The UCLA men’s basketball team has officially landed Serbian prospect Nikola Kusturica, a team source confirmed to the Southern California News Group on Thursday. Kusturica will fill the final open spot on the Bruins’ roster, providing a sense of clarity as UCLA’s summer practices get underway.
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Kusturica becomes the latest in a rapidly growing pool of overseas talent diverting to America to play Division I college basketball to increase exposure and financial prosperity. He joins a UCLA roster featuring three other such players, including fellow Serbian Filip Jović, who transferred to UCLA from Auburn this summer.
Kusturica, 17, and a 6-foot-9 wing, represents another trend of players who require two seasons at the college level before obtaining NBA Draft eligibility, a consortium that includes reclassified high schoolers and international talent such as Kusturica’s FC Barcelona teammate and Duke commit Joaquim Boumtje-Boumtje.
Therefore, Kusturica could play at least two seasons at UCLA. The details, including whether a second year is included in his NIL deal with UCLA, have yet to be revealed.
Kusturica, however, might not join the Bruins immediately as the 17-year-old wing recently finished competing for the Serbian national team at the FIBA U17 World Cup in Istanbul, Türkiye.
He shined throughout the tournament, leading Serbia to the final, where it fell 107-81 to the USA. Over seven games, Kusturica averaged 24.6 points and 6.9 rebounds. He earned a spot on the FIBA U17 World Cup All Star 5, and was named the Best Defensive Player of the tournament. You know UCLA head coach Mick Cronin loves that.
While the competition at the FIBA U17 World Cup doesn’t come close to mirroring that in Division I college basketball, especially the Big Ten, Kusturica proved he could hang with future D-I peers. In the championship game against a USA squad featuring Boumtje-Boumtje, and other highly-touted prospects such as Beckham Black, Clarence “CJ” Rosser Jr., and NaVarro Bowman Jr., Kusturica scored 37 points, shooting 9-of-23 from the field, while grabbing nine rebounds.
From watching Kusturica at the FIBA U17 World Cup, it’s not just the scoring that stands out, it’s how he does it. He can create at all three levels, shoot off the catch or the dribble, and grab-and-go in transition. He possesses an impressive handle for his size and position. Moreso, he shows an effort on the glass on both ends, and has a knack for tracking missed attempts. He scores off cuts and moves without the ball.
Throughout the tournament, he would force shots and push to take over games, but it seemed to come from a sense of self-confidence, a belief that he was the most talented player on the court, rather than an arrogance. A young athlete attempting to prove the widespread regard was warranted.
More often than not, it resulted in successful highlight drives or stepback jump shots.
So the talent is there. But without an immediate arrival to Westwood, it remains unclear exactly how he’ll jell with his new teammates.
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There’s a natural opening at the three, with UCLA hoping to revert Eric Dailey Jr. back to the four, where he flourished during his sophomore season. Kusturica isn’t a perfect option for that spot, as it might take some time for his shot to click, and his body to adapt to the physicality it requires to effectively penetrate from the perimeter in the Big Ten. The skill that might translate the quickest is his rebounding and off-ball awareness. That said, he likely presents a better option than the interior-centric Jović or young Joe Philon III.
Position-semantics aside, because of his motor, handle and IQ, there should be little doubt that he’ll carve out a role for himself with the Bruins. He can run in transition and space the floor for Trent Perry and UCLA’s other ball handlers. He can help a rather small roster compete on the boards.
Clearly, UCLA’s roster-building goal this offseason was to get younger in hopes of developing a roster in Cronin’s image. The Bruins added four transfers coming off their first college basketball season, an interior presence in Jović, Slovenian forward Sergej Macura from Mississippi State, microwave scorer Jaylen Petty from Texas Tech, and physical guard Azavier “Stink” Robinson from Butler.
Over the last two seasons, the Bruins have remarkably maintained the majority of their talent despite the transfer portal ravaging the majority of teams. Coming into the 2026-27 season, they maintained every eligible player from last year. Perry, Dailey, floor-stretching forward Xavier Booker, and bruiser Brandon Williams.
Cronin and his staff are betting on that continuity. It’s a calculated gamble for UCLA, but a risky bet in an era where most programs rely on yearly rebuilds. A direction further influenced by the anticipated and recent official implementation of the five-year rule.
With the addition of Kusturica, UCLA features 12 players with eligibility through the 2027-28 season, and at least 10 through the 2029 season.
Of course, there’s the concern of how previous overseas talent has fared at UCLA as a Bruins’ roster with five European players in their first year of college basketball sputtered to a 16-17 season in 2023-24. Aday Mara, whom the Oklahoma City Thunder selected with the 12th pick in the 2026 NBA Draft one year after transferring to Michigan from UCLA, didn’t find the right fit at UCLA.
With that reality hardly in the rearview mirror, it is fair for Kusturica to draw skepticism from UCLA fans. The main difference between the two players is Kusturica’s conditioning. Over two seasons, Mara played fewer than 14 minutes per game and his availability was constantly in question. At the FIBA U17 World Cup, Kusturica averaged 27.3 minutes per game.
Another concern could be chemistry, as Kusturica’s commitment comes on the precipice of summer practices. His recruitment was prolonged and murky. Misinformation regarding his financial compensation ran rampant as is par for the course. In reality, administration requirements and dedication to the Serbian national team were the main obstacles. But Kusturica is a prospect UCLA is familiar with, as assistant coach Nemanja “Yogi” Jovanovic is heavily involved in the development of the Serbian national team, and is the head coach of the nation’s U20 team.
With his commitment official, the logistical part of Kusturica’s recruitment has concluded. Now the hoops become the focus. His raw talent should spark excitement among fans. In no way should that be unbridled, but as UCLA builds its roster with an eye to the future, Kusturica will live at the core of that movement.
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