Following their in-conference road win over the Auburn Tigers, the Kentucky Wildcats came back to Kroger Field with something of stature to hang their hats on for arguably the first time this season. With the Florida Gators in town, fresh off a coach-firing and also 3-5, the matchup was set to be a brawl.
But for the second consecutive game – that isn’t a typo – Mark Stoops’ Cats scored more points than the other team. In an impressive runaway victory, Kentucky took care of Florida in defense of a raucous home crowd, 38-7. The win marked their first in an SEC matchup at Kroger Field since September 30, 2023 (also against Florida), and the largest over the Gators in program history.
Settling In
After a rocky start that saw the Wildcats down 7-3 following a muffed punt return-turned Gators score, the blue and white offense settled into a rhythm that Florida failed, at any point, to match. Two first-half scores through the air from Cutter Boley set the tone for a multi-faceted attack by coordinator Bush Hamdan’s offensive unit, which would be tied off in the second quarter by a rushing touchdown by way of Seth McGowan and a field goal.
The Wildcats led 24-7 at the half, forcing three Florida turnovers in the process.
Cats Controlled the Pace
Kentucky didn’t look back from there, either, even if the final two quarters weren’t quite as explosive on the offensive end. Boley continued to stand and deliver after his score-heavy first half performances, leaving touchdown duties to Kentucky’s backfield duo in the aforementioned McGowan and Dante Dowdell, who each had a second-half touchdown a piece.
In response, aside from benching season-long starting QB DJ Lagway, the Gators offered very little resilience. The Cats’ tempo offense and staunch defensive front created a manic pace throughout the match that Florida simply failed to handle; the result was a game doomed for the visiting team from the start, controlled entirely in pace and momentum by the blue and white.
The Cats ultimately out-gained the Gators 401 to 247 in total yards, with 233 of the former number coming on the ground in the team’s traditional manner. A good, old fashioned beatdown.
Keeping Dreams Alive
As a result of the blowout win, Kentucky’s newly-realized 4-5 record keeps the team’s hopes of a bowl game alive, even if the effort is still relatively last-ditch.
With six wins being the necessary target and an expected given set up next week at home against Tennessee Tech, the Wildcats will have to find a way to beat one of the #15 Vanderbilt Commodores or the #14 Louisville Cardinals, assuming the aforementioned given is indeed taken.
While the latter would certainly be the sweeter of the two, a late-season road win securing a bowl game, especially after Kentucky’s 2-5 start to the season, would be acceptable in any form.
If Mark Stoops expects the fans to remain bought into his vision, that wishful reality almost feels necessary. Regardless of whether or not it actually happens though, Kroger Field desperately needed a party, and the rare decisive win over Florida provided just that.
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