Kentucky
Kentucky puts together first complete game in statement win at Auburn
The stage was set for Auburn dating back to Wednesday night. South Carolina entered Neville Arena and left with a 40-point curb-stomping, Tiger fans immediately leaving to set up their campsites in Pearlville with tents stretching across campus. They brought out food trucks, played Mario Kart on massive projector screens, set up poker tables and portable basketball hoops — a 72-hour celebration for the tailgate of all tailgates. It was time for their Super Bowl, an opportunity to tell the college basketball world the SEC’s king had been dethroned.
College GameDay got the day started with a line wrapped around the building, fans pouring in with goofy “KenSucky” signs to — in their eyes — set the tone. Then they did the same that afternoon, packed in shoulder to shoulder from baseline to baseline, ready to create an all-time atmosphere they’d tell their grandchildren about one day. Three days of preparation leading up to this moment.
And then Kentucky led essentially from the opening tip to the final buzzer — 38:39 with the Cats in front, 1:21 with the game tied. Not a single second with Auburn ahead.
Kentucky silences an all-time environment
Arguably the most hostile environment in college basketball, a venue that held the longest home winning streak in the SEC at 16 straight games was dead silent. Fans hit the exits as quickly as they rushed to fill the seats with a minute and change left on the clock. Disbelief. Frustration. Confusion.
You heard whispers of gripes directed toward the officials, Bruce Pearl doubling down in his presser by saying he’d be sending a few clips to the league in search of answers — hilarious considering Auburn was called for fewer fouls (23-16) and took more free throws (30-24). Some wondered aloud if Jaylin Williams’ knee injury impacted the final result, taking the wind out of the team’s sails with the game still within reach. I mean, maybe, but even that argument seems shallow considering he had racked up three points on 1-5 shooting, one assist, one steal and one turnover in the 24 minutes up to that point. He’s invaluable to that team, but was he closing the gap in a game Kentucky led by as many as 16? Unlikely. The Tigers also missed some open looks that could have swung the momentum as a team. Plenty of finger-pointing there, obviously.
Go down the list, you can find plenty of excuses for the how and why. But that’s basketball. The what isn’t changing, and that’s all that matters.
Championship-level basketball
At the end of the day, Kentucky controlled the game against an opponent that ranked inside the top 10 in both offensive and defensive efficiency, undoubtedly one of the hottest teams in the SEC that the analytics loved. It went on the road as a heavy underdog playing without its straw that stirs the drink in Tre Mitchell and held Auburn to 59 points on 30.9% shooting and 18.2% from three. The Cats found themselves in a five-point game twice midway through the second half, only to see Antonio Reeves score 13 in a six-minute stretch to push it back to 16 and ice the win. Only to see Adou Thiero elevate to the rafters and throw down soul-capturing slams to keep the crowd at bay. It was the team’s most complete performance of the year by a mile, putting together 40 minutes of the championship-level basketball this team had shown it was capable of in spurts, but never consistently.
It didn’t take a herculean individual effort — Reeves was brilliant, but still *only* scored 22 on 8-20 shooting — to steal the win. This wasn’t a ‘just not our day’ game for Auburn. Kentucky simply dug in defensively to come up with stops and hit big shots in big moments. They fought and rallied the way you’d hope they would in the middle of a March Madness run. When John Calipari says this team is “built for March,” it’s pretty clear this is the vision.
Finding the blueprint
So much has been made about opposing teams finding the blueprint on how to slow this group down offensively while continuing to expose its defensive flaws. Then Kentucky went and found its own blueprint for beating anybody in college basketball. That is their blueprint for No. 9.
“Kentucky can guard and they can turn it up when they want to. They outplayed us tonight. They played really well,” Bruce Pearl said after the game. “We knew their guards were excellent, and late in the game, when it came down to just getting decent shots and keeping us at bay, they were able to do that.”
The Wildcats opened the game with their best start in recent memory, leading 11-2 over five minutes in. When it got down to four, they responded to push it back to ten a little over a minute later. Back down to five, up to 12 a little over a minute later before closing out the half up 10. Worried about the post-half start? Don’t be. They got it to 14 in a minute yet again. As the waves of momentum kept crashing in, Kentucky rode them all back to shore unscathed. Responses for every jab and haymaker attempt Auburn looked to throw, refusing to let go of the rope. Made free throws, turning bad turnovers into stops on the other end, tough rebounds to limit second-chance opportunities, everything. They played with guts, something you haven’t always been able to say about this team.
