NIL
Why not more 3-pointers? One of many ‘poor coaching’ examples Mark Pope plans to fix in year two
If you think Mark Pope did a ‘poor coaching’ job in his debut season at Kentucky, you’re crazy. So, yes, Mark Pope, you’re crazy. Entering year two in Lexington, Pope sat down with KSR to talk through what went well for the Wildcats and what needs to change as he pushes the program closer toward […]

If you think Mark Pope did a ‘poor coaching’ job in his debut season at Kentucky, you’re crazy. So, yes, Mark Pope, you’re crazy.
Entering year two in Lexington, Pope sat down with KSR to talk through what went well for the Wildcats and what needs to change as he pushes the program closer toward championship contention — the only goal that matters every season for the blue and white.
“We failed at our job last year,” he said — despite tying an all-time college basketball record for most top-15 wins while leading Kentucky to its first Sweet 16 since 2019.
Agree to disagree, Coach, but I get it. You understand the assignment of hanging banners every season and the Wildcats did not hang a banner his first season. It’s a black and white conversation you’re not willing to budge on. Fair enough.
Let’s talk through some of the things that didn’t work, then, reasons Kentucky did not win a championship. Why did the Wildcats only shoot 25 3-pointers per game after entering the season wanting to take 30, if not 35? They were top-30 in efficiency from deep, but barely top-70 in terms of volume despite boasting a top-five scoring offense?
“It was poor coaching,” Pope said.
The tone was lighthearted in a self-deprecating way, joking that for all of the team success they found together, being five 3-point attempts short of their preseason goal each game kept them from taking things to another level. It wasn’t the only thing and he was pleased with the team’s identity overall in year one, but it helped show how far away they are from being where he wants to be.
It’s five attempts on the surface, but so much more when you dig deeper.
“I’m still really disappointed with that this year, it still eats at me a little bit, like, ‘Ah!’ We couldn’t quite get there,” Pope said. “I was really proud of the product our guys put on the floor last year, and I thought — with all things considered, I was really proud of it.
“We have so much room to grow, we have so much more to do, we left so much on the table. We weren’t quite the team that I envisioned us being when we’re great.”
Plenty led to that nit-picky shortcoming beyond coaching and he wishes those circumstances were different, but that’s what the offseason is for. You build upon what worked in year one — again, plenty did work — while fixing what didn’t.
“Part of it was injuries, part of it was coaching, part of it all the things, part of it newness, part of it roster construction. It was all little pieces of it,” Pope said. “I’m super proud of what the guys did, I think it’s incredible. It was a really amazing journey, but you go through that and you’re like, ‘Man, we weren’t even close to what we’re supposed to be and what we’re aiming to be.’ I think that gives you great hope for what we can actually be.”
It’s part of a greater point he was trying to make, obsessing over ways to put a winning product on the floor capable of hanging banners. They were close in year one, but not close enough with those tiny details separating Kentucky from championship status.
Pope feels he’s found some of those answers to last year’s problems.
“It’s all built into it. We think we have some answers for when some things go wrong this coming season. You learn and you grow and you get better, right? That’s what we’re going to do,” he said. “With all that said, we talked about all the continuity issues and everything else, but I do think we learned a lot last year.
“I think we grew a lot last year as a staff, I think we grew as a team.”
While there were things that didn’t work in year one — at least at the level Pope demands — there were others that did, allowing the team to make history and push past the opening weekend for the first time in a half-decade. Putting together a tight-knit group that prioritized team goals over individual success is something he strived to do in his second offseason as head coach.
That worked then, now and always, Pope believes.
“Dealing with the changes, what we also learned was just how massively important it is for our guys to get to know each other and love each other,” he said. “As a basketball player, the only reason you’re here is because you’re completely obsessed with your own personal development and growth. You can’t get to Kentucky without being crazy, selfishly obsessed with yourself and how you grow — because that’s what it demands. It’s this personal sacrifice here that is so huge.”
Not saying individual success isn’t important — you don’t come to Kentucky if you’re not focused on developing individually and using the platform in the right way to skyrocket into superstardom — but team goals are the difference in getting there.
Take Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, for example. Would he become Kentucky’s first-ever NBA MVP if he didn’t lead the Oklahoma City Thunder to a No. 1 seed, now just six wins away from a world championship? Losers can produce and make a lot of money, but winners can reach legendary status.
There’s a healthy way of doing both.
“We’re not living in la-la-land where guys are going to completely divorce themselves from their own ambitions, but what we’re trying to do is build a place where you’re going to go achieve your own ambitions by becoming the greatest teammate ever and loving your guys more than you could possibly imagine,” Pope said. “This actually is, by definition — here and in the NBA — a team sport. It’s about a team.
“Our guys being so good at doing that last year was what helped us survive all the stuff that that kind of went into the season.”
Pretty good insight for a bad coach.
NIL
Marcus Freeman thinks he knows how to fix College Football’s coaching crisis
Over the past several years, there has been a massive exodus of elite coaches as some of the best coaches at the College level have either stepped away from the game or moved to different roles in the NFL. Whether it has been coaches like Nick Saban retiring, Head Coaches moving to the NFL like […]

