Kentucky
KSR Staff Predictions: Kentucky vs. Vanderbilt
Kentucky returns to action on Saturday to host the hottest team in college football, the Vanderbilt Commodores. Vandy heads to Lexington fresh off its upset of No. 1 Alabama and the drowning of one of its goalposts in the Cumberland River. In Lexington, the ‘Dores run into a well-rested Kentucky team eager to play its first game since the Wildcats’ defeat of sixth-ranked Ole Miss in Oxford two weeks ago.
Before the game kicks off at 7:45 p.m. on SEC Saturday Night, the Kentucky Sports Radio office has a round of predictions for the outcome.
Drew Franklin
Something’s fishy about the movement around the betting line on this game. The consensus around Lexington is that the 14-point spread is too high, yet the spread climbed higher as the week went on despite nearly 90 percent of bets being on Vanderbilt. That means the sharp money (the big spenders) like Kentucky to cover. They’re the professionals. I want to be on their side because when a line looks funny, it’s better to be with them than the public.
So, following the desert’s lead, I think Kentucky’s defense ends the Diego Pavia parade, limiting Vanderbilt to half of the points it scored against Alabama. Brad White‘s defense already played well against two of the best quarterbacks in the country, Carson Beck and Jaxson Dart, and I think the Wildcats are eager to rattle Pavia in Lexington. Big Blue Nation relishes that opportunity at Kroger Field, too.
Offensively, there are still concerns about finding the end zone, but overall, Kentucky is talented enough to move the ball at home on a banged-up Vandy defense. Kentucky takes another step forward against the ‘Dores, beating college football’s new Cinderella by 17.
Score: Kentucky 30, Vanderbilt 13
Adam Luckett
Vanderbilt and star quarterback Diego Pavia are the talk of college football this week. Most have forgotten about Kentucky’s win at Ole Miss in Week 5 at this point. Clark Lea‘s organization is the most popular program in the country at the moment.
Kentucky has a chance to change that on Saturday night at Kroger Field.
This is a perfect motivation spot for Mark Stoops and his coaching staff coming off the bye week. Meanwhile, Vanderbilt should come down from the highest high in program history. I fully expect Vanderbilt’s ball-control offense and Kentucky’s stingy defense to trade blows, but this game will be won when Kentucky has the football.
The points have not come yet in SEC games, but Bush Hamdan‘s offenses have shown improvement each week. If that trend continues, we will see a good day for Kentucky as Vanderbilt is allowing 32 points per game and 6.36 yards per play against FBS competition. The Wildcats get a lead early and keep Vandy at arm’s length.
Kentucky’s numbers (0-8 ATS off the bye since 2017) are not pretty, but I would be surprised if this team does not play well on Saturday. The home team improves to 2-2 in league play to begin a very important four-game stretch.
Score: Kentucky 27, Vanderbilt 16
Tyler Thompson
I was nervous about the Vanderbilt game before the ‘Dores upset No. 1 Alabama. Although that win showed Vandy is legit, specifically Diego Pavia, it actually makes me more confident in the Cats tomorrow.
Historically, Kentucky isn’t good coming off bye weeks, and without Vandy’s win over Bama, could easily have overlooked the ‘Dores coming off its own big win over Ole Miss. Now, the Cats have had an entire week to hear/read about Vandy, Pavia, and the upset of the season. Under the lights at Kroger Field, they can bring the Dores back to Earth and keep the momentum they built in Oxford rolling.
Brad White has also had extra time to scout Pavia and Vanderbilt’s offense. Kentucky’s defense flustered two Heisman hopefuls in Carson Beck and Jaxson Dart; I expect the unit to make life similarly difficult for Pavia — although I’m sure he’ll still get in a few “How did he do that?” moments. The key to the game will be what the Cats can do on offense. Coming off their best performance of the season, I’m looking for more progress against a Vandy defense that allows the second most points per game in the SEC.
The big spread worries me a little but I think the Cats will get it done on a fun night at Kroger Field.
Score: Kentucky 28, Vanderbilt 17
Zack Geoghegan
Vanderbilt is about to get hit with a reality check. The high of beating Alabama will not transfer onto the field this Saturday. Vandy’s loss to Georgia State in Week 3 still has me seriously questioning the Commodores’ sustainability. Even the three-point loss to Missouri doesn’t feel the same after the Tigers were smacked by 31 points last week. I’m sure many outsiders feel the same about Kentucky’s Week 2 loss to South Carolina, but Georgia State is not South Carolina. I’m still not fully confident in knowing which Kentucky team will show up on a weekly basis, but the trends are pointing upward. I’m relying on that slow progression to show up again against Vandy.
There will be no surprise about what’s in store for Kentucky coming off the bye week. I expect the best showing from the offense of the season and another excellent all-around performance from Brad White’s elite defense. The ‘Cats will blow this game open in the second half and win a blowout. And yet, the national polls will still find a way to leave Kentucky out of the Top 25.