“Kentucky disrupted us. Their length at the rim obviously disrupted us. Their ball pressure disrupted us. They had a good scout,” Pearl added. “I really think you just go ‘Alright, Kentucky guards like this, they can beat anybody.’ But we know that. … They played well and we didn’t, that’s why we got beat.”
“Held a top-10 team to 30 percent and 18?” Calipari said. “I don’t know, guess we could do better.”
Confidence, not desperation
Kentucky was desperate for a statement victory, but it’s hard to say the Cats played with desperation. They were confident, ready to prove naysayers wrong. Coach Cal made that abundantly clear after the win, throwing the press room door open looking to take media members out one at a time like a sniper at the podium. Everyone in that locker room walked in with little doubt they’d leave with a win.
The Cats are back on track, building back some trust lost in recent weeks. They went to Auburn and left proving this team is more than its record may show and the ceiling is unlike anyone else in college basketball. They’ve got dudes, and now, they’re slowly starting to prove that’s not just on one end. The offensive firepower has always been there and will continue to be, but if the defense can resemble anything close to this down the home stretch of the regular season and into postseason action?
Look out.
Kentucky
The Indiana game is a must-win for Kentucky, even in December
One week ago, I wrote that Kentucky needed to show us something against Gonzaga. Unfortunately, it did, in a bad way. The Cats’ 35-point loss to the Bulldogs was their fourth to a ranked team this year. It was a performance so abysmal that the team got booed off the floor at halftime. Ever since, BBN has been in a tailspin, uncertainty about the program’s short-and long-term future hanging over the Bluegrass like a thick fog.
Kentucky has already gotten back in the win column, beating NC Central by 36 on Tuesday night; however, the true test of whether or not the Cats have reached rock bottom is Saturday vs. Indiana. The Hoosiers are 8-2, losing to Minnesota and Louisville last week. They rebounded from the 87-78 loss to the No. 6 Cards by routing Penn State 113-72 on Tuesday, thanks in large part to 44 points from Lamar Wilkerson, who picked Indiana over Kentucky out of the transfer portal this past April.
Both Kentucky and Indiana fell out of the AP and Coaches Polls this week, hovering near each other in the group of “others receiving votes.” KenPom ranks Kentucky No. 20 and Indiana No. 21. It gives the Cats a 4-point edge in Saturday’s game, while BetMGM goes a half-point higher at 4.5.
Thank goodness this one’s at Rupp because it’s a must-win, in more ways than one.
Resume
Let’s start with the most basic: the schedule. It may feel premature to start worrying about the NCAA Tournament, but we’re 10 games in, one-third of the way through the regular season, and Kentucky still doesn’t have a good win, going 0-4 in said opportunities. The highest-ranked team the Cats have beaten so far is Valparaiso, which ranks No. 191 in the NET rankings. All of Kentucky’s wins are in Quad 4, all of its losses in Quad 1. Quad 1 losses don’t hurt you a ton, but at some point, you have to pick up some meaningful wins to offset them.
The Cats have two more chances to pick up a Quad 1 win before SEC play begins: vs. Indiana and St. John’s. Over half of Kentucky’s conference games are in Quad 1; before starting that gauntlet, we need to see that the Cats are capable of winning one. Of the two coming up, beating Indiana in Rupp feels more manageable than Mark Pope taking down his old coach, Rick Pitino, and St. John’s next weekend in Atlanta.
Lamar Wilkerson
Much has been said about Kentucky’s struggles with recruiting this week. Most of that conversation has centered around high school recruiting, not the transfer portal, but Lamar Wilkerson is one of the biggest portal targets Mark Pope missed on this past offseason. Kentucky felt so good about landing him that Mark Pope took him to the winner’s circle at Keeneland. Instead, Wilkerson went to Indiana, the Hoosiers sweetening the pot at the last minute.
On Tuesday, Wilkerson set an Indiana record with 10 three-pointers in the win over Penn State. He is averaging 18.8 points and 3.5 made threes per game this season. There were other whiffs for Pope and his staff during the offseason, but Wilkerson will take center stage at Rupp tomorrow night, at a time when Kentucky’s $22 million team is the laughing stock of college basketball.
Please don’t let him get hot.
