Kentucky
What went wrong for Kentucky in loss at Clemson
The Wildcats had their chances, but all in all, it’s hard to call Kentucky‘s first true road test of the season anything but an all-around disappointment. Mark Pope earned his first loss with the team shooting an abysmal 38.1 percent shooting overall, 25.9 percent from three and 61.1 percent at the line. Clemson opened as a home underdog and made the road favorite pay in the form of a good old fashioned court storming.
What went wrong inside Littlejohn Coliseum — besides opposing fans finding the Cats in a stampede at the final buzzer? KSR has the takeaways.
Unable to overcome a disaster first half
Kentucky set the tone initially with a quick 7-2 run, but Clemson responded and really took control the rest of the first half. The Tigers didn’t shoot well, but they absolutely dominated on the glass with a 31-21 lead overall and 13 offensive rebounds leading to 10 second-chance points.
Even when things went well for the Cats in the first half, they immediately went wrong. Down 23-19, they went on a quick 9-0 run to go up 28:23 with 5:45 to go. That led to a 10-0 response and a 14-2 finish at the halftime buzzer, the Tigers going into the locker room with all of the momentum.
It wasn’t gone forever — Kentucky retook the lead with 15:28 to go and had it as late as the 10:57 mark — but it never felt like Pope’s squad was in position to run away with it. Clemson carried itself like a team that was, despite the largest lead of the night being just eight. There was a ton to love about the team’s resolve on the glass, ultimately tying the overall margin and offensively, but the rough start gave the home team and crowd unnecessary and avoidable life.
Kentucky can’t match physicality
The Wildcats said the physicality of their previous matchups vs. WKU and Georgia State would help prepare them for the fight Clemson was going to show inside Littlejohn Coliseum. They knew the Tigers had size and length, a tough, hard-nosed group with plenty of experience that wouldn’t shy away from the challenge. That’s what made the performance so deflating, watching Brad Brownell’s group stick to the script as a top-15 defense nationally, suffocating Kentucky all night and forcing it out of its actions to limit clean looks leading to sloppy turnovers and bad shots. On the other end, Clemson brought it to the UK defense, creating and exploiting mismatches and drawing timely fouls.
“It was a really physical game,” Pope said. “It’s a credit to them, that’s how they play. Their bigs are relentless with their physicality.”
Sped up to get slowed down
Bringing in the No. 300 tempo in college basketball, Clemson confidently controlled the pace against the nation’s sixth-fastest team. The Tigers mucked things up to make a really comfortable offensive team, one that scores more points than anybody on a nightly basis, really uncomfortable and get away from its identity. The off-ball movement and crisp passing we’ve come to love disappeared in the form of 11 assists overall on 24 made field goals compared to 12 turnovers — just three dimes on ten makes in the first half.
In Pope’s eyes, the Wildcats got sped up thanks to the defensive intensity and physicality, leading to his group slowing down. Their trust in each other and the system in place transitioned into hero ball, which goes against everything the team stands for as an offense.
“Sometimes when you get sped up, you actually get slowed down and that very much hampered us on the offensive side,” Pope said. “That comes with just growing trust in the way we play and how we execute. I think we’ll be really disappointed with ourselves and how we tried to ring the bell on the offensive side. We try to, out of the goodness of our hearts and the care for our team, try to fix a lot of things by ourselves. It’s not how we play.”
7-27 from three
Kentucky made on average 11.1 3-pointers per game going into the Clemson game, good for No. 1 in the SEC and No. 12 in Division I. That led to an average of 96.7 points per contest through seven outings, good for No. 1 both within the SEC and nationally. Those two things have gone hand in hand.
What went hand in hand for the Wildcats in Clemson? A season-low 66 points for the Wildcats following an abysmal 7-27 mark from three. Jaxson Robinson and Butler were the only players to make multiple shots from the perimeter while the rest of the team combined for just three makes on 16 tries. They couldn’t buy a bucket with three-minute scoring draught popping up left and right as the Tigers found just enough consistency to pull off the win.
Lamont Butler dealt with foul trouble and a tweaked ankle
The San Diego State transfer was one of very few gems for the Wildcats against the Tigers, finishing with 16 points on 6-9 shooting and 2-4 from three with five assists, two rebounds and a steal. That all came in just 19 minutes, though, Butler limited to just nine in the first due to foul trouble and 12 in the second dealing with a tweaked ankle.
He scored on a quick and-one to give UK a spark, then earned another tough bucket for the team’s biggest lead of the day at six before all hell broke loose down the stretch. The ball movement ramped up in the second half after it stuck early, only to see Butler follow that up with the injury.
Is it a totally different ball game with the fifth-year senior out there longer as a game-high plus-17? Odds are good.
“We just didn’t function great (with Butler out) so I wonder if there’s a way to roll the dice a little bit more and magnify those minutes,” Pope said. “Lamont was kind of giving us everything he had in the second half but he was on a little bit of broken wheel and so certainly that had some impact on the game.”
Andrew Carr and Kerr Kriisa were no-shows
Carr saved the day for Kentucky against Duke in the Champions Classic, going for a team-high 17 points and six rebounds. That was against ACC competition, just as Clemson was for the former ACC member himself as a Wake Forest transfer. His past two performances against the Tigers were for 18 points and 11 rebounds, then 17 points and five rebounds — both wins. It was fair to expect the fifth-year senior to be the one to step up once again in a tough road environment against a familiar foe. Instead, he passed up open shots and missed the ones he took en route to five points on 1-7 shooting with five rebounds two assists, two blocks and two turnovers in 24 minutes.
