Earlier this week, Kansas linebacker and Lawrence native Cole Mondi became one of the country’s first walk-ons to capitalize on the NCAA’s new name, image and likeness rules.
The former Lawrence High football star who is in his first year with the KU football program agreed to an NIL deal with 23rd Street Brewery.
The details of the deal are still being finalized, but Brewery owner Matt Llewellyn said ...
The way the media sees it, first-year Kansas football coach Lance Leipold has his work cut out for him.
With 39 points — one from each voter — the Jayhawks were a unanimous pick to finish last in the 10-team Big 12 conference in this year's preseason media poll which was released Thursday.
In fact, KU was nowhere near ninth-place selection Texas Tech, which finished with 103 points.
Seeing KU in the ...
Tuesday’s news that KU guard [Ochai Agbaji][1] and [Remy Martin][2] were withdrawing their names from the NBA draft pool brought with it the finalization of KU’s roster online.
It also revealed that Martin will be changing numbers for his lone season with the Jayhawks.
After wearing No. 1 for four years at Arizona State, Martin is changing to No. 11 at Kansas.
We have yet to talk with Martin about his ...
Plenty busy with his own schedule at the moment, former Kansas guard Marcus Garrett said Tuesday that he was still keeping a close eye on what was happening in Lawrence at his alma mater.
And on a day when the Jayhawks learned that returning senior Ochai Agbaji and Arizona State transfer Remy Martin were both staying in school for one more season, Garrett said he liked what he saw.
“Best team in the ...
After weeks of working on his game and debating the decision to turn pro or return to college, Kansas guard Ochai Agbaji announced Tuesday that he was coming back to KU for his senior season.
While no one ever has – or likely ever will — confused Agbaji for a Devonte’ Graham type of personality, he has the opportunity to follow in Graham’s footsteps and be the face of the program during the upcoming ...
There are 125 days between now and when it actually matters, and that should provide KU fans with plenty of time to dream up at least that many different lineups for the 2021-22 Kansas men’s basketball team.
Luckily, the current KU roster is loaded with both the kind of talent and the number of bodies that make such an exercise a possibility.
From five super seniors and four returning starters to four ...