Right at the buzzer, Otega Oweh came up clutch for Kentucky — just as he did for the Wildcats on multiple occasions during his debut season in Lexington. No, it wasn’t a game-winner against Oklahoma in Norman, or again against the Sooners in the SEC Tournament. This time, it was announcing his decision to return for his senior year in blue and white, pulling his name out of the draft ahead of the 11:59 p.m. ET withdrawal deadline. With workouts scheduled through May 28 beyond his time at the NBA Draft Combine in Chicago earlier this month, Oweh saw the process through, receiving all of the feedback he could get his hands on before deciding to run it back as a Wildcat.
What does that decision mean for Kentucky going into year two under Mark Pope? We know the team will be good, but how good? KSR breaks down the return of Tega-Tron.
Kentucky can win a title with this roster
As the pieces started coming together, it didn’t take long to see the vision. The Wildcats had talent last season, but lacked physicality, toughness and athleticism, and Pope quickly went out of his way to improve the roster in those areas while continuing to prioritize positional versatility with shot-making potential at every spot on the floor. Maybe no Koby Breas — generational shooters are generational for a reason — but zero non-shooters in sight.
And depth. Lots and lots of depth. Worried about a player or three losing a wheel, an unfortunate reality the team faced last year? Kentucky’s got a dozen others ready to play.
Oweh was the final piece of that puzzle and the glue ready to hold it all together. The complementary fits were all there, waiting for that star and face to anchor the lineup. It would have been a solid team without the All-SEC guard, but was it capable of making a championship run? That’s a question the Wildcats will fortunately not have to answer with his return.
Is this the most expensive team in college basketball?
Pope joked that Kentucky’s NIL budget was “close to $200 million” earlier this month, holding back a belly laugh when asked to address some of the numbers thrown around in connection with his roster. He wasn’t going to play ball there, but he did make it clear the program deserves the best of the best. The winningest program in college basketball should have the best talent and the money it takes to build championship rosters in this climate.
“This is the University of Kentucky. I never forget that. We should be the best at everything,” Pope said. “Put NIL, put the transfer portal on the list. Our job is to go be the best at everything. We’re not shying away from that. It’s important to us.”
Otega Oweh’s decision is the best example of Kentucky’s healthy NIL situation yet. He could have entered the transfer portal as a potential face of college basketball and Preseason All-American in 2025-26, going to the highest bidder as one of the sport’s top earners next season. He’s a name-your-price, blank-check talent, but didn’t even think to explore the open market. Instead, it was UK or the NBA.
Had those NIL conversations gone poorly — take Denzel Aberdeen’s unexpected move from Florida to Kentucky, for example — we’re likely talking about finding Oweh’s replacement right now, whether he had kept his name in the draft or pursued other options in the portal. Instead, the folks in Lexington made it more than worth his while to return, just as they have for the rest of this absolutely loaded roster.
Prepare for a second-year jump
Now that Oweh is back, the conversation turns toward what he can be in year two under Pope. If you ask the man in charge, this is typically when his players make the biggest jump, moving past learning the system and focusing on individual development.
“My guys in their second year take a massive leap,” Pope said. “We’re such a read-based offense, and in parts defense, where our guys are the deciders on the floor. They’re not looking over at me. We coach them to coach each other and communicate with each other.
“So, with a year under your belt now, now you’re coming in not to learn the game or do the game, but you come in actually starting to play the game and trick up the game and use all these actions and manipulate them in creative ways. And that’s where the game gets incredibly fun. So these second-year guys are going to be really key for us.”
That’s a game-changer for Kentucky and a problem for the rest of college basketball. Oweh was already the team’s leading scorer at 16.2 points per game while adding 4.7 rebounds (second-best on the team), 1.7 assists and 1.6 steals (best on the team) on 49/78/36 splits. If that’s the worst version we’ll see of Tega-Tron as a Wildcat, what does the best look like?
A clear path to first-round status
Oweh was already receiving ‘really, really good feedback’ from NBA teams ahead of the withdrawal deadline, outperforming some of the early draft projections that had him fighting for second-round status. Most had him going undrafted, ESPN’s latest update listing the 6-4 guard as the No. 72 overall prospect in the field.
Fortunately for the Kentucky star — and part of why a return to Lexington made sense — there is an obvious path to solidifying himself as a first-round pick in 2026. His floor is already unbelievably high, Pope singling out his ‘elite’ physicality and explosiveness already, ‘as good as you’re going to find’ among current draft-eligible players.
Then you factor in the upside with ‘so much room to grow,’ as he put it.
“I think his ceiling as a playmaker, he hasn’t even begun to tap into that. I think he can become an elite, elite-level playmaker,” Pope said. “Something that he’s talked a lot about is his ability to get his shot off more quickly. He shot the ball really well last year at 36, 37 percent from three, but to get it off quicker and get more attempts, I think is a big deal for him. On the defensive end, his ability to kind of neutralize bigs on the glass and bigs on switches is a place where he can really excel. I think he has a chance to grow into one of the elite steals guys in the country.
“He’s got a ton of room to grow. He’s an unbelievable player who had a great season last year. It’s pretty fun to talk about.”
It was pretty fun to talk about those possibilities as Oweh tested the draft waters and explored the possibility of a return to Kentucky. Now that it’s official, there aren’t many things more fun to talk about than what year two of Tega-Tron looks like and just how good the Wildcats can be in 2025-26.
Welcome back, OO. Time to hang banner No. 9.