Kentucky
Kentucky takes two losses on the first day of March — a month that has not been kind to the Wildcats
Kentucky trailed by 15 points at halftime, then followed it up by turning it over six times in the first seven possessions of the second half with zero field goal attempts. Three minutes of some of the worst basketball this team has played all season, coming after finishing the first half with zero made field goals in the final 7:21, missing ten straight going into the break. 11 straight minutes without scoring a basket.
The game was so bad they literally just turned off the ABC feed and started showing Texas Tech vs. Kansas with the occasional NHL look-in.
(They actually blamed it on technical difficulties at Rupp Arena — apparently the ABC truck equipment caught on fire — but the timing was pretty suspicious.)
We should’ve known it just wasn’t meant to be when a guy averaging 2.1 threes per game hit not one, but two banked-in shots from deep on back-to-back possessions just over five minutes in. Actually, it was that 12-0 stretch pushing a one-point Auburn lead to 13 points with 14:20 to go in the half. It wouldn’t get closer than six points the rest of the way, no closer than 13 points in the second half while ballooning to as many as 22 points with 14:31 left on the clock.
Nothing went right for the Wildcats inside Rupp Arena, ending with the Tigers taking an actual belt and using it to recreate the ass-whooping that took place early Saturday afternoon.
No. 1 Auburn celebrates after beating Kentucky in Rupp Arena for the first time since 1988. pic.twitter.com/fMiQeCXgLK
— Vince Wolfram (@vincewolfram15) March 1, 2025
Thought things were bad then? Mark Pope made sure to really pee on your Cheerios a few short minutes later by announcing Jaxson Robinson would be undergoing season-ending wrist surgery this week, officially wrapping up his time at Kentucky and playing college basketball overall.
I’ll take your 16-point home loss and raise you a second-leading scorer out for the year, right before the team starts its postseason run. Sound good?
You wonder how much that news impacted this team mentally going into a game like this — Koby Brea said the Wildcats learned “yesterday or the day before” that Robinson would have the surgery, a massive dark cloud hanging over their heads before hosting the No. 1 team in the country. Sure, you can have a next-man-up mindset and strive to play for your brother, maybe even make up the counting stats lost on any given night, but that doesn’t replace the threat that is Robinson as a gravity shooter and scorer. It’s the idea that he’s one touch away from going off, someone you always have to account for every second he’s on the floor.
Others have stepped up in his absence OK, I suppose, but it’s been a by-committee scramble hoping and praying you have enough in the tank elsewhere or one bench piece unexpectedly going nuclear to make up the difference. Tonight? A combined five bench points with one total bucket in 50 combined minutes between five players.
Pope was asked about the team’s energy and if it was where it needed to be taking on the best team in college basketball. Like he always does, the Kentucky head coach shouldered the blame and said more could have been done to get the Wildcats in the right headspace before this one.
“I would love to make excuses on that. That ultimately falls on my shoulders,” Pope said. “… I failed to lead our team today to have the energy that is required for us to come out and be great. It’s not a lack of desire. There’s a — it was a whole cocktail of energy miscues, some being sped up miscues, some terrific shot-making from Auburn. All put together resulted in a really, really terrible day for us.”
In reality, Kentucky looked like a team that just found out its star scorer and veteran leader, the player once described as Pope’s ‘interpreter’ going into the year after joining forces three seasons ago at BYU, will never play another game at this level. That’s a devastating blow for any program and must be accounted for when talking about what went wrong and why the game was never really competitive, especially after some early bad luck — again, Auburn’s Miles Kelly banked in two threes in the first six minutes en route to a career-high nine 3-pointers and a season-high 30 points.
Let me put it this way, actually: Koby Brea (21), Andrew Carr (20), Lamont Butler (15) and Amari Williams (13) combined for 69 points while National Player of the Year favorite Johni Broome was held to just nine points on 3-9 shooting and 3-7 at the line in 33 minutes. UK also took 38 free throws, good for second on the year and first among high-major competition. If you would have told me those would be the numbers before the game, I’d ask you where we’re celebrating after the win.
Instead, the Wildcats trailed for 39:21 of 40 total minutes in a double-digit home loss.
There were obvious reasons that happened and the result was what it was. We already talked about the bench production, but those 18 turnovers were killers — Auburn scored 21 points off turnovers compared to just nine for Kentucky on eight Tiger giveaways — as were just four total made 3-pointers on a season-low 17 attempts from deep. You just won’t win many games with any of those numbers, even if you’ve got a four-man group producing the way Brea, Carr, Butler and Williams did.
