John Calipari’s roster-building push on the international front just produced another commitment.
Russian center Ilia Frolov has pledged to Arkansas, giving the Hogs a 6-foot-11, 225-pound big man with room to grow.
Frolov’s path to Fayetteville started taking shape earlier this week when Arkansas entered negotiations with the international prospect.
He then made the trip to campus for an official visit before pulling the trigger on his commitment to the Razorbacks.
The visit carried real weight in the process. Calipari and his staff wanted to see Frolov up close, get updated measurements and put him through workouts, drills and scrimmages to evaluate his strength and physicality firsthand.
Getting eyes on him in person was an important box to check before things moved forward.
There were also logistical matters to sort out. As is common with international prospects, Frolov had to work through the paperwork required to establish eligibility at the college level.
The visit gave both sides a chance to clear potential hurdles and get a clearer picture of his eligibility timeline for next season.
Once the Razorbacks got him on campus and into workouts, they came away convinced.
Arkansas is sold on Frolov’s skill set and upside, and that confidence played a big part in making this commitment happen.
What Frolov brings to Arkansas front court
Frolov spent the past season playing for Real Madrid’s U22 squad in Spain’s Liga U, a junior league structured similarly to the NBA G-League’s relationship with the NBA.
It’s a developmental circuit where young players get consistent reps instead of riding the bench behind established pros on the senior roster.
He made the most of his time there. Frolov averaged 13.5 points and 7.4 rebounds per game while also contributing 1.1 steals and 1.0 assists.
He shot 52.8% from the floor overall, 36.1% from three-point range and 84.6% from the free throw line, a shooting profile that suggests real skill as a stretch big at the next level.
At 6-foot-11 and 225 pounds, Frolov fits the mold of a modern center who can step outside and create problems for opposing defenses.
His free throw percentage alone signals that his touch around the basket is genuine, and his three-point shooting adds another dimension the Razorbacks can build around.
He joins an Arkansas front court that already includes Finnish forward Miikka Muurinen, Furman transfer Cooper Bowser, redshirt freshman Paulo Semedo and former four-star Maper Maker.
That’s a group with size and varied experience, and Frolov adds to the depth while bringing a unique international background to the mix.
Razorbacks continuing to tap international talent
This commitment doesn’t come out of nowhere for the Arkansas program.
Frolov is the fourth international player the Hogs have added over the last two seasons and the second international addition to this year’s roster.
The two players who preceded him on that international path, Bosnian big Elmir Dzafic and Lithuanian forward Karim Rtail, came aboard last year but didn’t factor into the rotation in a meaningful way.
Frolov arrives with a stronger statistical track record and with staff buy-in built directly through his campus visit and workout, which gives his situation a different feel from the jump.
It’s also worth noting that Frolov joins Muurinen as a second international player on this specific Arkansas roster.
Calipari has clearly made the global market a real piece of his roster-building strategy in Fayetteville, and Frolov’s commitment reinforces that this is more than a one-off experiment.

For the Razorbacks, the ability to pull a 6-foot-11 center out of the Real Madrid system, even at the U22 level, reflects the reach the program has developed under Calipari.
Real Madrid’s basketball operation is one of the most respected brands in European hoops, and a player developing within that structure carries some credibility from the start.
Now it’s on Frolov to make the transition from Spain’s Liga U to the SEC.
That’s a significant jump in competition, but his numbers, his size and the staff’s hands-on evaluation suggest they believe he’s ready for it.






























