Now 2-2 through four games with two straight losses to SEC opponents, Kentucky’s football team appears to be making negative progress as the weeks go by, in eerily similar fashion to last year’s squad that would ultimately finish 4-8.
Only, that team beat Ole Miss on the road in what was arguably the best win of Mark Stoops’ career in Lexington. This year’s team, starting their sophomore quarterback for only the third time, lost 35-13 against an unranked South Carolina Gamecocks team on the road.
They are not the same – in fact, somehow, this year’s team may even end up worse.
The Wrong Direction
How could that be? Last season it appeared that the team, missing a bowl game for the first time since 2015, was a fluke. Coach Stoops’ go-to system that had seemingly proven to at least land his teams around the six-win mark, giving them a chance to take home a trophy of some kind, even if the higher aspirations of the Will Levis-era teams had seemingly come and gone with him.
With new weapons added across the board and a seventh-year senior transferring in at quarterback in the form of Zach Calzada, Kentucky fans were sworn to ease by a staff that promised a motivated regime out for revenge. The loss of longtime recruiting guru from the staff in the offseason only seemed to hammer this sentiment home; Stoops and his staff, otherwise returning from last season, were out for revenge.
Then Calzada actually took the field, alongside his expectedly revamped offense. Kentucky barely snuck past the Toledo Rockets at home in their opening game, 24-16, before losing in mostly uninteresting fashion to the Ole Miss Rebels the next week. The Cats’ veteran quarterback failed to throw a touchdown in either contest, eventually relinquishing his position to the aforementioned backup Cutter Boley due to an apparent injury late against the Rebels.
While Boley, in a dominant home win against Eastern Michigan in week three, provided fans with a renewed sense of offensive hope, any good will he had garnered was incinerated and then some in his three-turnover performance against the Gamecocks last weekend.
Put simply, everything Coach Stoops and company are throwing at the board just isn’t sticking. Looking back on the team’s general woes in recent years, this has become the pattern.
A Tiresome Trend
From multiple offensive coordination changes to quarterback trials similar to the one currently dominating this team’s attention, something major is constantly awry regardless of the offseason’s worth of time that preceded it. So, what gives?
A coach unable to evolve with the game, and a roster built specifically to fail due to that inability. The dual-disappointment of Calzada and Boley is the unfortunate proof in the pudding.
Boley, barring a string of performances similar to this past weekend’s, will likely continue as the team’s starter. But with Georgia, Texas and Tennessee approaching in succession – all ranked teams that have their ducks in a row – it’s hard to put much stock in either signal caller given both their reputations.
Not only that, but even in the program’s best years in recent memory with Levis under center and Liam Coen calling plays, that NFL-level talent always seemed to hit a ceiling for similar reasons. Under Mark Stoops, as much as he’s given to the program, that ceiling remains.
So in the end, whether it be Kentucky’s quarterback debacle or any one of the numerous adjacent issues that the program puts up with in spite of its leadership, nobody wins. Except for, more often than not, whichever team happens to be on the opposing sideline.
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