Following Kentucky’s every move in the winter transfer portal window was very much system overload. Your head had to be on a swivel at all times as the program looked to find a lot of starters. The offensive rebuild took up most of the oxygen but the defense had to fill some holes in the […]
Following Kentucky’s every move in the winter transfer portal window was very much system overload. Your head had to be on a swivel at all times as the program looked to find a lot of starters. The offensive rebuild took up most of the oxygen but the defense had to fill some holes in the front. UK went to the FCS to fill one of those holes.
South Dakota transfer Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace committed to the Cats over Cincinnati, Georgia, and Wisconsin in January. The addition was expected to be a plug-and-play starter at defensive end. The Cincinnati (Ohio) Princeton product has quietly made a big impact to this point in his Kentucky career.
“Really excited about Quise. I think he’s got a really high upside,” Kentucky defensive coordinator Brad White told KSR on Thursday. “He’s been a really steady, consistent, high-level performer through spring, through fall camp for us. Expecting big things from him this year.”
“Obviously, I don’t wanna put the cart before the horse. And he wouldn’t want that either. He’s sort of very quiet and more of a introvert, but when he steps across the line he’s so strong and physical with his hands.”
The class of 2022 product logged 15 tackles for loss and 9.5 sacks as a senior in 2021 but went under the radar as a recruit. After redshirting in 2022, Humphrey-Grace made 34 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss, 5.5 sacks, and six pass breakups as a redshirt freshman in 2023. Those numbers increased across the board as a redshirt sophomore in 2024. The defensive end was the Missouri Valley Football Conference Defensive Player of the Year and a first-team All-American after recording 17 tackles for loss and 9.5 sacks.
It sounds like that production is translating to Kentucky. White didn’t want to go there but ended up comparing Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace to one of the best players in the Mark Stoops era.
“From a physicality standpoint, from a way he can potentially affect the game, he has Josh Paschal-type potential,” White said.
Those are some strong words from Kentucky’s defensive play-caller. The offensive line additions and defensive tackle David Gusta have gotten most of the trench attention this preseason but Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace is primed to play a big role for UK this fall.
Luckett’s Scouting Notebook: Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace
Over at KSR+, I put together scouting write-ups on each of Kentucky’s transfer additions from the offseason after watching film and collecting data. This is my breakdown of Mi’Quise Humphrey-Grace.
The Cincinnati (Ohio) Princeton product started his collegiate career at South Dakota and became the Missouri Valley Defensive Player of the Year as a redshirt sophomore after recording 64 tackles, 17 tackles for loss, and 9.5 sacks. Comes to Kentucky after positing a monster season as a redshirt sophomore.
Humphrey-Grace played defensive end in South Dakota’s even front. Sets hard edges as a run defender flashing the power to hold the point against offensive tackles. Adding more strength is an area for improvement. Shows a good long arm move as a pass rusher and can get tackles on skates. Wins with power more than bend. Good movement skills provide value on stunts.
A 4-3 defensive end who should hold up well in Kentucky’s odd front. Humphrey-Grace is another transfer portal addition with some pass rush juice but shows good hand striking in run support and should give the Wildcats a solid addition in the run game. True two-way value with playmaking put on tape. Plug-and-play starter on the defensive line.
Luckett’s Scouting Notebook: What Kentucky added to roster via the transfer portal
Category: General Sports