Kentucky
Kentucky’s offense hasn’t scored a touchdown in eight quarters. Here are the problems
Kentucky football’s Mark Stoops chats with media after Georgia loss
Kentucky’s Mark Stoops talks after losing to No. 1 Georgia football by one point Saturday night in Lexington.
LEXINGTON — Two more points. That’s all Kentucky football needed last week to topple top-ranked Georgia and send shockwaves reverberating through the college football world. Instead, despite not trailing until 12:20 remained, UK couldn’t fend off a resilient UGA squad, which rallied for a 13-12 victory at Kroger Field.
UK’s defense more than did its part. The Wildcats put the reins on the Bulldogs’ offense, forcing star quarterback Carson Beck into the worst completion percentage (62.5; 15 for 24) in his 17 games as a starter. UGA’s 262 yards were its fewest in a game in nearly five years — and the fewest it had tallied against Kentucky since 1996, when it finished with just 212. And the 13 points the Bulldogs scored were the fewest permitted by the Wildcats to a No. 1-ranked team since LSU failed to break into double digits in a 9-0 victory in 1959.
No wonder UK’s offense took last week’s loss to heart.
“It’s obviously extremely hard,” said Bush Hamdan, in his first season as Kentucky’s offensive coordinator. “When you look at their situations, again, we’ve got to analyze it. In this league, (you’ve) got to take care of the ball, got to score touchdowns in the red zone, got to execute on third downs.
“So we know what needs to get done.”
The past two games, however, the Wildcats haven’t done it.
Since the opener against Southern Miss was called in the third quarter because of lightning, with Kentucky up 31-0, the Wildcats haven’t reached the end zone again.
Eight consecutive touchdown-less quarters, which started with a shocking 31-6 home loss to South Carolina on Sept. 7 and continued with the one-point setback to Georgia last week.
So, what’s ailing the UK offense?
And how can it start hitting paydirt again once it’s within striking distance of the goal line?
We’ll look at the issues — and point out possible solutions, with help from coaches and players — as UK gears up for its fourth game of the season, set for 12:45 p.m. Saturday in Lexington against nonconference foe Ohio.
Given that Kentucky was robbed of more than a quarter of game time when the opener was called in the third period, it should come as no surprise the offense ranks near the bottom nationally in points and yards per game. The Wildcats average 16.3 points per game, which is 121st (of 133 FBS teams counted in the NCAA’s official statistics) in the country and last in the 16-team SEC. UK also ranks last in the league in total offense, averaging 261.3 yards per outing, which is 129th nationally. Kentucky has four touchdowns this season, all in the season-opening rout.
Those four TDs are tied with hapless, 0-3 Florida State for the fewest among Power Four conference clubs through three games. (UCLA has only two touchdowns, but it has played just two games so far in its maiden campaign as a member of the Big Ten.)
Even removing the traditional measures of raw points and yards does UK no favors.
Per TeamRankings.com, the Wildcats are averaging 4.2 yards per play. That puts them in a five-way tie for 115th nationally, alongside Colorado State, Hawaii, N.C. State and Temple. The only two power conference clubs accumulating fewer yards per snap are Stanford (3.7) and Purdue (3.1).
UK’s struggles earning much positive momentum per play extend to gaining yards in bunches.
CFBStats.com is a database that tracks every play a team is involved in during a season. One subset of numbers the site catalogs is “long plays” — which it defines as any play that gains 10 or more yards. It also breaks this down into separate categories of “long rushing plays” and “long passing plays.”
The Wildcats have succeeded in only one area: rushing plays of 10-plus yards. They have 19 through three games, which is tied for 27th nationally. In every other statistical big-play department, Kentucky is among the worst in the FBS.
Here’s the full breakdown:
Long scrimmage plays
Long rushing plays
- 10-plus: 19 (T-27 nationally)
- 20-plus: 2 (T-93);
- 30-plus: 0 (T-110); Kentucky is the only SEC team without a rush of at least 30 yards in 2024
Long passing plays
- 10-plus: 14 (124th nationally); Kentucky’s 14 pass plays of 10 or more yards are the fewest of any power conference team; the next-closest team is UCLA with 15. But the Bruins have played only two games this season.
