouhamed Dioubate — players who ranked third and fourth in scoring — to the transfer portal.
Momcilovic represents Pope’s biggest transfer portal signing since becoming Kentucky head coach. It’s been an active period entering a pivotal third season that could have ramifications on his future with the program.
He found a pair of potential starters from mid-majors, adding guard Alex Wilkins, who averaged 17.8 points and 4.7 assists last season at Furman, and former Old Dominion forward Justin McBride, a 6-foot-8 40 percent shooter from deep who averaged 15.3 points per game.
Kentucky also raided the northwest, adding guard Jerone Morton, a Kentucky native who shot 38.8 percent from deep last season with the Washington State Cougars. The Wildcats signed guard Zoom Diallo after averaging 15.7 points and 4.5 assists at Washington, along with his teammate Franck Kepnang.
Those moves provided Kentucky valuable scoring and ball-handling options, but none move the needle like Momcilovic, who CBS college basketball insider Jon Rothstein noted gives the Wildcats “major promise” heading into 2026-27.











.webp?ssl=1)



