Mark Pope has added two players through the kentucky basketball transfer portal, bringing in Zoom Diallo from Washington and Alex Wilkins from Furman as he reshapes Kentucky’s backcourt. The plan is to use Wilkins at the two and Diallo at the one, a setup that gives the Wildcats a clear outline but also invites a hard look at how the guards will fit together.
The concern starts with the simplest problem in roster construction: both players are technically ones. Wilkins is an elite ball handler who creates most of his own shots with his dribble, while Diallo is not the same kind of shooter and does not take nearly as many threes. Diallo likes to score in other ways, and that should give Kentucky a path to a familiar pattern this season, with Diallo driving and kicking to Wilkins for open looks. But some observers are uneasy about Wilkins spending more time in a catch-and-shoot role at the two, where the strengths that made him stand out as a lead guard can be muted.
That is where the offseason becomes important. If Pope keeps Wilkins at the two, he will need to spend the months ahead working on the move from point guard to shooting guard, a transition that is harder than going the other direction. Kentucky already saw how difficult the point guard conversion can be when Jasper Johnson struggled so much this season trying to become a true point guard. That makes the Wilkins experiment more than a small tweak; it is part of the larger question of how Pope wants the ball to move and who he trusts to initiate offense when the games start to matter.
Pope is not done, either. He still has to go out and get more players at the two, and that may end up being the cleaner answer to the problem. If he lands natural twos who are also strong shooters, the Diallo-Wilkins pairing becomes less of an issue because the lineup has more room for each player’s best skill. If Wilkins does not work out at the two, Pope can also shift him to the bench and bring him in behind Diallo. For now, Kentucky’s offseason plan is straightforward on paper and unsettled in practice, which is exactly where the kentucky basketball transfer portal has left the Wildcats: with talent in hand, and work still to do before the fit is real.