- 20-plus: 5 (T-111)
- 30-plus: 3 (T-81)
- 40-plus: 1 (T-84)
An offense that has to fight and claw for nearly every yard and point can ill afford to have obstacles upfront. Yet the offensive line is another area of the unit that has had a rough season to this point. The Wildcats’ starting five is giving up 2.67 sacks per game, which is 103rd nationally and 13th among SEC teams. UK is even worse among league clubs in tackles for loss allowed — 6.00 per game, which is ahead of only South Carolina, which has permitted a staggering 10.67 TFLs per contest.
Kentucky’s difficulty protecting starting quarterback Brock Vandagriff has contributed to a lack of pop in the passing game.
In other words, UK’s passing attack hasn’t gotten off the ground this season.
The Wildcats are outside the top 100 nationally in four passing categories: passing offense (109 yards per game; 130th), yards per completion (10.22; 107th), passing efficiency (100.58; 128th) and completion percentage (.508; 127th). Kentucky is last in the conference in passing offense, passing efficiency and completion percentage while slotting in 14th in yards per completion.
For the season, Vandagriff has thrown for 313 yards and three touchdowns — against two interceptions, one of which was a pick six by South Carolina — on 29-for-55 passing (52.8%).
The Wildcats’ receivers have seen their numbers suffer, too.
Dane Key is the only pass catcher with more than 100 receiving yards through three games; he has 119 on a team-best eight receptions. Fellow junior receiver Barion Brown paces the squad in receiving touchdowns (two). And transfer Ja’Mori Maclin had a 46-yard reception in the opener — Kentucky’s longest play from scrimmage this season.
Two sequences during last week’s game had UK fans scratching their heads.
The first came just before halftime.
After running back Demie Sumo-Karngbaye picked up 8 yards on third and 1, Kentucky had first and 10 at Georgia’s 14-yard line with nine seconds remaining before intermission. Instead of taking one — if not possibly two — shots at the end zone, UK coach Mark Stoops elected to let the clock run to five seconds before calling timeout. Alex Raynor promptly walked on the field and knocked in a 32-yard field goal to give the hosts a 6-3 lead at the break.
Stoops defended the decision after the game.
“I wanted points,” he said. “And we did take some chances. We just didn’t (capitalize). I mean, we couldn’t. That was going to be hard sledding (against UGA’s defense). We would take complete momentum away from us if we get a strip sack or a fumble or don’t go in with the lead. Thought our offense did a hell of a job of possessing it and driving and giving us a chance.
“It’s not like we were just giving up on that. That’s some hard sledding, man.”
Hamdan also agreed with the call, given the circumstances.
“That first half, the way our defense was playing, I think all those decisions are the right decisions, they really are,” he said. “I think the other part of that, too, is based off the coverage you might get in those situations: ball (is) on the 15-yard line with only a play or two, it’s hard to not go and take those points in a game like this against the No. 1 team in the country. So I think we did what we had to do in certain situations to take those points. Obviously, we’ve got to turn three (points) into seven here pretty quickly.”
The second call Stoops made that frustrated some segments of the fan base was not rolling the dice on fourth and 8 late in the final period, with Georgia leading 13-12. The Wildcats accepted a delay-of-game penalty to give punter Wilson Berry more room on fourth and 13. The Bulldogs took over at their 15 with 2:58 to play. They bled 2:49 off the clock. By the time UK regained possession, it had just nine seconds — and no timeouts — with which to work. Georgia sealed the victory three plays later.
Stoops never wavered in the aftermath.
“I know people are gonna question the fourth down. I don’t, I don’t,’ he said. “You know I’ve been honest with you for 12 years. If I say I made a mistake … I’ll tell you. I don’t regret punting that ball.
“I felt like if we went for it there and don’t make it, then our offense, if we stop them, has to go the length of the field — and that was going to be tough against that defense in a predictable pass situation. It’s not our strength.”
He reiterated that take during his weekly news conference Monday.
“I don’t take offense to the criticism of not going for it or whatever,” he said. “Again, I told the coaches on the headset on first down, I had every intention of going for it. Wish we would have gained some yards and had a manageable third down, manageable fourth down, but you’ve got to realize, in that same zone, on the plus-48, we had two sack fumbles, one sack, and then the next one went back from the plus (territory).
“Think about if we get three (points) there. Think about if coach Stoops goes conservative and we just run it three plays in a row and kick the field goal there, right?”
In a sense, all of these issues are interrelated.
Listen to Hamdan.
“That explosive-play piece is going to be critical,” he said. “And, for us, there’s no secrets of what we’ve got to do: As a whole unit, it starts up front, quarterbacks giving them a chance, guys making plays for us to get that done.”
