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Kansas' Kevin McCullar Jr. Out for 2024 NCAA Tournament With Injury; KU's Top Scorer

Timothy Rapp

The Kansas men's basketball team received a major blow to its national championship aspirations on Tuesday, as head coach Bill Self told reporters star guard Kevin McCullar Jr. has been ruled out of the NCAA tournament due to a knee injury.

McCullar, a senior, leads the team with 18.3 points per game while also averaging 6.0 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.5 steals.

Self added that Hunter Dickinson "looks great" after he missed the team's loss to Cincinnati in the second round of the Big 12 tournament with a dislocated shoulder, but that McCullar was simply unable to play through his knee pain.

The Jayhawks were already on upset watch after finishing the season with four losses in five games while going just 7-8 down the stretch after a 15-2 start. Those losses included a 30-point blowout embarrassment against Houston and the loss to Cincy, with both McCullar and Dickinson out.

Without McCullar, they'll likely be a trendy pick among the higher seeds to be upset in the first weekend. And if Dickinson isn't close to 100 percent, the odds only get worse.

On a human level, it's hard to see a player like McCullar—who returned to school for a fifth season to seek a national championship—lose the chance to play in one last tourney.

"How about one more year Jayhawk nation," he wrote on social media in May of 2023 when he announced his return for the 2022-24 campaign. "To be able to play in front of the best fans in the country; to play for the best coach in the nation, I truly believe we have the pieces to hang another banner in the Phog. Rock Chalk! Let's do it!"

Self was thrilled to see him return.

"This is a big day for Kansas basketball," he said in a statement at the time. "We've had a lot of good things happen through recruiting this offseason, but nothing that has transpired this offseason was bigger for KU basketball than having a seasoned veteran like Kevin McCullar return to our program."

Expectations were immense for this Kansas team—the Jayhawks entered the season atop the AP's preseason top-25 poll. After Tuesday's news, however, it doesn't appear likely they'll live up to that hype.

   

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