Kentucky
Cutter Boley puts career day aside to focus on loss: ‘Should’ve come out of there with the win’
Kentucky‘s overtime loss to Texas came with a serious silver lining: Cutter Boley had his best game as a Wildcat, throwing for 258 yards on 31/39 overall with 45 rushing yards and a score on the ground. The redshirt freshman took some bad sacks and threw an ugly pick, but outside of a handful of youth-driven errors, the kid showed some real stuff.
His head coach thought he grew up right before our eyes against the toughest defense on the schedule.
“I’m very impressed with Cutter,” Mark Stoops said after the loss. “Very impressed because there was a couple of things early and we were coaching him and talking to him and he’s learning and staying positive and working very hard. The completion percentage, to go 31 of 39, it was impressive. I like to see that.
“We needed our completion percentage to keep on increasing and it’s doing that. He’s a big reason why. I thought he was very comfortable.”
It could’ve been a chance for Boley to pat himself on the back and celebrate the individual win as the future looks bright in Lexington with the Hodgenville native under center. Instead, Boley could only focus on being six inches short on the overtime goal line stand and letting the Longhorns head back to Austin with a win.
“It’s tough, we’re six inches away right there, and it’s tough not to get that done,” he said after the loss. “… It’s just tough when you come up short like that. We should’ve come out of there with the win for sure.”
Don’t confuse his frustration for pessimism, though. Boley is proud of the team’s progress and general trajectory as the puzzle pieces slowly start to come together. No matter the record at 2-4, confidence is high the Wildcats can figure things out before it’s officially too late.
There are still six games to be the team they believe they can be.
“Come back on Monday and take steps,” Boley said. “Everybody believes that confidence ain’t slacked at all. Just postgame, everything like that, everybody still believes. We just gotta keep coming to work and putting in the work. … I think that there’s obviously — a loss sucks, you know what I mean? But I don’t think that fazed anyone’s confidence at all.
“We know the team we got, we’re in here working every day.”
As for his own growth, he just feels he’s making the plays that come his way and playing within his ability. When the situation calls for a scramble, he’s going to tuck it and go. When he needs to take the layup, he drops it off to move the chains and live to see another day. Need a home run? He’s got that in him, too.
Whatever the coaches need him to do or however the game unfolds, he’s ready to adjust.
“Just trying to execute the play as it’s called. I feel like we came in with a really good plan .I was just throwing it to the open guy,” he said. “… Just taking what they give me, I don’t have to go out there and force things to happen, I don’t have to make crazy plays. I just gotta take what they give me and when I have to make a play, I’ll make a play.
“It just kind of comes naturally, just trying to execute the play that’s called and get it to the open guy.”
The coaches trust him to do that. Now it’s on the coaches to put him in position to succeed — and Boley’s offensive coordinator understands that.
“I think there’s something there with him, for sure,” Bush Hamdan said of Boley. “I think his confidence continues to grow, but we’re falling short. We’re not making those plays. I understand the criticism, it’s warranted, and we gotta get it fixed.”
Kentucky
Arkansas women’s basketball blown out by Kentucky in season-ending loss at SEC Tournament | Whole Hog Sports
Kentucky
Hardley Gilmore returns to Kentucky Football
A wide receiver from Belle Glade, Florida, Gilmore totaled 28 receptions for 313 yards and one touchdown for the Wildcats during the 2025 season. The 6-foot-1 sophomore has had a very interesting offseason as he entered the portal, flipped a commitment, and is now back in Lexington.
After the 2025 season, Gilmore committed to Louisville when he entered the transfer portal, then flipped his commitment to Baylor, and ultimately signed with the Bears. To end Gilmore’s portal saga, he’s now back in a familiar place with the Wildcats.
When the 2026 season begins, Gilmore will have two years of eligibility remaining.
Gilmore had a solid sophomore campaign with the Wildcats, appearing in all 12 games. His best game of the season came in the late-season loss against Vanderbilt. He tallied six catches for 55 yards in the game.
With Kentucky losing most of its wide receiver production from last season, this is a significant pickup, and it won’t be surprising if Gilmore is back in the starting lineup this fall.
Kentucky
Kentucky vs. Texas A&M Injury Report: The usual suspects are out
As for the Aggies, the only name on the report is Mackenzie Mgbako, a one-time Kentucky target who remains out for the season after undergoing foot surgery. Texas A&M head coach Bucky McMilan said today that Mgbako will return next season, which would be a big boost for the Aggies before the offseason begins.
Kentucky vs. Texas A&M Injury Report
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