Over the past several years, there has been a massive exodus of elite coaches as some of the best coaches at the College level have either stepped away from the game or moved to different roles in the NFL. Whether it has been coaches like Nick Saban retiring, Head Coaches moving to the NFL like Jim Harbaugh, or a coach like Jeff Hafley leaving a Head Coaching gig to become an NFL coordinator, the game has been stripped of it’s talent.
The biggest reason for the loss of elite level talent has been some of the recent changes to the College Football landscape. As NIL and the Transfer Portal have made it even more demanding on coaches, many have pointed to the added issues coaches need to deal with as a reason for the departures.
Marcus Freeman appeared on The Joel Klatt Show, where he gave his pitch to how College Football could start to make the sport more appealing to the coaches.
“We’ve gotta create some type of balance for those coaches and I think we are. I see us trending from my first year to now my fourth year in a direction that is trying to create some type of balance for assistant coaches, and that’s important.”
Marcus Freeman
The overall point that Marcus Freeman is making makes a ton of sense as the day to day roles these coaches, especially assistant coaches have are truly overwhelming. Where College Football needs to adapt is by simply creating more breaks in the yearly calendar to create more periods where coaches can get the balance that NFL coaches are given.
The main area where the game can shift is by creating more dead periods or longer dead periods in the recruiting calendar. During the season, coaches are still working extra hours keeping in contact with recruits which adds to the job. Once the season ends, the true season for assistants starts as they travel around the Country pitching their program to recruits.
The other area where College could look to cut down on activity is by moving from two transfer portal windows to one transfer window. The second transfer window creates another period where coaches could be on break but, they’re instead recruiting their own players once preventing departures while also looking to add to the roster.
As the College game continues to shift in a way that benefits the athletes, the coaches will need to become the next group that reaps some benefits.
More College Football News:

NIL
One SEC program reportedly spent over $31 million in NIL money in 2024
With the new House Settlement, the NIL era has changed with schools allotted $20.5 million to spend on their athletics — figuring out how to divide that figure is another story. Prior to the groundbreaking settlement, schools used collectives and, let’s be honest, bag men to help pay the athletes. One number came to light […]

With the new House Settlement, the NIL era has changed with schools allotted $20.5 million to spend on their athletics — figuring out how to divide that figure is another story.
Prior to the groundbreaking settlement, schools used collectives and, let’s be honest, bag men to help pay the athletes. One number came to light recently, and that regards the Missouri Tigers of the SEC. According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Tigers had over $31 million in NIL money to pay their athletes in 2024.
“The records show that nearly two-thirds of the money in 2024 went to football players and about a fourth to men’s basketball. The remainder was split among baseball, women’s basketball and lower-profile programs.”
Did it pay off? Well, in 2023, the football program won 11 games, and in 2024, Missouri went 10-3. The Tigers lost to Texas A&M, Alabama, and South Carolina. The Tigers returned veterans like QB Brady Cook and WR Luther Burden, who both received big paydays to return to Mizzou. Playing in the vaunted SEC against the likes of Bama, Georgia, Texas, Tennessee, and LSU, among others, is no easy task. The collectives and boosters wanted to make sure the Tigers could compete on the football field.
Then in men’s basketball, the Tigers returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in two seasons. Missouri was bounced in Round 1 against Drake. But, Missouri fielded a 22-11 team that made Mizzou fans excited for the first time in a few seasons.
There is no doubt that NIL plays a huge part in what teams do year in and year out. Now with the revenue sharing model, Missouri can focus money on the football team, and still remain competitve in the SEC.
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NIL
Mizzou outfielder adds name to transfer portal
COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ) One of Mizzou Baseball’s promising young talents is exploring for a new home. On Tuesday, Brady Picarelli announced on social media that he is entering the transfer portal, following just one season with the Tigers. He has three years of eligibility remaining. The rising sophomore outfielder displayed plenty of potential during his […]


COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)
One of Mizzou Baseball’s promising young talents is exploring for a new home.
On Tuesday, Brady Picarelli announced on social media that he is entering the transfer portal, following just one season with the Tigers. He has three years of eligibility remaining.
The rising sophomore outfielder displayed plenty of potential during his limited opportunities as a freshman this year. The Missouri native recorded a .313 batting average with four home runs and 18 RBI’s over 18 appearances this season. He also appeared on the starting lineup card in 11 different games.
In high school, Picarelli was one of the state’s top-15 prospects (No. 13) in the Class of 2024, per Prep Baseball Report. The Eureka alum was also considered Missouri’s No. 1-ranked outfielder in his class.
Mizzou currently has nine confirmed players, who have chosen to enter the transfer portal this offseason. Eight of those student-athletes are pitchers: St. Elizabeth alum Brock Lucas, Blair Oaks graduate Wil Libbert, Russellville alum Charlie Miller, Tony Neubeck, Kaden Jacobi, Josh Kirchhoff, Seth McCartney and Jaylen Merchant.
NIL
Manning to Join Athletes in Action Tour to Czech Republic
MANHATTAN, Kan. – Rising junior Taj Manning has been selected to join the Athletes in Action Basketball international tour this summer, traveling to the Czech Republic from June 28 to July 11. Manning will be part of a select team comprised of eight college basketball players from across the country. The team will complete […]

Manning will be part of a select team comprised of eight college basketball players from across the country. The team will complete in exhibition games against the Czech Republic’s U20 and U23 national teams while also participating in outreach activities, including a one-day youth basketball camp and coaching clinic.
The Grandview, Mo., native has seen action in 22 games with a start in his K-State playing career, including 14 games with a start as a redshirt freshman in 2023-24.
Athletes in Action is a faith-based organization that partners with college athletes across the country, organizing sports tours and leadership training experiences aimed at fostering personal development and global impact.
How to follow the ‘Cats: For complete information on K-State men’s basketball, visit www.kstatesports.com and follow the team’s social media channels on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
NIL
How might House settlement affect college baseball?
Conversations about the House settlement have predictably centered on how schools might deploy funds to football and men’s basketball, but there are plenty of other sports that might see benefits from a new structure — perhaps none more than baseball. Baseball might be one of the biggest winners in the passage of the settlement, as […]

Conversations about the House settlement have predictably centered on how schools might deploy funds to football and men’s basketball, but there are plenty of other sports that might see benefits from a new structure — perhaps none more than baseball.
Baseball might be one of the biggest winners in the passage of the settlement, as I wrote in this week’s magazine.
At a base level, seeing its longstanding scholarship limit of 11.7 erased in favor of roster limits allows for schools with baseball aspirations more access to fully fund scholarships in the sport.
South Carolina, Florida State, Clemson and Tennessee are just a few of the schools that are expected to add a significant number of scholarships moving forward, while revenue share and NIL figure to factor in significantly.
That also comes as schools continue to invest considerable resources into coaching contracts and facilities across the sport.
“It’s really the only sport that was so low and underfunded on the scholarship side that the first thing with the scholarship limits going away, it’s like, ‘OK, how fast can we get those to 25, 30, 34, whatever it is,’” South Carolina AD Jeremiah Donati told me. “Oh, and, by the way, you’ve got to pay ’em. It’s like a double dip.”
This also opens the door for a handful of mid-majors that are willing to invest more in baseball. College of Charleston is expecting to share between $300,000 and $500,000 with its baseball team.
“We haven’t been to the tournament in 11 years now,” said College of Charleston AD Matt Roberts. “And when you look up the street and you see Coastal [Carolina] going back [to the College World Series] — we beat them twice this year — you know it’s possible. Every year in the tournament, there’s always that team, and we’ve got to get back in the tournament. Rev share gives our coaching staff a chance to put together a competitive roster to do that.”
College baseball has always been hamstrung by scholarship limits. In this new revenue sharing world, the sport might just be ready for a significant cash infusion.
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