Kentucky
KSR Game Day: Kentucky faces first true road test against Florida
Ah, Gainsville Rock City. Home of a nationally recognized roadside graffiti wall, the world-famous ska punk band Less Than Jake, and the infamous Gators from the University of Florida. Good morning, Big Blue Nation; while KSR did not make the trip to the late Tom Petty’s hometown, the Kentucky basketball team did, and they are ready to send the Gators free fallin’ into the loss column.
Today’s game will be Kentucky’s first true road test, considering most of the fans in Louisville were wearing blue when the ‘Cats put a beatdown on little brother a few weeks ago. Unlike at the Yum! Center, home orange will be the dominant color in the crowd as the good folks at Florida decided this would be a good opportunity to have an orange-out. Because of course they did.
There is no question that the Stephen C. O’Connell Center will be rocking. Will Kentucky’s freshmen unleash that dog in ’em and walk out with a win? Or will this game serve as a rude awakening to away games in the SEC?
How to Watch
No. 6 Kentucky (10-2) vs. Florida (10-3)
12:30 p.m. ET | Saturday, January 6 | Exactech Arena at Stephen C. O’Connell Center
- TV: ESPN (Jay Bilas, Dan Shulman)
- Streaming: WatchESPN
- Home Radio: UK Sports Network – 630 WLAP, iHeart Radio (Tom Leach, Goose Givens)
- Online Radio: iHeart
- Satellite Radio: Sirius 161 or 191
- Live Stats: StatBroadcast
What Vegas is Saying
Florida opened up as a 1.5-point favorite over Kentucky on Fanduel. Since then, money has trended in Gator’s direction and the line is now up to -3.5. There doesn’t seem to be too much faith in the Wildcats of Kentucky amongst those in the betting community.
As for point total, the over-under is set at 168.5. Florida averages 86.3 points per game while the Wildcats average 91.1. If nothing else, we could be in store for a high-scoring affair.
Prepare for Florida by relishing the past
Kentucky’s history with Florida runs deep. Sure, the ‘Cats have a bigger rivalry with Louisville and Tennessee but the Gators have been the source of some of the most memorable and notorious moments in recent memory. Relive the magic:
Another blast from the recent past, entangled in the Florida-Kentucky series, stopped by practice last night. Former Kentucky legend, current Atlanta Dream star, and temporary Florida assistant coach, Rhyne Howard, paid the men’s team a visit. No word on who she’ll be cheering for when the ball tips, but know that the camera will be sure to find her multiple times this afternoon.
The Scouting Report
The Gators will provide the Wildcats with one of their most difficult matchups to date this season. Specifically, the Gators’ offensive rebounding could pose a serious threat. The Gators rank fifth in the nation in offensive rebounding percentage, corralling 41.3 percent of their misses. Simply put, rebounding will be important for Kentucky in this matchup, one of the few areas where Kentucky has struggled this season.
The Wildcats gave up 24 offensive rebounds in its last game against Illinois State. Kentucky’s two seven-footers, Aaron Bradshaw and Ugonna Onyenso pulled down just two defensive rebounds in 31 combined minutes against the Redbirds. That can’t happen against Florida. Kentucky is going to need a better rebounding effort from top to bottom.
Then again, Florida’s aggressiveness on the offensive glass could lead to more transition points for the ‘Cats. As Tre Mitchell put it, “You’ve gotta think about it in a sense where if you’re sending two, three guys to the glass for an offensive rebound, there’s nobody getting back on defense. That’s an opportunity for us to get out there and run, we just gotta secure the rebound first.”
Easier said than done, but if Kentucky can regularly limit Florida to one chance on offense, fastbreak points will be easy to come by.
For a more in-depth scouting report, KSR’s Brandon Ramsey has you covered. For more Xs and Os from Brandon and Zack Geoghegan, check out the third episode of KSR’s best-named podcast, Floppy Action.
Free Big Z! Free Big Z!
Kentucky’s latest player enigma, Zvonimir Ivisic, is back from his native Croatia and is with the team in Gainsville. The NCAA eligibility crew is back from their Christmas break as well (purportedly), but continue to keep everyone waiting.
I’m sure it is probably Janice in Accounting’s birthday and a handful of folks have a serious case of the Mondays, but there seems to be little excuse for why is taking so long to make a decision on Big Z’s eligibility. Tre Mitchell told the Lexington Herald, “They just need to free my guy, man. They just need to let him loose.”
One group of Kentucky fans took the cause to the next level. Their idea? Put up a #FreeBigZ billboard outside of the NCAA Eligibility Center in Indianapolis. The targeted location is directly across the intersection, one within walking distance for employees to see going in and out of the office.
The campaign started Friday morning, and within four hours, the $3,600 needed to cover expenses related to the rental and material costs was raised.
You people are crazy.
