Kentucky
Mark Pope reflects on skirmish in front of Louisville bench: 'That was probably the most fun part of the game, right?'
The Kentucky–Louisville rivalry delivered on Saturday, with a scuffle breaking out in the second half between UK forward Brandon Garrison and the Cardinals’ bench. After the game, Kentucky head coach Mark Pope reflected on the wild moment.
“Listen, it wouldn’t have been an appropriate game if it wasn’t a tension-filled mosh pit down in front of their bench. That was probably the most fun part of the game, right?” Pope said. “But I think you have two organizations right now that have an insane amount of passion about winning and feel all of the joy and intensity and stress of this rivalry.
“But also are pretty good about being focused about what actually makes you play the best to give yourself the best chance to win. I think both programs are probably in that space somewhere.”
The skirmish broke out when Louisville’s Reyne Smith dove for a ball near the Cardinals’ bench and Garrison went after it, as well. While the two battled for the ball, Garrison stumbled into Louisville’s bench and some shoving ensued.
It didn’t last long with both Pat Kelsey and Mark Pope rushing into the action to keep their players from escalating the situation. Nonetheless, the short-lived incident energized the Rupp Arena crowd, with fans noticeably louder after the scuffle.
Kentucky ultimately responded best to the fracas, running away with a 93-85 win. In the victory, UK shot 32-55 (58.2%) from the field and 11-21 (52.4%) from beyond the arc. Pope’s Wildcats looked like a well-oiled machine, racking up 23 assists, compared to Louisville’s mere eight.
Pope believes his team used the scuffle as a motivating factor instead of allowing it to distract them.
“You have two veteran groups that are pretty focused on the way they compete the best, the way they give themselves the best chance to win,” Pope said. “It is to be laser-focused on the job at hand and be super disciplined about not letting the emotion be a distracting factor, if that makes sense. I was really proud of our guys.”
Kentucky fifth-year senior point guard Lamont Butler responded particularly well to the incident, erupting for a career-high 33 points while shooting 10-10 from the floor, including six 3-pointers.
Butler’s status was questionable leading up to the game due to an ankle injury that he’d suffered in Kentucky’s loss to Clemson on Dec. 3. Kentucky must maintain its focus as it prepares to square off against Ohio State on Saturday at 5:30 p.m. ET.