Kentucky Wildcats Shine in 2024 NBA Draft with Top-10 Selections

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Two Kentucky Wildcats were selected in the top 10 of the 2024 NBA Draft, continuing the tradition of UK men’s basketball players making their mark in the opening round. Reed Sheppard was picked No. 3 overall, while Rob Dillingham was selected at No. 8 on Wednesday night at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Sheppard was the first collegiate player off the board, becoming the third Kentucky guard to be selected in the top five in the last 30 years when the Houston Rockets picked him third overall. Dillingham followed just five picks later, going No. 8 to San Antonio before his draft rights were traded to Minnesota.

This marks the seventh time in program history that two players were selected within the NBA Draft’s first 10 picks. UK previously had multiple top-10 selections in 1949, 1984, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2015.

With Sheppard and Dillingham’s selections, Kentucky has now had at least one player taken in the first round for 15 consecutive drafts, the longest streak in the modern draft era (since 1966). In total, the Wildcats have had at least one player drafted in 17 straight years.

Sheppard is the fifth Wildcat selected by the Rockets and the first since Terrence Jones in 2012. Other Houston selections include Pat Riley (1967), Fred Cowan (1981), and Patrick Patterson (2010). Dillingham is only the second UK player chosen by San Antonio, joining Keldon Johnson in 2019.

“I’m super excited,” Sheppard said. “I’m a guy going in who is looking to learn. He’s going to do whatever it takes to win. If it’s not making 3s right away, it’s getting teammates involved. Whatever it takes to win and be on the court, I’m going to do whatever makes the team better.”

Sheppard is UK’s first top-five selection since De’Aaron Fox went No. 5 to Sacramento in 2017. He is the highest pick overall since Karl-Anthony Towns was the top choice in 2015. The London, Kentucky native is the top overall selection by a Kentucky player who is a native of the Commonwealth since Rex Chapman went No. 8 in 1988 to Charlotte.

Sheppard averaged 12.5 points per game and topped double-figure scoring in 21 games, earning National Freshman of the Year honors from the National Basketball Coaches Association and the United States Basketball Writers Association. The 6-foot-3 guard led the team with 148 assists on the year and was the Southeastern Conference’s Freshman of the Year. His 4.5 assists per game ranked fourth in the league, with his 148 assists ranking as the eighth-most in single-season history by a UK freshman.

Defensively, Sheppard was a standout with 82 steals on the season. Since steals became an official stat in 1979, Sheppard’s total is the second-most by a UK player in program history, trailing only Rajon Rondo (87). He became the first player in UK history to register five steals in three consecutive games.

Dillingham averaged 15.2 points per game off the bench, earning the SEC’s Sixth Man of the Year. His scoring mark was second on the team, trailing only Antonio Reeves. Dillingham’s points per game off the bench were the most among all players in the SEC and the most by any true freshman off the bench this season.

The Hickory, North Carolina native poured in a career-high 35 points against Tennessee on Feb. 3, tying for the most points off the bench by any UK player in the John Calipari era. He was also just the third player to score 35 or more in the Rick Barnes’ Tennessee era, joining Mason Jones and Domantas Sabonis.

For the year, Dillingham scored in double figures in 27 games. Against UK’s seven ranked opponents this season, Dillingham averaged 17.1 points per game and 3.9 assists, connecting on 60% of his shots from 3-point range and averaging 2.6 made 3s per game in those contests.

Kentucky has had 140 players drafted 142 times in its illustrious history, with 62 players selected in the opening round. The 62 first-round selections are more than any other program in the country. Since the draft moved to two rounds in 1989, the Wildcats lead all schools with 48 first-round picks.