The explosive plays will lead to more yardage. More points. It begins with the offensive line (and other blockers) giving Vandagriff enough time to find Brown, Key, Maclin and the rest of the team’s pass catchers. And in a perfect world for Hamdan and his unit, gaining yards by the bushel will ensure they are in third-and-long situations less and less — heading off future touch-and-go fourth-down decisions such as last week.
“It’s a lot like NFL football,” Stoops said. “You watch NFL football, they make hay on first and second down. You give those beasts time to bear down on you in predictable (passing downs), nobody’s comfortable — especially with the situation we’re in right now.”
But it’s not as if said situation is hopeless.
For all the problems plaguing the passing game, the rushing attack has been a bright spot.
Kentucky is averaging more than 152 rushing yards per outing — a figure that undoubtedly would be higher if it had been able to pad its stats in the second half of the abbreviated Southern Miss game. Most impressively, UK ran for 170 yards against the vaunted Georgia defense. UGA’s first two opponents, Clemson and Tennessee Tech, combined for 116 rushing yards versus Kirby Smart’s club.
“This offense, it’s always going to start with being able to run the football,” Hamdan said. “At times, I think defenses have played pretty soft on the back end with us and not allowed us to stretch the field as much. … But having that run game has been impressive.”
Impressive though it may be, it means little if points aren’t put on the board, touchdowns more so than field goals. That’s why the stretch of eight quarters without a TD is so vexing for players.
“The plays are there, and you come up an inch short,” starting center Eli Cox said. “Eleven guys have to be on exactly the right spot every single play for those big plays to happen, especially against a good defense. We were just one thing short. Whatever the play was, we had opportunities and the plays were there. We’ve just got to go make them.”
For what it’s worth, Hamdan said he hasn’t noticed his group hang its heads after two straight games without crossing the goal line.
“We’ve just got to keep working,” he said. “This is not a final product in Week 2 or Week 3. It’s a constant state of improvement. That’s the message for them, for myself, for everybody. And we’ve got to keep taking the next step.”
Until that comes to pass, and the offense begins playing up to its potential in all facets, self-belief must carry the day — “knowing what we have” and “who we are,” as Maclin put it.
“That’s plain and simple. Just keeping it cool, man, keeping it just at that,” he said. “I feel like it’s all just preparation throughout the week: preparing, trusting the coaches.
“That’s where the confidence comes from.”
Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack.
Kentucky
Cub Express Auto Wash opens 3rd Kentucky location in Bowling Green
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO) – Cub Express Auto Wash will officially open its newest Kentucky location next week.
Located at 2270 Scottsville Rd. in Bowling Green, a ribbon cutting ceremony will be held on Tuesday, July 7, at 11 a.m. It will kick off five days of free car washes for the community.
The Five Days of Free will run from Tuesday, July 7, through Saturday, July 11. Each guest will receive the Ultimate wash, Cub Express’s top-tier wash experience. at no charge.
The public is invited to attend the ribbon cutting on-site at 11:00 a.m. to celebrate the opening alongside the Cub Express team.
Claim Your Free Ultimate Wash
Copyright 2026 WBKO. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
A Kentucky big man is predicted to be one of the SEC’s breakout stars this season
Mark Pope had a real surprise on his 2025-26 roster as true freshman center Malachi Moreno exceeded expectations, stepping into a starting role. Big Blue Nation didn’t expect Moreno to see the floor much once Jayden Quaintance was back on the floor, but JQ never got healthy, and Moreno took over for Brandon Garrison immediately. The freshman seven-footer averaged 7.8 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.8 assists, and 1.5 blocks per game.
This season, many expect a massive leap for Moreno as he could take over as one of the more dominant centers in the SEC. While his name was in the NBA Draft, the stock rose quickly for Moreno, and this gives fans and the staff a ton of confidence that he is going to break out this season.
Another person who believes Moreno is going to break out this season is Jon Rothstein. He made a list of his five top breakout candidates in SEC basketball this season, and Moreno was on this list, joined by Florida’s Isaiah Brown, Alabama’s London Jemison, Tennessee’s Dewayne Brown, and lastly Patton Pinkins from Ole Miss.
I believe Moreno is going to boost his stats from year one to year two in an absolutely massive way. I predict Moreno to score in the ballpark of 13 points per game this season. I expect him to pull down about 9 boards per game. His assists will take a big leap with him running the show, and I am predicting 3.5 dimes per game. Lastly, the shot blocking will be important for Moreno, and I believe he will average about 2.2 blocks per game.
