On January 10, 1996, King set a career high in points with 20 on 10-of-10 shooting from the field, tying a Big East Conference record for number of field goals made in a game without a miss.[4][5] In January 1996, King made 22 straight field goals, three shy on the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) record of 25-for-25.[6]
Going into the 1996–97 season, King was the only player on UConn's roster that had experience as a starter and was named the team's captain.[7] In January 1997, the NCAA announced that King and UConn sophomore Ricky Moore had been suspended for accepting free airline tickets from agent John Lounsbury to fly back to Connecticut in October 1995. King's suspension was for the remainder of his senior season. The NCAA gave King a longer suspension than Moore because according to their investigation King knew he was violating NCAA rules.[8] UConn was later stripped of their wins during their 1996 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament run and ordered them to pay back $90,970 in money the school made during the postseason.[9] The team made King an undergraduateassistant coach following his suspension, allowing him to attend practices, travel with the team and sit on their bench during games.[10]
Huskies head coach Jim Calhoun told the Hartford Courant, "Kirk King made a mistake; nothing more, nothing less. I think he should be able to play, but I don't run the NCAA. What Kirk said to us was more than compelling to me. Apparently, it wasn't for other people. I can't control that."[11] King graduated from Connecticut with a bachelor's degree in sociology.[2]
In the summer of 2000, King played professional basketball in the Philippines.[12] King re-joined the Connecticut Pride in the CBA before the league ceased operations and filed for bankruptcy in February 2001. He was named to the CBA All-Star game during the 2000–01 season.[15] He also played with the Baltimore Bayrunners in the IBL during the 2000–01 season.[19] Following the IBL season, King signed with the Toros de Aragua of the Liga Profesional de Baloncesto in Venezuela. Later that year, King joined the Piratas de Quebradillas in the Baloncesto Superior Nacional, Puerto Rico's top-tier men's professional basketball league.[15]