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Koby Brea commits to Kentucky

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The Kentucky Wildcats have landed one of the best shooters in college basketball.

Dayton Flyers transfer Koby Brea has committed to the Wildcats, according to ESPN's Jonathan Givony.

This comes following an official visit Brea took to Lexington.

"Growing up, I was told I was dreaming too big whenever I'd say my dream was to play for the University of Kentucky," Brea told ESPN. "I feel like God does everything for a reason, and He has put me in a position where I'm able to play for my dream school in my last year of college while playing for something bigger than myself."

Brea was originally believed to be down to Duke and UConn entering last weekend, but in the game of recruiting, things can change quickly.

Duke pulled out of the race, and their visit was canceled, putting Kentucky back in contention and taking the place of that visit.

The Huskies added another transfer guard, Aidan Mahaney, on Monday, just after Brea's visit ended on Sunday, resulting in them pulling out of the race. Mahaney was also strongly considering Kentucky and took a visit to Lexington over the weekend.

When Brea arrived in Lexington on Monday night, the Wildcats were the clear leader, and they locked it down.

Koby Brea:

958 D1 players shot 100 or more 3-pointers last year. Brea had the highest true shooting percentage out of all of them at a smoking 72.2 TS%. pic.twitter.com/gkRQedgkPT

— Alex Weber (@AlexWeberOn3) May 1, 2024

Brea is ranked as the 40th-best transfer on ESPN and the 100th-best transfer on 247 Sports. According to EvanMiya, which has more of an analytical look at things, Brea is the 79th-best transfer.

Coming out of Monsignor Scanlan High School in Bronx, New York, Brea was an unranked class of 2020 recruit. While he wasn't a player exploding on the Grassroots scene, both of his parents come from the Dominican Republic, making him eligible to represent the Dominican National Team in the U-17 FIBA Centrobasket Championships.

There, Brea got to play against some of the best talent in the world. Ultimately, Brea committed to Dayton over a small list of other schools, such as Massachusetts, Manhattan, Iona, and Robert Morris.

As a freshman, Brea played in 16 games for Dayton but missed much of the preseason and all of the non-conference schedule due to an injury. He never really got comfortable and, because of this, received a redshirt.

As a redshirt freshman, Brea had a breakout season, earning A-10 Sixth Man of the Year and Most Improved Player awards, notably leading the team in 3-pointers made, attempts, and percentage (42%).

After learning he had stress fractures in both tibias, Brea saw his play drop in the 2022-23 season. At that point, surgery had to be completed. "I had to learn how to walk again slowly," Brea told the Dayton Daily News.

Fully healed in 2023-24, Brea had the best season of his college career. Playing the sixth-man role he became so comfortable in, Brea averaged career highs in points (11.1 ppg), rebounds (3.8 rpg), field goal percentage (51.2%), and 3-point percentage (49.8%). In doing so, he won his second Sixth Man of the Year award and helped lead Dayton to a Top 25 ranking and their first NCAA Tournament win appearance since 2015.

49.8% from 3 last season. That is the statistic that is going to jump off the page. The fifth-best 3-point percentage in the country, Brea did so on 201 attempts, making him one of the most efficient shooters in the country. That number isn't an outlier as he shot 42.3% in 2022-23, his only other season he did not miss time due to injuries.

That shooting ability isn't just limited to catch-and-shoot opportunities, as he is excellent at shooting off movement, whether that is coming off screens or creating for himself. To have the shooting efficiency and versatility he does in a 6-foot-6 frame is very rare.

No player comes without weakness, though. Brea's two biggest are his unproven ability to get to the rim and his defense.

Shooting as well as he does, Brea doesn't look to go inside often, with only 9% of his attempts coming at the rim. At 6-foot-6, he has the size, but he lacks some athleticism and quickness to get by more athletic defenders. That also hurts him on the defensive end, ranking 135th in EvanMiya's defensive rating amongst all transfers. Interestingly, Kentucky transfer target Jaxon Robinson is just below him at 136th.

In Brea, Kentucky is getting a proven shooter with a good frame and four years of college experience. If you were hoping to see Kentucky land a replacement for All-American Antonio Reeves, Brea is probably the closest thing there was to getting for next season.

Take a look at the newest Wildcat below.

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