Kentucky
Keegan Brown hired by Kentucky Basketball, per report

Kentucky
Kentucky vs. West Virginia – Second round NCAA tournament extended highlights
Women’s Basketball
March 23, 2026
Kentucky vs. West Virginia – Second round NCAA tournament extended highlights
March 23, 2026
Watch the highlights from No. 5 Kentucky and No. 4 West Virginia’s matchup in the second round of the 2026 women’s NCAA tournament.
Kentucky
5 worst moments of March Madness Round 2, from Tyler Tanner’s miss to Kentucky flop
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The top-seeded teams dominated the second round of the NCAA Tournament, with the lone double-digit seed advancing to the Sweet 16 being Texas, one of the most iconic brands in college sports.
Texas being a “Cinderella” in 2025-26 is fitting for where men’s college basketball is as a sport amid the name, image and likeness era. The lone double digit seed to reach the Sweet 16 last season was Arkansas, which is led by one of the greatest coaches ever in John Calipari and was riddled with talent.
No. 12 seed High Point gave its best shot at breaking that mold on Saturday, March 21, before ultimately falling to No. 4 Arkansas 94-88 in a highly competitive game. No. 11 VCU also had a chance to be the latest mid-major to reach the Sweet 16, but was dominated by No. 3 Illinois 76-55.
Only 16 teams remain, with just one weekend before the Final Four returns to Indianapolis. Here’s a look at our five worst moments of the NCAA Tournament’s second round in 2026:
5 worst moments of NCAA Tournament second round
Vanderbilt star Tyler Tanner nearly made an all-time shot for the win against No. 4 Nebraska in the second round, but the ball rimmed out after multiple bounces off the backboard and rim.
Tanner was already having a career performance, as he finished with 27 points and four assists with four steals. With 2.2 seconds he caught the inbounds pass on the opposite side of the court before heaving it from behind halfcourt, which barely missed and resulted in Vanderbilt’s entire bench falling to their knees in disappointment.
Nebraska’s Braden Frager hit a game-winning driving layup to hand his school its second-ever NCAA Tournament win and first Sweet 16 appearance. Unfortunately, one of Vanderbilt or Nebraska was headed home after one of the best second-round games in recent memory.
“We were in an inch away from being in the Sweet 16,” Vandy coach Mark Byington said. “It’s going to take a while for us to get over.”
Florida was shocked by No. 9 seed Iowa in the second round, falling 73-72 after Alvaro Folgueiras hit a game-winning 3-pointer with less than five seconds remaining. It’s a brutal finish to the season for the Gators, who played their way back onto the 1-seed line after winning 16 of their last 17 regular-season games.
Florida looked like a top national championship contender, especially with its impressive frontcourt of Alex Condon, Thomas Haugh and Rueben Chinyelu. But sometimes March Madness strikes, and unfortunately it did for Florida before the first weekend came to a close.
Iowa ended the game on a 7-3 run, which was ultimately the difference in the back-and-forth, highly competitive game.
Kentucky makes the bad kind of history
While Kentucky survived a scare against Santa Clara in the first round, it took a wild shot from Otega Oweh at the buzzer to force overtime. The Wildcats kept within distance of Iowa State in the first half of their game on March 22, before the Cyclones pulled away for a dominant 82-63 win.
Kentucky played sloppy basketball against Iowa State, setting a program record for most turnovers (20) in an NCAA Tournament game. The 19-point loss was also Kentucky’s largest loss in a March Madness game since 1972.
Second-year coach Mark Pope is facing a pivotal offseason, especially with Oweh exhausting his eligibility.
David Punch’s nose
TCU star David Punch took a shot to the face from Duke’s Cameron Boozer late in the second half of a close game on Saturday, March 21, and wasn’t the same after returning to the game. Boozer was called for a Flagrant 1 on the play, although Punch was unable to shoot the free-throws as he returned to the bench with blood flowing down his face.
Punch Jr. briefly went to the locker room, missing the remainder of the first half before returning in the final 20 minutes of the game.
TCU trailed 38-34 at halftime, before falling apart and losing 81-58 to Duke to end its season. And despite coming off a 16-point, 13-rebound performance against Ohio State in the first round, he was held to four points on 1-of-10 shooting against the Blue Devils.
High Point’s season comes to an end
High Point’s program-best season came to an end against No. 4 Arkansas, as it fell 94-88 after winning its first-ever NCAA Tournament game in the first round. The Panthers dominated the regular season, finishing the regular season 30-4 with a Big South Conference Tournament win.
Chase Johnston became the latest March Madness legend after helping High Point to a win over Wisconsin, and Rob Martin channeled his inner-Kemba Walker with 30 points and five assists in High Point’s loss to Arkansas.
High Point was putting on for mid-major programs in the NCAA Tournament and hopes to continue its momentum fresh off a respect-earning trip.
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