If Moreno is able to put up numbers close to that this year as a sophomore, he is going to, without question, turn himself into a first-round draft pick, which Coach Pope predicted. The big thing for Moreno will be getting more physical down low. At times last season, teams would have a big who played a little bit more physical than Moreno, and he didn’t do well.
If Moreno can get mean down low, he is going to put up some eye-popping numbers this season in Lexington. I believe Moreno will finish this college basketball season as a top ten center in all of college basketball. It is going to be an absolute delight to watch Moreno run the show on offense this season for Pope and the Wildcats.
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Kentucky
Kentucky Adds Three More International Swimmers to Women’s 2026 Recruiting Class
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The University of Kentucky has added three more international swimmers to its 2026 women’s recruiting class: Valeria Tarin of Mexico, Gabrielle Idle-Beavers of England and Yasmin Silva of Peru.
Tarin currently trains with Desert Dragons in Chihuahua, where she excels at the shorter distances of free, back and fly. She competed at the 2025 World Junior Championships (LCM), racing the 50 free (26.80), 50 back (31.12) and 100 back (1:07.62). A four-time junior national champion, Tarin has also qualified for the Pan Pacific Junior Championships and was a top three finisher in multiple events at the Mexican National Championships.
Tarin posted a series of strong performances at the 2026 Arena Elite Championships (LCM) in April, logging lifetime bests in three events. She won the 100 back (1:05.33 – PB) and 50 fly (28.77 – SB) and placed 3rd in the 50 free (26.37 – PB), 6th in the 100 free (57.85 – PB) and 10th in the 50 back (30.97 – SB).
Best Times LCM (SCY Conversion)
- 50 free – 26.37 (23.03)
- 100 free – 57.85 (50.67)
- 100 back – 1:05.33 (57.77)
- 50 fly – 28.30 (24.86)
Idle-Beavers will head to Kentucky from England, where she represents Mount Kelly Swimming and primarily specializes in breast and IM. She most recently competed at the AP Race International Meet (LCM) in April, which saw her contest the 50 breast (31.84) and 100 breast (1:08.69 – PB).
At the 2026 Sheffield Premier Open Meet (LCM) in March, Idle-Beavers clocked a handful of personal best performances. She raced the 50 free (26.49 – PB), 100 free (58.05), 50 back (30.89 – PB), 50 breast (31.60 – PB), 100 breast (1:09.67) and 200 IM (2:22.21). Earlier in the season, she set a personal best time of 2:20.72 in the 200 IM at the Arena Lisbon International Meeting.
Best Times LCM (SCY Conversion)
- 50 breast – 31.60 (27.56)
- 100 breast – 1:08.69 (1:00.08)
- 200 IM – 2:20.72 (2:03.89)
Another 2025 World Junior Championships qualifier, Silva represents the Peruvian Swimming Federation and swims for Streamline Club in Trujillo, primarily specializing in fly and IM. She recently competed in the 2026 Mare Nostrum Swim Tour (LCM), which was highlighted by a lifetime best performance in the 200 fly (2:11.86) at the stop in Canet-en-Roussillon.
At the 2025 National Senior Championship (LCM) in December, Silva posted a series of strong performances. She won the 100 fly (1:03.26), 200 fly (2:20.15) and 400 IM (5:09.51 – SB) and took 2nd in the 400 free (4:38.04 – PB) and 200 back (2:30.50), 3rd in the 50 fly (28.73) and 200 IM (2:30.79), 4th in the 800 free (9:35.58 – PB) and 1500 free (18:21.92 – PB) and 5th in the 100 back (1:10.92). She also set a best time of 1:02.79 in the 100 free as the leadoff on the 400 free relay.
Best Times LCM (SCY Conversion)
- 100 fly – 1:01.47 (54.11)
- 200 fly – 2:11.86 (1:56.27)
- 200 IM – 2:26.47 (2:09.07)
- 400 IM – 5:03.97 (4:28.08)
A Division I program, Kentucky competes in the Southeastern Conference, with the women’s team finishing 12th at the 2026 SEC Championships in February. Three athletes went on to compete at the NCAA Division I Women’s Championships, but they did not score any points in the team standings.
The three international recruits will bring added depth to the Wildcats across the board, and are currently poised to be some of the team’s top competitors in their top events based on their projected converted times.
Tarin, Idle-Beavers and Silva will join Allie Joyce, Quinn Schureck and Karrington Hansen in Kentucky’s class of 2030.
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