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Let the Madness Begin: Looking at Kentucky’s Path to a Final Four

The three-seeded Kentucky Wildcats will take on the Troy Trojans in Milwaukee to kick off Coach Pope’s first March Madness at UK.

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Kentucky basketball players huddle after after a play.
Chet White | UK Athletics

Mark Pope’s first bracket as Kentucky’s head coach has been set. His third-seeded ‘Cats will take on the 14-seed Troy Trojans in Milwaukee, WI, tipping off on Friday, March 21 at 7:10 p.m. Let the madness begin.

While Kentucky is fresh off their largest loss of the season against Alabama in the SEC Tournament, optimism remains at an all-time high in Lexington. Just hours before the selection show, Lamont Butler’s return from his latest injury was made official ahead of the big dance. His absence played a big part in UK’s inability to roll with the Crimson Tide in the aforementioned defeat, rendering his impending return nothing short of vital.

In addition, the Wildcats road to a potential tournament run could, given two wins in the first weekend, lead them to Indianapolis, where the blue and white would undoubtedly dominate given the close proximity to home.

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The Road Ahead

But to make that happen, not only will Kentucky have to topple Troy, but they’ll likely have to beat six-seed Illinois, so long as the Illini make it past Texas/Xavier in their opening round.

Both Kentucky and Illinois rank in the top 50 nationally in offensive efficiency (UK at 14, IL at 33), with the former just barely edging the latter in averaged PPG as a team 85.3 to 83.8. A shootout could be in order in the Round of 32 if Kentucky manages to get past Troy in the opening round, who rank 22nd nationally in defensive efficiency. Something will have to give come Friday night.

Looking back on this season as a whole, in spite of some unbelievably bad luck regarding injuries, Kentucky has put together a stifling inaugural resume under Mark Pope. With eight (!) wins over top 15 opponents, the ‘Cats tied the standing record for the most in college basketball history. They’re the only team to achieve this metric post-2000, to boot.

Not only that, Pope took down Duke, Louisville, and Tennessee (twice) in his first go. Beating rivals is a part of the job when you’ve got the big blue nation at your back, and just as he does every other measure, Mark Pope understands the importance of that one, too.

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Add wins over Gonzaga in Seattle, one-seed Florida and Texas A&M and you’ve got a year full of season-defining victories. Put plainly, the Kentucky faithful has much to celebrate already… though it’s reasonable to hope that the best is yet to come.

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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Men's Basketball

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Reaching Closer To Coveted Finals MVP

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Alonzo Adams | Imagn Images

After trading wins through the first four games of the NBA Finals, Oklahoma City broke the series tie to command a 3-2 lead with back-to-back wins.

The Thunder dominated in their return to Paycom Center as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams combined for 71 points en route to a 120-109 victory. Indiana took a narrow 12-11 lead with 9:03 left in the first quarter and never reclaimed it. 

Oklahoma City’s defense stirred havoc on the Pacers all game. 

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Game one hero Tyrese Haliburton was battling a lower leg injury and was held to only four points. Haliburton went 0-6 from the field, only scoring from the free-throw line.

Gilgeous-Alexander recorded four blocks and two steals in addition to his 31-point performance. The Thunder outnumbered Indiana in blocks 12 to four and steals 15 to nine.

In the fourth, the Thunder shook off a rally by the Pacers that closed their 18-point lead to only two points. 

A behind-the-back pass from Gilgeous-Alexander led to a Williams deep ball. Followed by a scoop-and-score by fellow ex-Wildcat Cason Wallace, the OKC lead extended to seven.

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Indiana continued to be outmatched by the Thunder defense.

Gilgeous-Alexander persistently split through the Pacers’ double teams and found open teammates, fueling an 18-to-2-point run to close out the win. Claiming the first back-to-back victory for either team this series.

The Kentucky alum finished with a double-double with 31 points and 10 assists, his first of the series. 

Game five marked Gilgeous-Alexander’s fourth 30-point performance of the NBA Finals. Currently, he is averaging 32.4 points, 5.0 assists, 4.6 rebounds, 1.8 blocks, and 2.4 steals per game.

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A Finals victory almost looks certain for the Thunder. Given Halliburton’s injury and the palpable momentum swinging in Oklahoma City’s favor with consecutive wins.

Gilgeous-Alexander is one win away from claiming the first Finals MVP for any Kentucky player in NBA history. Additionally, Gilgeous-Alexander would join an exclusive club of legends to earn Finals MVP and league MVP in the same season.

He would become the first double-crowned MVP since LeBron James in 2013.

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Men's Basketball

Mark Pope On Coaching Kentucky Players At USA U19 Camp: “A Sneak-Peek Into What’s Going To Be”

Pope got to coach two of his own at the USA U19 camp, in newcomer Wildcats Jasper Johnson and Malachi Moreno.

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Mark Pope got to coach two Kentucky natives at the USA U19 camp.
Chet White | UK Athletics

What does Mark Pope do in the offseason? Well, when he’s not recruiting, signing autographs, or answering countless questions, he’s coaching Team USA at the U19 camp.

Coach Pope, in lieu of his uber-successful first season at the helm for Kentucky, was brought on to coach the group of young athletes prior to the beginning of their college careers.

Amongst the fray of recruits committed elsewhere, Pope got to coach two of his very own players in Jasper Johnson and Malachi Moreno – both Kentucky natives, playing under a Kentucky alumni, for a team USA.

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Big Blue Nation, you aren’t dreaming. No pinch necessary.

Jaw-Dropping

“It was awesome,” Pope said of the opportunity, in an interview with KSR’s Jack Pilgrim. “It’s the first time I’ve been allowed to coach them… it’s like a sneak-peek into what’s going to be.”

“They were both incredible, like jaw-dropping great. So, the chance to coach them, the chance to be in some live-play, some competition against other players… I loved that part and I loved getting to see their competitiveness come out, their fearlessness come out, their hearts come out.”

While the original USA U19 roster was much larger, part of the process is a “cut down” of sorts, in which only 18 players remain as a part of the next unit. Jasper Johnson made it, whilst Malachi Moreno did not – although, the latter was the result of a minor injury he sustained during play.

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Reportedly, it was a mutual decision between Moreno and the team that he would return to Lexington in order to manage his injury ahead of the 2025-26 season.

Either way, Coach Pope getting an early chance to lead two of his incoming players can only be taken as a good omen. With his second season at Kentucky creeping closer, fans can only look on, and take in what little new information is available whilst they wait.

It won’t be long before Johnson and Moreno both are electrifying their hometown crowd at Rupp Arena. November is circled in blue on everyone’s calendar.

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