
McInnes, McGlynn and Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of year
Derek McInnes, John McGlynn, and Gary Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of the year!
Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball has added Justin McBride from the transfer portal to address their frontcourt issues. McBride, previously at James Madison, averaged 15.3 points and 5.6 rebounds last season.
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There wasnât any hiding itâthe Kentucky Wildcats had a problem in the frontcourt. When Mo Dioubate and Andrija JelaviÄ exited, they didnât just leave minutes behind⊠they left a void in identity. No true power forwards. No physical anchor at the four. No margin for error. So when Justin McBride stepped on campus for his official visit, this wasnât just another portal recruitmentâthis was a solution. And it didnât take long.'
Louisville made a push. SMU, Florida State, and Baylor were all circled. But Lexington hit different. One visit, one vision, one decisionâMcBride shut it down and gave Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball its third portal commitment of the cycle, joining Washington guard Zoom Diallo and Furman wing Alex Wilkins. Need met opportunityâand Kentucky didnât miss.THE BREAKTHROUGH â PRODUCTION WITH PURPOSEMcBrideâs path wasnât linear. It was built. Oklahoma State (2.5 points, 1.5 rebounds). Nevada (7.8 points, 4.2 rebounds). Early flashes, but no consistent role. Then came James Madisonâand everything changed.Under Preston Spradlin, a coach with roots tied back to John Calipariâs Kentucky staff, McBride found clarity and turned it into production.
15.3 points, 5.6 rebounds, 1.5 assists per game49% from the field | 40% from three | 78% from the lineThird Team All-Sun Belt honorsLed the team in scoring 10 timesStarted 30 of 31 games
Thatâs not just a jump â thatâs a statement.He didnât just play well. He became the engine of an 18â15 James Madison team, finishing eighth in the Sun Belt in Spradlinâs first season.That matters. Because it shows he can carry weightâand now, he doesnât have to carry it alone.THE FIT â WHY THIS WORKS IN Mark PopeâS SYSTEMThis is where the move goes from necessary to smart. In Popeâs system, the four isnât a back-to-the-basket enforcerâit's a position built on movement, spacing, and decision-making. You need forwards who can:Stretch the floorAttack closeoutsRebound in spaceDefend across positions
McBride checks those boxes. That 40% from three isnât just a stat â itâs gravity. It opens driving lanes. It forces rotations. It fits the pace-and-space identity Pope is building in Lexington.But beyond the shooting, itâs the feel. McBride plays within rhythm. He doesnât steal possessions. He doesnât need the offense built around him to impact the game. He connects pieces on a roster that needed balance; thatâs everything.
Justin McBride is a forward who averaged 15.3 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 1.5 assists per game at James Madison.
Before committing to Kentucky, Justin McBride received interest from Louisville, SMU, Florida State, and Baylor.
McBride fits well in Mark Pope's system, which emphasizes movement, spacing, and decision-making for forwards, rather than traditional back-to-the-basket play.

Derek McInnes, John McGlynn, and Gary Naysmith nominated for SPFL manager of the year!
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Every roster has its stars, but the teams that actually come together â the ones that work â are built on players who understand how to fill the gaps. Justin McBride has spent his career figuring out exactly where he fits, and now he arrives in Lexington not searching for that answer, but carrying it with him. For Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball, that kind of clarity at a position of need could be the difference â turning a lingering question mark into something steady, something reliable, something real.
This article originally appeared on UK Wildcats Wire: Kentucky basketball lands Justin McBride from transfer portal