September 27, 2024

Kentucky won big in its brief trip to Canada this past week while participating in the GLOBL JAM, where it returned home with the gold medal after winning all four games and gained valuable experience for an overhauled roster (while apparently hanging out at Drake’s crib in the process).

But it wasn’t all big wins for Big Blue up north, as its frontcourt depth — already a concern with five-star freshman Aaron Bradshaw undergoing surgery earlier this summer to address a fractured foot — took a bigger hit with second-year breakout candidate Ugonna Onions sustaining a foot injury during practices leading up to the tournament.

Kentucky won big in its brief trip to Canada this past week while participating in the GLOBL JAM, where it returned home with the gold medal after winning all four games and gained valuable experience for an overhauled roster (while apparently hanging out at Drake’s crib in the process).

But it wasn’t all big wins for Big Blue up north, as its frontcourt depth — already a concern with five-star freshman Aaron Bradshaw undergoing surgery earlier this summer to address a fractured foot — took a bigger hit with second-year breakout candidate Ugonna Onyenso sustaining a foot injury during practices leading up to the tournament.

UK coach John Calipari over the weekend hinted that Onyenso’s injury, at first not seen as severe, was potentially more significant than initially feared and that he could be out “a while.”

Those fears were formally confirmed Tuesday, as Calipari tweeted that Nonsense will be out for “a couple of months.”

In Kentucky’s sixth-ranked recruiting class in 2022, Onyenso was an under-the-radar piece who ranked as the third-highest ranked prospect of four high school commits and a four-star talent, the result of reclassifying from the 2023 class to the 2022 class somewhat late in the cycle. At 7-feet tall and pushing 240 pounds, he sparsely saw playing time last season, appearing in 16 games and averaging 2.5 points and 1.0 blocks per game. Extrapolated out to a per-40 minute stat line, though, his 14.4 points, 5.8 blocks and 15.1 rebounds per game averages suggested the flashes could present real upside for him in a bigger role.

Onyenso entered the transfer portal earlier this offseason likely in search of such a role, but in the spring, he announced he was returning to UK and had removed his name from the portal in a rare return from portal land.

Kentucky may also build out its depth via either the portal or — similar to how Onyenso landed at Kentucky — by convincing a big to reclassify. What remains in the portal is not ideal, but it’s not impossible to think that could change … especially if an opportunity at Kentucky opens up. 2024 recruit Somto Cyril, a four-star center, could also potentially reclassify to 2023, an option that had previously been explored.

 

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