UK Men's Basketball

Kentucky’s EJ Montgomery becomes fifth Wildcat to enter 2020 NBA Draft.

More than any other Kentucky player this year, EJ Montgomery seemed to epitomize the uncertainty involved in the UK-or-NBA basketball crossroads that precedes the NBA Draft. He announced his decision Wednesday, fittingly as the last of five UK teammates to do so. He said he would enter the draft and forego his remaining two seasons of college eligibility.

Montgomery followed Ashton Hagans, Tyrese Maxey, Immanuel Quickley and Nick Richards in entering this year’s NBA Draft. Of the five, he had the lowest averages in points (6.1 per game) and minutes (24.0).

But, as his father, Efrem Montgomery, said this spring, UK Coach John Calipari downplays the importance of statistics.

“Cal always says numbers don’t matter at Kentucky,” the elder Montgomery said. “Winning matters.”

Montgomery, who averaged 4.8 points and 4.6 rebounds in his two college seasons, would not be the first Kentucky player drafted who posted modest statistics. Daniel Orton, who averaged 3.4 points and 13.2 minutes in his one UK season, was first-round pick in 2010. So was Skal Labissiere (6.6 points and 3.1 rebounds) in 2016. Archie Goodwin, a shooting guard who made only 26.6 percent of his three-point shots and 63.7 percent of his free throws, was a first-round pick in 2013.

Earlier this offseason, Mississippi State Coach Ben Howland suggested that Montgomery would be wise to follow Richards’ example and return for a third college season. Richards blossomed as a junior and was voted to the coaches’ All-Southeastern Conference First Team.

“EJ Montgomery is going to be an NBA player,” Howland said. “I don’t have any doubt about that. But, I think that he would be smart to come back next year.”

Howland likened Montgomery to former UNLV standout Stacey Augmon in terms of being a versatile defender and capable scorer.

Montgomery, who came to UK as a McDonald’s All-American and five-star recruit, entered his name in last year’s draft. His father said that working out for seven teams last year should help make his son a known commodity this year.

Montgomery’s announcement on Twitter on Wednesday included the sophomore thanking his UK coaches and teammates for their assistance in his development and a nod to an NCAA Tournament opportunity lost amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“The circumstances were unfortunate, but I am thankful that I was able to play for a great coach and coaching staff and compete every day in practice and in games to challenge myself to become a better all-around player,” Montgomery said.

Calipari often cited Montgomery as a potential difference-maker. When Montgomery came within a rebound of a double-double against Fairleigh Dickinson (career-high 25 points and nine rebounds), Calipari gushed, “EJ was ridiculous. That’s my vision of him. That’s what I think he is.”

Before Kentucky played Alabama in early January, Calipari suggested another breakout performance could be coming.

“EJ may step up and be the monster we want him to be,” Calipari said.

Montgomery defined being a “monster” as: “He just wants me to go out there and compete. Fight every possession. Go get rebounds and just do the little things I can do. I think I’m breaking out of my shell. Me and Cal had a talk. He just wants me to go out there, not think, and have fun.”

Before UK played Vanderbilt later in January, assistant coach Joel Justus described Montgomery as “a young guy who’s still trying to figure out how hard this is. The burden of success and failure right on your shoulders … . EJ is practicing at an all-time high where he is focused and in a great mindset.”

Montgomery punctuated his sophomore season with an exclamation point. His tip-in with seconds remaining capped a Kentucky rally that erased an 18-point second-half deficit to beat Florida 71-70.

Calipari expressed his belief in Montgomery’s decision in Wednesday’s UK news release.

“At 6-10 with perimeter skills, athleticism and an ability to block shots, someone is going to get a big-time prospect with EJ,” Calipari said. “His skill set is where the game is going. EJ has always had those tools, but what I’m so proud of is how he progressed, not only through his two seasons here but especially the last month of the season.

“I was excited for EJ going into the postseason because I really thought it was going to be a great opportunity to show all the work he’s put in. He was really playing his best basketball. I’m happy for EJ and his family and will continue to be here to help throughout this process.”

2020-21 UK basketball roster

Here is how the University of Kentucky men’s basketball roster for next season looks as things currently stand. Each player is listed with his height:

Graduate transfers

Davion Mintz (6-3)

Seniors

x-Riley Welch (6-0)

Juniors

y-Ben Jordan (6-9)

Sophomores

Keion Brooks (6-7)

x-Brennan Canada (6-6)

x-Zan Payne (6-4)

Redshirt freshmen

Dontaie Allen (6-6)

True freshmen

Devin Askew (6-3)

Brandon “BJ” Boston (6-6)

Terrence Clarke (6-7)

x-Isaac DeGregorio (5-11)

Cam’Ron Fletcher (6-6)

Isaiah Jackson (6-9)

Lance Ware (6-9)

Departures: Ashton Hagans (NBA Draft), Johnny Juzang (transferred to UCLA), Tyrese Maxey (NBA Draft), EJ Montgomery (NBA Draft), Immanuel Quickley (NBA Draft), Nick Richards (NBA Draft), Nate Sestina (graduated), Kahlil Whitney (transfer portal/NBA Draft).

x-Walk-on

y-Also a UK baseball player

This story was originally published April 15, 2020 at 11:54 AM.

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Jerry Tipton
Lexington Herald-Leader
Jerry Tipton has covered Kentucky basketball beginning with the 1981-82 season to the present. He is a member of the United States Basketball Writers Association Hall of Fame. Support my work with a digital subscription
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