For the third time this season, the Kentucky Wildcats fell to the Florida Gators, this time when it mattered most.
On Friday, March 13, the No. 9 seeded Kentucky Wildcats (21-13, 10-8 SEC) didn’t last against the No. 1 seeded Florida Gators (26-6, 16-2 SEC) in the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament, losing by a score of 71-63.
Coming into this one, the Wildcats had already played two games in two days, taking down the No. 16 LSU Tigers and the No. 8 Missouri Tigers, while the Gators enjoyed their double-bye.
Starting off, it seemed like Kentucky was a little tired from its previous time in Nashville, turning the ball over three times by the first media timeout and allowing Florida to get out to a 10-4 start.
The same trend would continue, as Florida would score with ease at the rim, even shoving players on the ground on loose balls – a call from the referee was nowhere to be found.
(Kam Williams thankfully got up by the way).
Kentucky didn’t show any signs of quit however, going on an 8-0 run in just 44 seconds of play, due in part to stellar outside shooting from Mo Dioubate. Yes, that sentence is true. No, I can’t believe I wrote it.
Florida would answer with its own 6-0 run while Kentucky would miss its next five goals, quickly shifting the entire vibe of the game back in favor of the chompers.
That run would indeed not end, as the Gators would go up by 11 with three minutes left in the first half. At the time, they were out-stating Kentucky by double digits in rebounds, second chance points and points in the paint.
At the half, Mark Pope’s Wildcats trailed 37-28, missing 16 out of their 18 field goals. Did I mention that Collin Chandler had a bloody nose but was called for the foul?
The second half got out to an extremely slow start for both teams, but Alex Condon would continue to dominate in the paint for the Gators, dunking the ball aggressively on back-to-back plays and taking his point total to 20.
Down 17 in Nashville with just under 13 minutes left in the game, the odds that Kentucky could pull off one of those crazy comebacks seemed distant.
At one point, Florida actually didn’t make a field goal in over five minutes, but that didn’t really matter considering the Wildcats did nothing to eat away at the lead.
Trent Noah would check in around the seven-minute mark, earning his first minutes of the tourney. He missed a wide-open three, but came up with a steal on the defensive end, leading to an open dunk for Otega Oweh and cutting the lead to ten.
As a last desperation, Chandler would be fouled on a 3-pointer, giving him an opportunity to cut the lead to single digits. Making all three, with Denzel Aberdeen drawing a charge the next play, Kentucky indeed had life.
Ending the 8-2 run, Flordia’s Thomas Haugh would sink two freebies, putting Florida up by eight with 2:35 remaining.
Aberdeen would cut the lead to six with a layup, putting Kentucky fans on their feet, but Haugh would again answer with a tough fadeaway. Aberdeen, with a got ya moment, would answer with a pocket three after the timeout.
Down five, Xavien Lee would hit a stepback jumper, lacing it with ease. He then stole the ball for Florida, sealing his team’s first game of the tournament.
Up next, Pope and the Wildcats will await to hear their name called during Selection Sunday on March 15. KY Insider will be on site and will provide coverage during the event.
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