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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

Former Wildcat Recruiting Top Transfer to Kentucky

While he no longer plays here, Dontaie Allen still has a big blue heart, recruiting a top transfer and his current teammate to Kentucky.

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Wyoming Cowboys guard Obi Agbim (5) dribbles the ball up court.
Isaiah J. Downing | Imagn

Nothing is off the table in the NIL (name, image, likeness) era of college sports recruiting, with the latest development in Lexington coming in the form of a former player recruiting for the ‘Cats on social media.

Dontaie Allen, now a senior guard for the Wyoming Cowboys, played for Kentucky for two seasons between 2020-2022. He’d transfer to Western Kentucky for two more seasons before finding his final home out west with Wyoming for a fifth season.

With the transfer portal officially opening for the upcoming season next week on March 24, players from across the country and on all levels are starting to throw their names into the hat – perhaps the most prevalent among them thus far is Obi Agbim, the Cowboys’ starting guard.

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Agbim, averaging 18/3/3 on year, has been granted the ability to play a fifth and final season due to “JUCO” rules that have allowed flexible eligibility for swathes of talented players across the country who went the junior college route.

Familiar Familia

Allen, now Agbim’s teammate, made multiple comments on an Instagram post announcing his entering into the portal. The first of which was simply “La Familia,” a term that may or may not ring familiar to Kentucky fans.

The second, and certainly more curious, was Allen’s usage of a GIF of himself in a Kentucky uniform from a few years ago. This comment, having tallied more than 250 likes and counting, is visible at the top of the comment section and among the most trafficked of the bunch (although most all replies are Kentucky-oriented, too). While Agbim himself hasn’t interacted with the reply directly, he has liked other comments left to allure him to Lexington, such as “They saying Kentucky twin” and “If you go to Kentucky beat bama and Tennessee…”

If he does end up in the blue and white, fans couldn’t ask for a much better start than that.

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Men's Basketball

Kentucky’s Seniors Willing to Do Anything to Make Tournament Run With Kentucky, “You Got to Leave Everything Out on the Floor”

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Kentucky Wildcats guard Koby Brea (4) looks on as a teammate shoots a free throw.
Jordan Prather | Imagn

After a game that rolled into the next day, the Wildcats celebrated after Otega Oweh hit a buzzer-beating layup to advance in the SEC Tournament.

However, with less than 24 hours to prepare for the next opponent, the Alabama Crimson Tide, it seemed like Kentucky wasn’t favored for another miraculous win with the absence of Lamont Butler. 

Alabama would go on to beat Kentucky for the third time this season, blowing the Wildcats out by just under 30 points. 

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However, after the game, the upperclassmen were adamant about leaving it all on the court and focusing on the future. 

“I’m ready to die on the court next game, I swear,” said Koby Brea. “Just forget about this one (the Alabama loss), it’s a tough one, it’s embarrassing.”

Andrew Carr would add on that every game, rain or shine, the Wildcats give it everything they have. 

“That’s part of it, for us, we’ve attacked every single game as the biggest game we’ve ever played in our career,” said Carr when asked about potentially playing his last game. “Of course, you can try and point to a lot of different things, but for us, we know that we got to do a better job of being ourselves and not tryna get outside of what we do.” 

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Amari Williams tacked on the same ideas as his teammates. 

 “Just remembering that every game you gotta have full energy and motivation going in and just knowing that you gotta leave everything out on the floor,” said Williams when asked about the mindset in the NCAA Tournament.

Now, with hopes of making waves in the big dance, the Wildcats will remember what Mark Pope said after the Oklahoma game. 

“If you’re going to beat us, you’re going to have to kill us.”

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Men's Basketball

Mark Pope Visits Malachi Moreno While Working With Special Needs Children: “Big Blue Nation is Going to Fall in Love With Him”

Mark Pope recruits both players and people, and according to him, Malachi Moreno will bring the best of both worlds to Lexington.

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Top 2025 center Malachi Moreno has committed to play for Mark Pope and the Kentucky Wildcats.
UK Athletics

Malachi Moreno is undoubtedly an incredible basketball prospect. The 6’11 big, who just won Mr. Basketball in Kentucky and is working through his senior year of varsity hoops, is averaging 22 points, 15 rebounds, four assists and four blocks per game for Great Crossing.

But it isn’t his on-court ability that had Mark Pope singing his praises on his weekly radio show. Pope recently visited Moreno at his high school, where the Kentucky commit works with fellow students who have special needs.

“We got a really special basketball player,” said Pope, who has become quickly notorious for recruiting players for their abilities on and off the floor. “All he wanted to do was let me go experience the greatness of these fellow students that he works with on a regular basis.”

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“We got an incredible human being. Big Blue Nation is going to fall in love with him.”

That is, if they haven’t already. In addition to Moreno’s admirable service work and eye-popping statistics, he was born and raised in the Commonwealth State. Georgetown, right down the road from Lexington, is his home.

Not only that, but Moreno has often been seen taking pictures with fans at games and out and about on the town before them, meeting the BBN in waves before so much as stepping on the court in front of them. He’s a player with a proven heart for the ‘Cats fanbase, as well as the people in the community around him.

Malachi Moreno is a name already making the rounds throughout Rupp Arena. There are few prospects more exciting than seeing what difference he’ll be able to make in Lexington, in many more ways than one.

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