KU adds international big man Mbiya

By Henry Greenstein     Jun 25, 2025

article image Adidas
Paul Mbiya is pictured at the Adidas Eurocamp in Treviso, Italy.

Updated 1:10 p.m. Wednesday, June 25, 2025:

The Kansas men’s basketball team’s long search for a backup big man has resulted in a significant signing.

Paul Mbiya, a 6-foot-11, 260-pound center from Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is joining KU. Head coach Bill Self announced his signing on Wednesday afternoon.

“We’ve had a good last couple of days recruiting with Kohl (Rosario) signing yesterday and Paul today,” Self said in a press release. “Paul is big. He’s a legit 6-11 with a wingspan of 7-foot, 8 inches. He fits very well with the way we play. He is an immediate impact guy, and he gives us much needed size to go along with Flory (Bidunga) and Bryson (Tiller).”

Dushawn London of 247Sports was first to report the news of Mbiya’s commitment earlier on Wednesday, with Mbiya telling London, “I signed with Kansas because of the opportunity: to play for a top program with the most wins in the history but also to play with a fellow Congolese and make a great impact. I’m really excited about it.”

That fellow Congolese is Bidunga, the 6-foot-9 forward also from Kinshasa who is expected to take a significant leap forward as a presumptive starter in his second season with the Jayhawks, after briefly entering and then withdrawing from the transfer portal during the spring.

With Bidunga’s wingspan measured at 7-foot-2 prior to last season and Mbiya’s cited at the aforementioned 7-foot-8 at the French basketball league’s Young Star Game, KU should have plenty of shot-blocking ability at its disposal next season.

Mbiya played primarily in the French under-21 league last season for ASVEL, averaging 15.3 points, 11.7 rebounds and 3.0 blocks per game. In his 10 appearances for the senior team across league play and the EuroLeague, he played just 36 total minutes.

Mbiya turned 20 in April, but KU’s press release confirmed that he will be a freshman during the 2025-26 season. That makes six freshmen on the Jayhawks’ roster, and suggests Mbiya could be a potentially significant contributor beyond his first season.

KU was initially involved in Mbiya’s recruitment back in April before he initially signed with N.C. State on May 2. However, Mbiya withdrew from the Wolfpack in recent days following its addition of North Carolina transfer Ven-Allen Lubin.

KU and Oregon were reportedly the primary contenders for Mbiya’s services the second time around, ahead of Wednesday’s signing.

The addition is the Jayhawks’ second in two days, following a long and relatively quiet period of the offseason, after KU signed the reclassifying freshman shooting guard Rosario on Tuesday.

Mbiya will have the opportunity for significant minutes in the Jayhawks’ frontcourt. Illinois transfer Tre White and freshmen Tiller and Samis Calderon are solid options at power forward, but KU lacked a true center behind Bidunga prior to Wednesday. The Jayhawks had been linked to other international post prospects such as Brice Dessert (France) and Ege Demir (Turkey) ahead of the addition of Mbiya.

The question now is whether KU will try to fill its remaining two roster spots, under the new terms of the House v. NCAA settlement, now that it has 12 scholarship players. The Jayhawks actually have 16 players in total, counting walk-ons, and potentially 17 if they add two-sport athlete Jaden Nickens, but have until a July 6 deadline to designate student-athletes who would have lost out on their roster spots as a result of the new rules. Those athletes will then be exempt from counting toward KU’s 14-player limit (15 in future years).

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Written By Henry Greenstein

Henry is the sports editor at the Lawrence Journal-World and KUsports.com, and serves as the KU beat writer while managing day-to-day sports coverage. He previously worked as a sports reporter at The Bakersfield Californian and is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis (B.A., Linguistics) and Arizona State University (M.A., Sports Journalism). Though a native of Los Angeles, he has frequently been told he does not give off "California vibes," whatever that means.