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Mark Pope gets a second chance at an elite transfer target who carries a massive injury risk

Is it worth the risk?
Jan 20, 2026; Gainesville, Florida, USA; Louisiana State Tigers guard Dedan Thomas Jr. (11) drives to the basket past Florida Gators guard Xaivian Lee (1) during the first half at Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images
Jan 20, 2026; Gainesville, Florida, USA; Louisiana State Tigers guard Dedan Thomas Jr. (11) drives to the basket past Florida Gators guard Xaivian Lee (1) during the first half at Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images | Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images

The transfer portal is officially about second chances. And it appears Mark Pope is about to get a massive one.

Last offseason, the Kentucky head coach desperately tried to secure an elite floor general, targeting high-profile names like Donovan Dent and Dedan Thomas Jr. Ultimately, Pope whiffed on both. Dent took his talents to UCLA, and Thomas opted to play in the SEC for LSU.

But in the wild west of modern college basketball, a "no" is rarely permanent; it's just a wait until next time. That happened with Jayden Quaintance this year. According to a report from Joe Tipton, Dedan Thomas Jr. is preparing to officially enter the transfer portal.

Pope is getting a second swing at the exact type of point guard this program desperately needs. But this time around, the pursuit comes with a massive, glaring red flag.

The elite floor general

If you look strictly at the stat sheet, Thomas is a no-brainer acquisition.

He is one of the most productive, high-IQ point guards in the country. After two stellar seasons at UNLV, where he averaged over 14 points a game, he proved his game translates well to the SEC. During his abbreviated 2025-26 campaign at LSU, Thomas averaged 15.3 points and a solid 6.5 assists per game while shooting nearly 51% from inside the arc. That assist level nearly doubles Denzel Aberdeen's team-leading total from last season.

He is the true creator and offensive engine that Kentucky glaringly lacked when their half-court offense continually bogged down last season. He takes care of the basketball, dictates the pace, and creates easy shots for his teammates.

But there is a big catch, and it is one we have seen go south before.

The massive medical red flag

The production is undeniable, but the medical chart is terrifying.

Thomas was forced to undergo foot surgery this past February, abruptly ending his season in Baton Rouge. The expected recovery timeline is five to six months. If his rehabilitation goes perfectly, that puts his return to the court right around the start of fall camp.

Foot injuries for point guards who rely on quickness and lateral agility are notoriously tricky. And for Kentucky, it brings up a painful, highly expensive dilemma.

The Jayden Quaintance PTSD

Can Mark Pope really afford to allocate a massive chunk of his NIL budget to a player who might not be physically ready to go when the lights come on?

BBN is currently suffering from severe injury PTSD. Pope’s first two seasons in Lexington have been absolutely decimated by the injury bug. Lamont Butler, Jaxson Robinson, Kam Williams, and Jaland Lowe all missed significant time.

But the most glaring comparison is Jayden Quaintance. Kentucky invested heavily in the talented big man's upside, only to watch him log just four total games this past season due to health issues. It crippled the roster rotation and made for an ugly end to the season.

Mark Pope has to look at the medicals for Dedan Thomas Jr. and make the hardest evaluation of the offseason. If Thomas heals completely, he is a program-altering point guard who can drive Kentucky deep into March. But if there are any setbacks, Pope risks repeating the exact same expensive, injury-riddled nightmare that just ruined his season.

He can't afford to do that, literally.

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