Score: Kentucky 34, Vanderbilt 14
Jack Pilgrim
Vanderbilt beating Alabama was the best thing that could have happened to Kentucky and its poor track record coming off the bye week under Mark Stoops. For whatever reason, the Cats are almost never prepared and have laid a couple of massive eggs in key matchups. Luckett mentioned it, but that 0-8 ATS mark in this spot since 2017 is pretty damning. What could possibly be the excuse now? Overlooking the Commodores would be impossible after becoming the hottest thing in college football, Diego Pavia on every TV show and social media post since Saturday evening.
As bad as Stoops has been coming off the bye week, he’s equally good with a chip on his shoulder and spoiling the fun for others picking up momentum. You want Vanderbilt thinking they’re world-beaters still coming down from the high of last week before punching the nerds in the mouth.
It feels like the world has forgotten about Kentucky’s upset in Oxford, and that’s a great thing. This defense has the potential to be historically great — it’s already ranked No. 5 nationally overall and No. 11 in scoring — while the offense is finally finding its groove. That’s a good recipe for success going into a matchup against the sport’s biggest media darling.
Score: Kentucky 31, Vanderbilt 10
Nick Roush
I’d like to thank Diego Pavia and the Vanderbilt Commodores for making this one interesting. The Alabama upset is giving this team some much-needed juice out of the Bye, an issue that has plagued Mark Stoops’ program throughout his tenure.
Kentucky’s defense may let Vanderbilt get some points off its scripted first drive and that’s just fine. The Cats will settle in and the law of averages will take over. The Commodores have only one turnover this fall and now they’re facing one of the nation’s best havoc defenses. That’s going to lead to some takeaways that give Kentucky a comfortable enough lead.
This is the worst defense the Wildcats will see in SEC play. My only apprehension against picking the Cats to cover the spread is the red zone. Kentucky’s 56.25% red zone touchdown percentage ranks 15th in the SEC.
Vandy will try to slow things down and limit possessions. Turning things into a rock fight is Mark Stoops’ M.O. The Wildcats will win, but there will be a few more field goals than we’d like to see in this Saturday night slugfest.
Score: Kentucky 23, Vanderbilt 13
Kentucky vs. Vanderbilt: How To Watch, Listen
You can also keep up with the game and chat with other fans on our game thread on KSBoard, with Nick Roush, Adam Luckett, and Drew Franklin providing updates from Kroger Field and the rest of us from home.
Kentucky
Gov. Beshear spends week in Europe promoting Kentucky, attending World Economic Forum
FRANKFORT, Ky. (WKYT) – Gov. Andy Beshear is spending the week in Europe with a delegation from Team Kentucky, attending the World Economic Forum and meeting with company leaders in Finland, Sweden, and Switzerland.
Beshear said the trip will support future investment, job creation, and economic development opportunities in Kentucky. The governor is scheduled to speak twice at the forum, appearing on a panel of U.S. governors discussing state roles in American competitiveness and during a session called “Can We Save the Middle Class?”
“Kentucky is a logistics state,” Beshear said. “One of my biggest pitches that I make, especially on an overseas trip, is if you are a company that doesn’t have a U.S. presence, and you want access to the U.S. markets, you want to sell what you make in U.S. markets, the place you oughta put your manufacturing facility is in Kentucky.”
Building on international presence
Beshear said attending the World Economic Forum is an opportunity to build on Kentucky’s international presence, which includes 524 foreign-owned facilities that employ more than 110,000 Kentuckians.
The World Economic Forum is an invite-only annual meeting that started in 1973. It has become a major international networking opportunity and one of the world’s largest assemblies of global decision-makers, with thousands of government, business, and civic leaders representing over 125 countries participating.
Beshear called it a unique opportunity to meet with business leaders from around the world at one location and remind them why he feels Kentucky is an ideal location for manufacturers.
“Why? Because you can reach 60 plus percent of the country’s population in a one-day drive,” Beshear said. “But that’s not the only way that products are moved. Products are moved by rail. Products are moved by air. Products are moved by river. These riverports are essential to certain types of industries.”
Riverport investments
Last week, Beshear announced more than $2.3 million in awards to enhance six of Kentucky’s public riverports. According to Team Kentucky, the projects modernize equipment, expand capacity, and improve safety, strengthening the state’s role in regional and national freight movement.
“What this does is it helps us to create more industrial and other sites. It helps us recruit more companies. It helps us compete for that company that pays really good wages but has to have access to a riverport,” Beshear said. “We’re gonna be able to check more of the boxes that any of these companies would have.”
This is Beshear’s second year in a row at the World Economic Forum. He called last year’s trip one of the most effective economic development trips he has taken.
Republican criticism
Some Kentucky lawmakers have criticized the governor’s foreign travel. The Republican Party of Kentucky Communications Director, Adam Hope, issued a statement ahead of Beshear’s trip to Europe.