At the end of the day, Auburn is a juggernaut and anything short of a Final Four would be a disappointment for Bruce Pearl’s group — the Tigers now have a higher KenPom team rating (+37.53) than Kentucky’s 38-1 team in 2014-15 (+36.91), for those curious. They’ve been racking up double-digit wins all season en route to 16 Quad 1 victories and an all-time resume. Losing by 16 to this team isn’t something to lose your mind over, no matter how slow and painful the death in a game that inexcusably lasted two hours and 38 minutes thanks to 44 total fouls called, 69 free throws and seven trillion monitor reviews.
You live with that. Can Kentucky live with the news Mark Pope delivered on Jaxson Robinson’s season-ending surgery at the podium just minutes later? That feels like another story with just two regular season games to go and the SEC Tournament just 11 days away, Selection Sunday four days after that.
Very rarely do you lose twice on the same day, but Big Blue Nation felt that on the first day of a month that has not been kind to this fanbase in recent years. Hopefully the rest of March finishes better than it started — they sure could use it.
Kentucky
Saturated soil raises flooding risk across Kentucky after recent heavy rain
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – Recent heavy rainfall has left soil across the state completely soaked, contributing to localized flooding in some areas.
When rain falls, some water soaks into the ground through a process called percolation.
Soil can only hold a limited amount of water. Once the small air spaces within the soil fill with water, the ground becomes saturated and additional rainfall has nowhere to go.
Soil type plays a role in how quickly water drains.
Much of Kentucky has clay-heavy soil, which is made up of very small, flat particles packed tightly together.
That composition makes it harder for water to move through. In clay soil, water may drain at a rate of only 0.02 to 0.17 inches per hour.
When rainfall comes down faster than the ground can absorb it and water cannot drain into a stream or storm drain quickly enough, it begins to build up.
That buildup is what leads to localized flooding.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Cyclosporiasis spreads across Kentucky
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO) – Cyclosporiasis is a microscopic parasite that can contaminate food and water — is making people sick across several states, including Kentucky.
Dr. Patricia Tellez-Watson said, the illness is caused by Cyclospora cayetanensis and spreads when someone ingests contaminated food or water. “It is an intestinal infection caused by this water-borne, food-borne microscopic parasite,” she said.
Symptoms can include diarrhea, nausea and vomiting.
Tellez-Watson said, cases are often sporadic, but outbreaks can happen — especially during hot, wet months, when the parasite can survive in the environment long enough to become infectious.
Health experts recommend taking extra precautions with food and water. Washing hands and thoroughly rinsing produce before eating or cooking can reduce risk.
Watson also urged people to be cautious with fresh produce, particularly pre-packaged items, and to consider using bottled water.
Officials have confirmed cases in Bowling Green, though it’s unclear how many.
Copyright 2026 WBKO. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Drafted by Reds, Matt Ponatoski enrolls at University of Kentucky
What will Moeller’s Matt Ponatoski bring to Kentucky football, baseball?
Hear what Moeller senior had to say about signing to play football and baseball at the University of Kentucky.
Dual-sport star and Moeller alum Matt Ponatoski’s final decision still awaits, but signs are pointing towards Lexington, KY.
After committing to the University of Kentucky as both a quarterback and pitcher, Ponatoski was selected in the 18th round (No. 542 overall) of the 2026 MLB Draft by the hometown Cincinnati Reds. While Ponatoski was ranked No. 208 on the MLB’s draft board and expected to be selected higher, doubts around whether he intended to go pro this year caused his stock to fall.
Ponatoksi has until the MLB’s signing deadline on July 27 to make a final decision, but the Moeller product has seemingly signaled his intention to stick with the University of Kentucky. He enrolled at the University of Kentucky on Wednesday, July 15, per a Kentucky Sports Radio report, indicating he will join the Wildcats football team in the fall.
The Man of Moeller was just the third player in the history of the Gatorade Player of the Year award to win for two different sports in the same season. Doing so in his junior year, he joined Pro Football Hall of Fame receiver Randy Moss and National Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Joe Mauer.
For Wildcats football, Ponatoski would come in as a four-star quarterback prospect and helped give new head coach Will Stein a top-25 recruiting class in the nation. He threw just one interception in his senior season for the Moeller Crusaders, completing 66% of his passes for 2,395 yards and 28 touchdowns.
For Kentucky baseball, Ponatoski would join up with fellow freshman and former Louisville Trinity pitcher Grayson Willoughby, who won Kentucky Mr. Baseball and withdrew his name from the draft. Willoughby, a top-rated pitching prospect, felt MLB teams were attempting to low-ball him and thus chose to stick with the Wildcats. Ponatoski is fresh from a season leading Moeller to the state championship game, recording a 1.37 ERA on the year.
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