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Fan fatigue
You don’t need me to tell you BBN is unhappy. The boos in Nashville were ugly proof of the unrest in the fanbase now. Concerns about recruiting and the school’s partnership with JMI, as outlined by Jacob Polacheck and Jack Pilgrim earlier this week, aren’t helping. Mark Pope struck a different tone on Tuesday night, using his bench to send messages to Kam Williams, Jaland Lowe, and Brandon Garrison, and biting back anger afterward as he talked about how his team continues to fall short of the standard. On the player side, Otega Oweh seemed to step up as a leader, scoring a season-high 21 points and insisting all is well in the locker room during interviews, one of which took place with his teammates surrounding him.
On Saturday, we get to see if those baby steps of progress are enough to avoid a fifth loss. Kentucky has already lost one home game this season, last week vs. North Carolina. Given all that’s happened since, there might be boos if the Cats pick up a second tomorrow night.
Fear of becoming Indiana
Indiana used to be one of Kentucky’s biggest rivals; for fans of a certain age, the Hoosiers may still be. Over the past 20 or so years, Indiana has faded to irrelevance. The Hoosiers haven’t gone to a Final Four since 2002. There’s a reason they put Christian Watford’s buzzer-beater vs. Kentucky in 2011 on a popcorn box; they haven’t had much else to celebrate.
As Kentucky fans, we’ve made our fair share of jokes about Indiana, but it’s not quite as funny now that the Cats haven’t gone to the Final Four in a decade, won an SEC regular-season championship since 2019-20, or an SEC Tournament title since 2017-18. For all our hopes that Mark Pope would be the one to turn it around, Kentucky still hasn’t won a big game this season. As Mark Story outlined in the Herald-Leader, Kentucky could be on the path to becoming the next Indiana, which makes Saturday’s game even bigger. With this being the first game in a four-year series, it could be an annual reminder if things keep trending in this direction.
So, please, Kentucky, win this basketball game. You can make it my early Christmas gift.
Kentucky
Kentucky lawmaker introduces federal bill to fight pharmacy benefit managers
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A Kentucky lawmaker is taking the fight for pharmacists to Washington.
Representative James Comer introduced the Pharmacists Fight Back Act on Thursday.
Kentucky already has a similar law in place that WKYT Investigates’ Kristen Kennedy has been following as the state works to get the law enforced.
Kentucky pharmacists may now get help on the federal level.
“Rarely does a day go by without hearing from my constituents in Kentucky who are struggling under the weight of soaring prescription drug costs,” Comer said. “The questions I’m consistently asked are, ‘why? Who is benefiting from the system? Why isn’t it patients?’ My response is the same each time. It’s the PBMs.”
Federal bill targets pharmacy benefit managers
Comer says pharmacy benefit managers have outgrown their role in healthcare. State legislators agreed when they passed Senate Bill 188 last year. The law was supposed to increase reimbursement rates for pharmacies and keep PBMs from steering patients to affiliated pharmacies.
The regulations are similar to what Comer wants to do on a federal level.
“Our oversight investigation, which culminated in a report last year with our findings and recommendations, found PBMs have largely operated in the dark,” Comer said. “PBMs have abused their positions as middlemen to line their own pockets by retaining rebates and fees, undermine our community pharmacists and pass along costs to patients at the pharmacy counter. It’s unacceptable, and Congress has a responsibility to act.”
If the act becomes law, it would affect pharmacies across the U.S.
Pharmacists in Kentucky are already seeing some advantages with the regulations placed on pharmacy benefit managers, but their biggest complaint is that the law isn’t being enforced.
That could change if the federal government gets involved. The Kentucky Pharmacists Association thinks Frankfort has a responsibility to act on the PBM law that passed in the state. They’re still asking the governor to make sure the Department of Insurance is enforcing the law in place.
Stay informed on investigations like this by checking out our WKYT Investigates page at wkyt.com/investigates.
Copyright 2025 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Several people hurt in Western Kentucky Parkway multi-car accident, officials say
MUHLENBERG, Ky. (WFIE) – Kentucky officials says there are multiple people injured in a three-car accident on Western Kentucky Parkway.
According to a post made by the Central City Fire Department, three vehicles were involved in a crash between the 64 and 65 mile markers eastbound of the parkway.
They say both the eastbound and westbound lanes are closed at this time. The closure should last around 3 hours.
Two people were extricated from a vehicle. Four adults and three juveniles are being taken to the hospital. No update has been given on their conditions.
They say a mass casualty incident was declared, and Ohio County Fire and EMS were called to the scene due to the number of patients.
We will update you when we learn more.
Copyright 2025 WFIE. All rights reserved.
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