As for Kriisa, his time on the floor was crucial with Butler out for extended stretches in both halves. Instead, he wrapped up the day with zero points on 0-4 shooting to go with two rebounds and one steal in 21 minutes for a team-low -21 in plus/minus. He looked to draw fouls with flops early, but the officials quickly caught on and failed to bail him out, leading to transition opportunities the other direction with Kriisa still laying on the floor. When it came to actual production, the beloved fifth-year senior came up short.
Kentucky
Kentucky Wildcats News: McDonald’s All-American Gameday

Kentucky
Mark Pope must land this Kentucky native in the transfer portal who shoots 47% from three
A massive addition to the transfer portal just happened as former Liberty guard Brett Decker Jr. announced that he plans to hit the portal when it opens on April 7th. This should immediately catch the eye of Mark Pope, as Decker Jr. is a Kentucky native from Elizabethtown.
This season for the Flames of Liberty, Decker Jr. averaged 16.9 points per game while shooting 49.9% from the field and 47.1% from three. Decker Jr. will more than likely end up being the best three-point shooter in the transfer portal, so knowing this, plus the fact that he is a Kentucky native, Coach Pope needs to do everything in his power to land Decker Jr.
Last season, the Wildcats didn’t have that much three-point shooting outside of Collin Chandler. Otega Oweh, Denzel Aberdeen, and Kam Williams all were solid shooting the three ball, but Chandler was the only player fans could rely on to make one from deep.
When Pope doesn’t have a lot of players who are capable of making threes, his offense isn’t going to be that good, and this is why the Wildcats had a rough season last year. Coach Pope needs to learn from this mistake and make sure that he adds a bunch of players via the portal who can fill it up from deep. Obviously, Decker Jr. is a player who makes a ton of sense for this staff to target to come in and play the Koby Brea role.
If Decker Jr. does pick Kentucky, he could come off the bench as a flamethrower from deep, and in the games where he just can’t seem to miss, Pope won’t take him off the floor. When it comes to the other backcourt members Pope recruits, he will need guys who can score all over the floor, while Decker Jr. could just be the shooter for this team.
Decker Jr. is only a sophomore, so if Kentucky were to land him, he could develop the rest of his game and be one of the better players in the nation during his final two seasons of college hoops. Pope needs players who are going to be knockdown shooters from deep, and a good start would be to land the best shooter in the portal.
If Kentucky is able to land Decker Jr., Pope will still need to go out and get some more players who can be reliable from three, but he would be an excellent start. Coach Pope needs to do everything in his power to bring the Kentucky kid home.
Kentucky
Recent $167m lottery winner arrested for allegedly stealing $12,000 in Kentucky
A man who recently won a $167m Powerball lottery jackpot stands accused of stealing the relatively paltry sum of $12,000 after breaking into a house in his home state of Kentucky on Saturday, according to authorities who arrested him.
James Farthing’s arrest on Saturday on counts of burglary and illicit marijuana possession reportedly was at least his third since winning Kentucky’s most lucrative lottery prize ever.
Farthing, 51, was allegedly captured on surveillance cameras at the side door of a woman’s home in Lexington before unlawfully entering the place, police wrote in an arrest citation that was reported by the local news outlet WKYT. The break-in victim heard a loud noise consistent with a door being busted open, and she realized $12,000 was missing from the home after Farthing broke in, officers alleged in the citation.
Police later found Farthing at a casino and harness-racing track and took him into custody in connection with the alleged burglary. Officers said they added the illegal marijuana possession count after searching his car and finding the herb along with multiple blunts, including one that had burnt out in his vehicle’s ashtray.
Farthing had spent most of his life in and out of incarceration before he, his mother and girlfriend bought the winning ticket for a $167m Powerball jackpot awarded in April 2025, according to the Smoking Gun website.
Hitting that jackpot left them with deciding whether to collect the full amount in annual increments over 29 years or immediately in a one-time, lump sum of $77.3m.
Farthing and his family said they would talk with a financial adviser before choosing the better option for them.
As Farthing put it, the win resulted from playing the odds. “I’m always buying [lottery tickets] ’cause I’m like, ‘Somebody’s gotta win,’” he later told WKYT.
It was a matter of days before he recorded another brush with the law – when officials in Florida said he hit a hotel guest in the face, kicked a deputy and violated his parole conditions by leaving Kentucky without permission.
He pleaded guilty to that case in early March as part of a deal requiring him to pay $1,000 in fines but sparing him any additional jail time, WKYT reported.
Furthermore, in February, Kentucky authorities arrested Farthing on allegations that he tried to intimidate a participant of a legal process. Investigators said the alleged victim in that case reported meeting Farthing and being pressured into ingesting a marijuana edible. The woman later reportedly called police and reported that people with a weapon wanted to hurt her.
Officers who responded to the scene alleged that they found marijuana and a gun. And as the alleged victim was being questioned, police accused Farthing of sending her a text message which read, “Why would you do this to me? Unreal. I’d never hurt you.”
Farthing was tentatively due in court in the burglary case on Monday and on the intimidation charge on Thursday. He also reportedly has an separate hit-and-run case pending.
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