LEXINGTON — Tyran Stokes has played things close to the vest with his recruitment. Unanimously regarded as the top player in the 2026 class by the three major recruiting databases (Rivals/On3, 247Sports and ESPN), Stokes has rarely granted media interviews that might provide a window into his thinking.
In the estimation of one man who covers recruiting year-round, however, Kentucky basketball and coach Mark Pope should fancy their chances.
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“There’s been a lot of momentum picking up toward Kentucky’s way,” Jamie Shaw, the senior national recruiting analyst for Rivals, said during an appearance on Kentucky Sports Radio’s Here Comes the Boom podcast on Aug. 21.
While Shaw added other schools are still in the running for the 6-foot-7, 225-pound all-world forward — Louisville, Arkansas, Kansas, Gonzaga and Southern Cal, among others — UK, which still is looking for its first commitment in the 2026 cycle, appears to be near the top.
“The Kentucky momentum is real,” Shaw said.
Stokes’ lack of communication with media members is by design. His mother, Keaira Stokes, joked with The Courier Journal at Peach Jam this summer that her son had passed the baton of media obligations to her.
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“Sometimes it’s not too much, but he just wants to be Tyran not THE Tyran Stokes,” she told the CJ in July. “He just wants to be that kid that he really is.”
While not naming specific schools, Stokes said in August one factor in his decision will be the program he believes can best develop him for the NBA.
“A good foundation, someone who has fans and puts their all into their school,” he said. “Not just someone who cares about, ‘Oh, we’ve got a good football team or a good basketball team.’ I want to go somewhere where I can have a good time actually experiencing college — go to a nice football game, have a nice baseball (team). … Just experience school.
“And also a school that’s not going to duck smoke. That’s it. I don’t like ducking smoke, so I want everybody on the schedule. If I could get North Carolina, Duke, anybody on the schedule, that’s all I want.”
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He’s already taken official visits to UK, U of L and Kansas. Gonzaga, Oregon and Southern Cal also are supposed to receive OVs before Stokes wraps up his recruitment. His mother told the CJ her son might make up his mind before his senior season of high school basketball begins.
Whenever that time comes, expect the Wildcats to be among the Louisville native‘s finalists.
Here are some other Kentucky basketball recruiting updates:
Kentucky makes top eight for top-ranked 2026 point guard Taylen Kinney
Taylen Kinney dribbles the ball up the court during a USA Basketball Men’s Junior National Team minicamp on April 5, 2025, in San Antonio. Kinney, a Newport, Kentucky, native, is the top point guard recruit in the Class of 2026 on the 247Sports Composite.
Taylen Kinney, a former in-state star at Newport High, was on UK’s radar even before Pope’s arrival as coach. The Wildcats’ previous staff, led by Hall of Famer John Calipari, also recruited the 6-1, 174-pound point guard. Pope & Co. didn’t let that attention abate.
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And their work has paid off: UK is one of Kinney’s eight finalists, which he revealed in a post on his personal Instagram account Aug. 21. His other seven finalists are Louisville, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Miami, Oregon and Texas.
Official visits to UK and U of L took place earlier this year. He had an OV with Kansas last week. And he is set for official visits with his other five finalists before September wraps up.
Kinney told ZAGSBLOG in July he is planning to commit before his season at Overtime Elite — an Atlanta-based league for 16-to-20-year-old players — starts this fall.
He was a revelation at OTE during the 2024-25 campaign. Kinney ended the regular season among the league’s top 10 in points (20.1; eighth), assists (5; tied for fifth) and steals (2.3; third) per game.
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He had little to say about himself, or his game, when The Courier Journal caught up with him in April at the Queen City Clash, a tournament held at Queen City Sportsplex in Cincinnati. His coach with Adidas-sponsored Wildcat Select 3SSB filled in the blanks, though.
“I just tell him to be himself,” Wildcat Select coach Andrew Mitchell said. “When you build these relationships (with college coaches), make them genuine. Make it like a brotherhood, fatherhood. Make it where you know what you’re getting yourself into, rather than you get there and you’re like, ‘(Dang), this isn’t who recruited me.’
“You want it to be as genuine as possible.”
Kinney is the No. 16 overall prospect in the 2026 class, per the 247Sports Composite, doubling up as the top-ranked point guard and the No. 1 recruit in Georgia.
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Despite Kentucky offer, 2026 guard Qayden Samuels likely not visiting Lexington
Qayden Samuels has an offer from UK. One he earned in the summer following a standout showing at the NBPA Top 100 Camp; per On3, “Samuels went for 25 or more (points) in four of his five games” at the event, while “averaging 26.4 points and 9.8 rebounds” overall. If that weren’t enough, Samuels made more than half his shots (54.2%) from the field — including 37.1% aim beyond the 3-point arc despite averaging seven attempts per contest.
Despite the Wildcats’ prior interest, the five-star 2026 wing doesn’t appear to be Lexington-bound for college.
“I don’t think we will be taking a visit there,” Samuels’ mother told KSR+ Aug. 25.
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Samuels is one of 21 prospects with a Kentucky offer in the 2026 cycle.
Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack.
Sports columnist C.L. Brown contributed to this story.
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Kentucky basketball recruiting 2026 targets Tyran Stokes, Tay Kinney