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Men's Basketball

Kentucky Fan Allegedly Threatened With Jail Time for Standing During Kentucky-Louisville Game

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Kentucky fans standing and cheering during Kentucky-Louisville game.
Caleb Bowlin | UK Athletics

Rupp Arena at its best can be one the best environments not just in college basketball, but in all of sports. That said, it is not without its faults. One such example occurred this weekend.

During the Kentucky-Louisville game on Saturday, an intense rivalry and one of the most anticipated games of the season, there was a video posted of a Lexington police officer telling a group of Wildcat fans in the lower arena to sit down or they would be escorted out.

One of the fans, Clay Fink, commented on the now viral video on Twitter/X and stated they were actually told they would spend the night in jail if they did not sit down.

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“This cop was sent to me and some guys sitting next to me,” Fink said. “The guy next to me was at his first-ever Kentucky game and the people behind us said they didn’t mind. Some folks four rows back were losing their minds. Cop said we’d spend the night in jail if we didn’t sit.”

Standing during one of the biggest rivalries in college basketball is expected, so you would have to believe there would be more to the story, but Fink says “nope.”

“People behind us didn’t mind, said they’d stand too. It was the folks three to four rows back looking for a reason to be mad.”

Fink says those fans antagonized them for much of the game before their complaints led to an officer being sent. While the officer has caught a lot of grief on social media, Rupp Arena is a privately owned venue and the police are working for the event. If the event requests something to be done, they have the ability to send police on their behalf to resolve the issue or escort them out.

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If Kentucky wants to become the best environment game in and game out, not just the big games, this is the type of obstacle that needs to be overcome. Fans should be encouraged to stand and cheer, not discouraged.

Men's Basketball

Archie Goodwin and Kahlil Whitney Set to Join La Familia This Summer

La Familia continues to add more firepower to the 2025 roster.

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James Crisp (Left), Adam Hunger (Right) | Associated Press

As the start of the 2025 TBT Tournament inches closer, La Familia has been slowly but surely adding star Wildcats to the roster.

Usually, we see announcements for new additions to the squad roll out on social media in some form, whether it be a post from La Familia’s official accounts or in form of Ansley Almonor’s announcement, which took place on BBN Tonight.

However, this time, Archie Goodwin and Kahlil “The Dragon” Whitney were added to the roster on the TBT website without any announcement, surprising Big Blue Nation as the news leaked and began to circulate.

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They were removed from the website afterwards, but as of Thursday, June 19, appear on the website as listed members of the roster.

Goodwin has been an active member for years, highlighted by his semifinals appearance last year where he averaged 13.8 points per game en route.

Whitney is a name that may cause some to shed a tear, with so much potential surrounding the former five-star leading up to his debut. Ultimately, he left the program after appearing in just 18 games for Kentucky.

La Familia is competitive as all get out, shown by chippy play with guys who have nothing to lose but everything to win for the place they call home. Goodwin and Whitney, now added to that list of guys, will look to redeem themselves with one goal in mind. Win.

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The official La Familia roster as of June 19:

– Willie Cauley-Stein (2012-15)

– Doron Lamb (2010-12)

– DeAndre Liggins (2008-11)

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– Aaron Harrison (2013-15)

– Andrew Harrison (2013-15)

– Ansley Almonor (2024-25)

– Archie Goodwin (2012-13)

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– Kahlil Whitney (2019-20)

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Men's Basketball

Former Kentucky Star, 10-year NBA Veteran Eric Bledsoe Arrested and Charged with Felony Domestic Violence

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Former Kentucky guard Eric Bledsoe has been arrested and charged with felony domestic violence.
Scott Utterback | Courier Journal

Eric Bledsoe, a key part of the 2009-10 Kentucky team that reinvigorated the Big Blue Nation following the Billy Gillispie era, was arrested on Wednesday morning.

According to reports, the California Highway Patrol investigated a report of domestic violence. The investigators were led to a gas station on a Los Angeles-area freeway where they discovered Bledsoe with a woman who was suffering from “bruising and swelling” to her face, and who said that Bledsoe allegedly hit her. Bledsoe was booked on a felony domestic violence charge and held on $55,000 bail.

Bledsoe was previously arrested on a similar charge back in 2022, but that case was later dropped when prosecutors said the alleged victim gave “inconsistent statements about whether there was a physical altercation.”

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Bledsoe was part of Kentucky’s La Familia team last year in the TBT, and was announced to return again this season.

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Men's Basketball

Zach Tow Returns For Second Season As Kentucky Walk-On

Madisonville native Zach Tow reappears in team photos as UK begins summer workouts

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Elliott Hess | UK Athletics

Zach Tow, a walk-on from last season’s team, appeared to have his status for this year confirmed after being spotted in UK Athletics’ photos from the first day of summer workouts.

The Madisonville native (No. 20 in blue pictured above) returns to the program for his second season under head coach Mark Pope, having joined the Wildcats following on-campus tryouts last year. The 6-foot-5 senior was an All-District and All-Region selection at Madisonville North Hopkins, where he averaged 12.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per game as a senior during the 2021-22 season. As a junior, he averaged 11 points and 11 rebounds. He helped lead the team to the Sweet 16 in 2019.

Tow saw playing time in a blowout win during the regular-season home finale against LSU and again in the first round of the NCAA Tournament against Troy–Pope’s first NCAA Tournament win as a head coach.

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He is the second walk-on from last season’s roster to return, following Walker Horn. Both Horn and Grant Darbyshire entered the transfer portal after the season; Horn would go on to decide to come back, while Darbyshire transferred to his hometown team of Cincinnati.

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