NBA

Jermaine O’Neal reveals he nearly committed to Kentucky before Rick Pitino urged him to choose the NBA

Jermaine O’Neal reveals he nearly committed to Kentucky before Rick Pitino urged him to choose the NBA

Feb 17, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Former NBA player Jermaine ONeal watches his son SMU Mustangs forward Jermaine O'Neal Jr.

(not pictured) during the second half against the Louisville Cardinals at Moody Coliseum.

Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Former NBA All-Star Jermaine ONeal recently revealed that he came close to committing to Kentucky following the Wildcats 1996 national championship before head coach Rick Pitino gave him advice that changed his life.

Speaking on the Str8 to Da League podcast, ONeal shared that Kentucky was his top choice coming out of high school and that Pitino had heavily recruited him, making multiple in-home visits with ONeal and his family.

I was going to go to Kentucky.

Shout out to Rick Pitino, man.

Like he recruited me, and this was like the realest thing, man.

My mother loved him, man.

She loved him, ONeal said.

According to ONeal, Pitinos honesty ultimately convinced him to skip college and enter the NBA Draft.

He was sitting in our living room, he came four times on visits, and he said, Look, everything I know about you and your family, the struggles, the things youre going through.

He said, Were going to be good with you, or were going to be good without you.

Would love to have you, but you should go pro.

That was the realest thing, bro.

When he said that, it made complete sense.

ONeal went on to become the No.

17 overall pick in the 1996 NBA Draft by the Portland Trail Blazers, and had an 18-year NBA career that included six All-Star selections, three All-NBA Team honors, and averages of 13.2 points and 7.2 rebounds across more than 1,000 career games.

While Kentucky fans can only imagine what could have been, ONeals comments offered another example of Pitinos reputation for putting players long-term interests ahead of recruiting victories.