Kentucky is struggling to get an early return on investment with its basketball roster.
After spending a reported $22 million in NIL on this year’s team, the Wildcats are just 5–4 after a 35-point blowout loss to Gonzaga on Saturday—among the worst losses in program history. All five of Kentucky’s wins are against mid-major opponents and three of the four losses are to Power 4 teams; just one was close.
During Saturday’s game against Gonzaga in Nashville, the team went almost nine minutes without a basket, which prompted heavy boos from the fans.
“All the boos that we heard tonight were incredibly well-deserved, mostly for me,” Kentucky coach Mark Pope said after the game.
The Wildcats have been incompetent both offensively and defensively and were called out Saturday by program legend DeMarcus Cousins. “this uk team has no heart,” Cousins wrote. “This is hard to watch.”
But the team’s struggles haven’t entirely been self-inflicted. They have been without three key players due to injury, including Jaland Lowe (shoulder) and Mouhamed Dioubate (high ankle sprain) and Jayden Quaintance (torn ACL), the latter of which is the roster’s best NBA draft prospect.
Quaintance, the 18-year-old sophomore who transferred from Arizona State, has yet to play for the Wildcats as he rehabs a torn ACL. He was one of UK’s most expensive roster acquisitions of its six transfers after commanding a seven-figure NIL deal to sign with Arizona State out of high school.
Freshman point guard Jasper Johnson headlined a recruiting class that ranked No. 6 in the 247Sports rankings and his estimated NIL value was around $1.4 million, according to On3, though his father, Dennis, a former Kentucky football star, said his son didn’t choose his alma mater because of the Wildcats’ money.
“Kentucky wasn’t the highest NIL of the three schools we were considering,” Dennis Johnson told Kentucky Sports Radio in September 2024, shortly after his son committed.
Lowe was another expensive acquisition after he entered the portal from Pittsburgh, where he was a third-team All-ACC selection last season. Pope also plucked Denzel Aberdeen from national champion Florida, where he was a key reserve on the Gators title-winning squad in March. Florida has spent more than $10 million on its roster as it attempts to repeat as national champions.
The $22 million was first reported in October by the Lexington Herald-Leader. Kentucky’s payroll is likely a combination of boosters and revenue sharing. In July, CBS Sports reported that men’s basketball was getting 45% of the school’s revenue sharing for the 2025–26 athletic calendar, which would be roughly $9.2 million of the $20.5 million schools are allowed to use to pay athletes.
“We have the best donors in college basketball,” Pope said in May. “We have the best fans in college basketball. This is the University of Kentucky—I never forget that—so we should be the best at everything. And put NIL and put the transfer portal on the list. Our job is to go be the best at everything.”
That has yet to translate on the court this season. The Wildcats still have St. John’s and Indiana on their non-conference schedule before SEC play starts on Jan. 3. ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi currently projects the Wildcats to be among 11 SEC teams to get into the NCAA tournament, a slight decrease from the record 14 the conference got into the 2025 tournament. But the sluggish start has others less bullish on their prospects. Kenpom, a college basketball analytics website, projects the Wildcats to finish the regular season 18–13, which would likely keep them out of the Big Dance.
Much has been made of the Wildcats’ $22 million price tag, especially for a Kentucky roster that appears to lack the NBA talent of years past. For context, Ohio State’s football program paid $20 million for the roster that won the national championship in January. But the Buckeyes paid eight figures for a roster of 85 scholarship players, not 15, making the average salary on Kentucky’s roster about $1.46 million.
Quaintance is expected to return in January during conference play, barring any final setbacks. Quaintance is the lone Kentucky player appearing on most respected mock drafts, but NBA teams are more interested in his potential; his return wouldn’t necessarily transform the ‘Cats into contenders.
Perhaps the bigger question is what kind of team Quaintance returns to: one that is still in the mix for an NCAA tournament bid, or an eight-figure sunk cost?