
And just like that, Mark Pope has brought back Kentucky basketball
It took 3 games for Kentucky to come back to college hoops prominence, but in reality, it took much more than that.
It took nights in gyms across mid-major conferences over the past several years, fruitless Big 12 campaigns, and ugly first-round NCAA Tournament losses. No, uglier than the ones UK endured as a top seed.
Kentucky’s new recipe, after teams of underachieving one-and-dones, is a group of underrated veterans who see Kentucky not as another stop on the NBA climb but as the destination on a journey to college basketball glory. Who saw this perfect fit coming? Precious few.
That tear-down of Kentucky basketball in the spring was complete. Hall of Fame coach John Calipari? Gone. His entire roster? Gone. The hopes of one of college basketball’s most passionate (maybe insane) fan bases? If not gone, at least going into hibernation. The rebuild was on.
Kentucky looked inward. It hired former ‘Cat Mark Pope from BYU to run the program. He of zero NCAA Tournament wins, as a coach, anyway. Pope tagged a group of transfer-portal loaners: guys who had been a step slow or an inch short or a consistent jump shot shy of being ready for the NBA, but ready to move on from Drexel or Wake Forest or Oklahoma. He added a couple freshmen but prepared for a season with a group of zero NBA needle movers.
Expectations were not high. The media in Birmingham picked the ‘Cats to finish 8th in the SEC. Both the media and coaches, scanning Kentucky’s roster, picked BYU transfer Jaxson Robinson for an All-SEC third-team slot and moved on to greener pastures.
But after 3 games, Kentucky is back. Tuesday night merely confirmed it: No. 19 Kentucky 77, No. 6 Duke 72.
Except it took much more than 3 games.
Who led the charge to victory? Guys who are new to Kentucky but were anything but new to college basketball; guys who need Kentucky’s legitimacy as much as the Wildcats’ need their spark and scrap and hustle.
Last night was Andrew Carr’s 120th college basketball game. He has played 1 NCAA Tournament game, a 20-point loss as a No. 15 seed at Delaware. Carr worked over, under and around Duke’s post players with the game in the balance, scoring 17 points, wheeling and dealing in the post like a 32-year-old NBA player with a receding hair line and a quest for a championship ring.
Last night was Amari Williams’ 108th college basketball game. He has played 1 NCAA Tournament game, playing 4 minutes as a freshman in a 1 vs. 16 game of his Drexel team against Illinois (they lost by 29). Williams went 1-on-1 with Cooper Flagg, already the consensus No. 1 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, in the game’s biggest possession and forced Flagg to stumble out of bounds with the game on the line.
Last night was Otega Oweh’s 63rd college basketball game. He’s never played in the NCAA Tournament. Oweh outjumped and outfought Flagg for the rebound that clinched Kentucky’s victory. With 15 points and 6 rebounds, Oweh keyed Kentucky’s upset.
When guys like Carr and Oweh talk in platitudes about crowd support, about team focus, about the opportunity to play for championships in March, they’re speaking from a place of knowledge. They understand the tick and whir of college basketball and have played enough to realize that excellence isn’t something to take for granted.
The appreciation from new-old guys like Carr was obvious. He delivered the opening statement of Tuesday’s night’s post-game press conference.
“All the Kentucky fans who showed up tonight, it was an incredible atmosphere,” Carr said.
Turning to the game, Carr was succinct but spoke with the voice of experience, “I felt like we did an unbelievable job being resilient tonight and in a really special way to come out with a win.”
All those years of NIT bids and first-round NCAA bouncings and long bus rides built a fire that Pope has done a remarkable job of rekindling for Kentucky. Remember, Pope once was like them: He transferred from Washington to Kentucky and helped the ‘Cats win the 1996 NCAA Tournament.
“We all had a common goal to win big, so we knew, if we want to do that, we have to come together in hard situations,” Oweh said after the game.
A group of experienced players coming together is how the Wildcats ended up taking the upper hand over Duke and Flagg, who is a generational talent. A generational talent in his 3rd college game. A generational talent in his 3rd college game who isn’t used to grizzled old veterans who need the win more than he did.
