Koby Brea was one of the top shooters in the country, and the former Kentucky guard was recently mentioned as a possible sleeper pick in the 2025 NBA draft by one analyst.

Brea averaged 11.6 points, 3.2 rebounds and 1.3 assists on 43.5% shooting from 3-point range in 36 games as a fifth-year senior with the Wildcats. Averaging 5.9 attempts per game, Brea led the SEC in 3-point percentage and ranked ninth among all players in Division I.

The 22-year-old is considered a possible second-round pick this year, given his ability as a high-level shooter. Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report believes Brea should be on teams’ radars as a player who can step in and fill a crucial need in rotations.

There is no doubt in my mind that Brea has a chance to be a specialist at the NBA level. It isn’t just stationary, catch and shoot stuff: He was 43% on pull-ups. He shot 40% off movement. With his size and just a very projectable stroke and, of course, the numbers, you throw that into one equation, you have a very believable NBA shooter. … I think if you’re an NBA team out there and you’re late in the second round and need shooting, I don’t know how you don’t at least consider Brea.

Brea, who played the first four years of his career at Dayton, finished last year with 93 total 3-pointers, tied for the seventh-most in a single season in program history. He was one of six players from a power conference to make 90 or more 3s on at least 40% shooting.

The 6-foot-6 standout finished as a career 43.4% shooter from beyond the arc, including a 49.8% mark last year with the Flyers. He joined the likes of Stephen Curry, Allan Houston and Dennis Scott as players to record at least 1,000 points, 450 rebounds and 300 3s on 40% shooting in a career.

Brea was among the prospects invited to the draft combine, beginning Monday in Chicago, Illinois. He will have the chance to showcase his overall skill set and improve his draft stock against his peers in front of teams, executives and coaches.

The draft will occur June 25-26 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.