“Governor Beshear is once again off rubbing elbows with global elites in Switzerland,” Hope said. “Before he boarded a taxpayer-funded flight out of the country, he found time to take shots at Republican legislators who actually show up and do the people’s work. That’s not surprising coming from the Kentucky Governor who would rather point fingers than fix problems.”
Hope said Beshear “loves to lecture everyone else about bipartisanship, transparency, and focusing on the ‘real issues,’ but when it’s time to lead, he disappears.”
“Kentuckians deserve a governor who shows up and does his job,” Hope said. “Instead, Andy Beshear is skipping town, dodging responsibility, and chasing headlines as he tries to build a national profile for a presidential campaign that’s already six feet under. Republicans are here, doing real work, while Beshear is making excuses and chasing attention.”
Republican Representative TJ Roberts has been outspoken about his thoughts on Beshear’s travel. He recently filed House Bill 86, which would require the governor to submit a written request to the State Treasurer to use tax dollars for international travel, prohibiting the use of tax dollars for international travel without approval.
The bill states that the request must clearly articulate how the travel would benefit Kentucky.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Former Oregon standout and analyst Dallas Warmack to join Kentucky coaching staff
Will Stein continues to impress the college football world since taking over the helm as Kentucky Football’s head coach a few weeks ago.
It’s not only signing talented players that’s catching eyes; Stein is also perfecting his recruiting pitch to lure other coaches away from their current programs to work alongside him in Lexington.
On Sunday, Pete Nakos broke news that former Oregon Ducks standout Dallas Warmack would be joining Stein on the sidelines as an assistant offensive line coach. Warmack was a top player in the class of 2015, committing to Alabama, where he’d play three seasons before transferring to Oregon.
As a Duck, he started 24 of 26 games and earned Pac-12 Third-Team honors as a senior in 2019. After college, Warmack bounced around professionally, including playing in the XFL before transitioning into an analyst role on the Ducks’ staff.
This marks now the third coach who will be in charge of revamping and maintaining UK’s Big Blue Wall. Cutter Leftwich will lead the position group while Warmack and Derek Warehime will contribute in supporting roles.
Shoring up the offensive line is something that’s clearly been a priority for Will Stein and his staff. There’s now no dodging around the fact that there will be no shortage of fingers to point should things not go as planned. The talent is in place with proven mentors to surround them with.
It’s also worth noting that Oregon had a stellar offensive line that competed to be one of the nation’s best during Will Stein’s tenure with the Ducks. If he can replicate that kind of execution in the SEC, then the Cats will already be a leg up from where they were a season ago. If nothing else, it will be refreshing to see a polished unit that looks organized and avoids penalties.
Welcome to Lexington, Coach Warmack.
Kentucky
Mark Pope was holding on for dear life to pull Otega Oweh and Brandon Garrison from skirmish at Tennessee
Tensions flared briefly during Kentucky Basketball’s road matchup at Tennessee, but head coach Mark Pope made sure it never crossed the line.
After the game, cameras caught Kentucky guard Otega Oweh exchanging words with Tennessee forward Jaylen. What started as trash talk quickly escalated when Carey gave Oweh a shove. Brandon Garrison immediately stepped in to have Oweh’s back.
Before anything could spiral, Pope sprinted from the sideline straight into the middle of it.
Grabbing the jerseys of both Oweh and Garrison, Pope physically pulled them away from the confrontation, making it clear that Kentucky wasn’t going to get dragged into unnecessary trouble. Officials quickly intervened as well, and the situation was defused with the only real contact being Carey’s shove.
Since the game was over, the officials could not call any technical fouls or ejections, and it was just a moment of emotion in one of the SEC’s most heated rivalries.
Oweh has become one of Kentucky’s emotional leaders, playing with fire and confidence, especially in big road environments. Garrison, meanwhile, showed the kind of teammate mentality every coach wants by being ready to defend his guy without hesitation.
But Pope’s response mattered most. In a loud, hostile building, one extra shove or one negative reaction could have resulted in the SEC office reviewing the incident, leading to potential suspensions.
Instead, Pope made sure his team stayed focused on getting off the court.
Kentucky went on to win the game against Tennessee, 80-78, in another game that Kentucky had to come back to win. After looking dead in the water three games ago, there’s now reason for hope within the Big Blue Nation.
-
Montana1 week agoService door of Crans-Montana bar where 40 died in fire was locked from inside, owner says
-
Virginia1 week agoVirginia Tech gains commitment from ACC transfer QB
-
Minnesota1 week agoICE arrests in Minnesota surge include numerous convicted child rapists, killers
-
Detroit, MI6 days agoSchool Closings: List of closures across metro Detroit
-
Lifestyle5 days agoJulio Iglesias accused of sexual assault as Spanish prosecutors study the allegations
-
Oklahoma1 week agoMissing 12-year-old Oklahoma boy found safe
-
Education1 week agoVideo: Violence at a Minneapolis School Hours After ICE Shooting
-
Oregon1 week agoDan Lanning Gives Oregon Ducks Fans Reason to Believe