Kentucky will probably still have bumps in the road, but how rapidly the script has turned from Kentucky being the team of NBA lottery talents who have to learn to play college basketball. The trade for a group of steady, greybeard college basketball players is one BBN welcomed after last night.
Little early for all that..
Maybe so…but we like what we’ve seen so far. Go Cats!
I mean, taking down Duke is worth buying in. Not sure what Mrs Oracle hears, but this team was left for dead by most of the sec after Calipari took his s***show to Arky.
At least they’ve got something to look forward to since UK’s football season has been an utter disgrace
Lol at South Carolina fans talking smack. Like you guys have ever had any real success at anything other than women’s basketball. You just lost to North Florida. Hush, kid
And yet Stoops still owns a winning record against South Carolina… probably why you are here commenting on a UK basketball thread
Let me guess you’re from South Carolina where the only program that wins a
Natty is the girls!
What’s your point? Is a girls natty irrelevant?
You aren’t wrong, pig. Stoops has worn out his welcome with BBN. Hopefully we strike gold and he moves on after Loserville torches us and then we can bring Sumrall home to right the ship.
I watched most of the first half and was impressed with both squads. They’ll both be in the dance. That Pope has molded UK into this level of performance is definitely a compliment to him and his staff.
Anytime I see “fill in the blank is ‘BACK’” I think “ they’re not back”. Texas football is back! The Vols are back! Now TX and TN have put together some pretty good consecutive seasons, so maybe they really are back. Kentucky has a long way to go to change the narrative. But I’d headline this article as “Kentucky took a nice step forward” and leave it at that. What is back is the passion of fans. Seeing the players continuously talk about their excitement about playing on this stage and this level of basketball is refreshing in and of itself. Counting success as NBA draft picks is done. Discounting an SEC title is done. Saying “we are built for Match” is done. And I’m so glad to see all that go away. I’m looking forward to the SEC this year without fear of being embarrassed by collapsing freshmen being thrown around by every roster they match up against. They’re going to lose games and that’s fine- I know they will be prepared and will play like their hair is on fire. I was disappointed in the Pope hire. Didn’t Kentucky deserve Dan Hurley? Billy Donovan? It’s a Blue Blood program for crying out loud. I was wrong. Mark Pope will make mistakes and he will lose games. I like him. I love his passion for his school and his appreciation of fans that take their vacations to see the Cats play. That spend the money to come to games. I’m just excited for this team and this season.
I don’t know how old you are. To make this short and sweet unlike your rambling nonsense. UK has never been gone! Most programs never win a national championship. We’ll win again and lose but we’ll never be gone. We are a blue blood with records no one in the country has!
I’m old enough to remember the Joe B Hall national championship and have seen everything in between then and now. They are not irrelevant in the way that Indiana basketball has become, but they have been less than competitive for a number of years. That’s a fact. A blue blood? Yes. And under performing blue blood? Also yes. The question if they are “back” is to be determined.
This is kind of like declaring Alabama doesn’t miss Saban after DeBoer beat UGA. Like, it’s a great win, be happy about it, but it’s also only his first test. Cal won some pretty massive games at UK too. Didn’t stop him from getting bounced by a couple of 14+ seeds in the tourney. Kind of like Pope getting bounced by Duquesne.
You’re comparing a team like BYU getting beat to a team like UK getting beat. UK was a 3 seed beat by a 14 seed. There’s no excuse for that. It is the result of a recruiter who thinks he’s a coach.
Cal won all his massive games in the first half of his time at UK. From 2016 onwards he basically did nothing.
UK is better off now than it has been since 2015. There’s no argument against it.
I guess if this would have been a football game, we would have tore the goalpost down and that shows how much the program has slipped. Hopefully we are on the right path now.
Let’s just say KY is headed in the right direction and the fan base has been rejuvenated with the new coach. Will KY lose games u bet and they will win some as well. Being back is an overstatement but an ignited fan base yes is wholeheartedly back. Good luck to all SEC teams and I hope they perform better as a whole In the tournament in March.