Good times.
The Kentucky Wildcats scored win No. 12 and top-10 victory No. 3 on Saturday, taking down the unbeaten and sixth-ranked Florida Gators 106-100.
Thanks to 14/29 shooting from deep, the Cats were able to get their first SEC win of the Mark Pope era. Koby Brea led the way with 23 points on 8/11 shooting (7/9 from deep).
After the game, Pope and select players met with the media to discuss the game. Here is a recap of what they said via UK Athletics.
MARK POPE: All right. If you guys didn’t have fun tonight, you should quit right now and find a new job. That was just an elite level, physicality, bloodbath, competitive, just incredible performance after incredible performance going down the line. A great game. It’s like, how fun is this SEC league going to be? I mean, just incredible. Congratulations to Florida. They’ve had an incredible start to the season. They have big time players that are really competing at a high level and guys that are really dialed into their particular role on that team. I couldn’t be more proud of our guys. They just battled and battled and battled. Sometimes we are not great, these guys have so much fight in them and so much together and so much resilience. It’s a really fun team to coach. The only sad thing for me is we only get 17 more of these. I already get sad thinking that we only get to do this 17 more times in this regular season. So, we are going to try to enjoy every second of it.
Q Mark, what did you think the way that Andrew Carr kind of finished the game for you? He had a rough first half offensively and a little bit on the defensive end, but came up big when you needed him.
MARK POPE: Yeah, Andrew is like, you go down these lines and it’s pretty incredible. You think about Andrew, you know, he’s 50% from the field and a 40% from the three-point line and he’s five assists, zero turnovers. We spent the last several minutes of the game switching one through five and had a ridiculously difficult defensive responsibilities. I thought he was terrific. You know, what’s nice is with us moving Andrew around, you could see that Florida had to be responsive in the lineups they were choosing to put on the floor because they were trying to deal with Andrew down the stretch. And that’s really impactful. You have a good feeling as a coach when you know that the other side has to kind of jockey a little bit to try to figure out what they can do lineup wise. It might not be the lineup or position that they want on the floor for a bunch of reasons but the one they have to have on the floor to handle Andrew Carr. That’s a pretty good feeling. And that talks to about his incredible effect on the game.
Q Mark, 16 and 0 run and to 10 and 0 runs. Other than the simplicity of making shots and getting stops. What goes into something like that? What does a team need to have two have to have runs like that against a team like this?
MARK POPE: Well, to have the first run you need to have Otega Oweh. I will tell you what, you know what guys, it’s the most humbling thing in the world to watch these guys grow. And the game is such an incredible teacher. Otega’s first rotation was a little bit more short than normal and he was out before the first media. He sat for a little while and he is coming off of a game where he didn’t love it. He refused to allow any of that to affect any of his intensity or drive. When he came back in we were a little bit sideways and couldn’t kinda find a rhythm and he was like – you guys just relax man, I will come find all of your rhythm for you. And with the later runs, I think it has a lot to do with, listen, Florida is a great team. Sometimes, I’m just talking about our team right now. I’m a big believer, this is going to sound soft. But I’m a big believer that all of my guys snuck into Kerr Kriisa’s apartment after celebrating his birthday to go scare him and surprise him. You know, my guy that is struggling right now because he can’t play right now and it’s killing him. They all snuck into his apartment like little kids, to go surprise him. I actually think those runs come from a group like that. I really do. I think it comes from being together and these guys are working so hard to be together as much as they can. I think that’s probably the most important ingredient.
Q Mark, I was going to ask about that, I was going to ask about Otega before you said that. Of all of the personalities on your team, he seems like the one that is the first to say, you know what – enough of this, I’m fixing this. Is that accurate?
MARK POPE: It’s interesting because when you guys talk to him he is the most soft-spoken guy ever, isn’t he? But he has a competitive fire in him that burns really really deep. What he is doing this season is just really incredible. You know, Otega is interesting. Otega breaks some of our rules. He is one of those guys where from time to time I have to close my eyes and look away and don’t change it and just accept it that this is just Otega being Otega. He’s done that for us a lot this year and the contribution he’s making to this team and the way he’s leading and the joy he brings to our guys is really special.
Q Mark, how do you kind of summarize the value of Koby, being able to have a Koby to bring off the bench?
MARK POPE: How fun is it to watch Koby Brea in the second half go – what was he, 6 for 7? Something crazy like that? Where is Koby? 7 for 9. And just like, off the bounce. It’s interesting. We worked so hard to create shots for Koby and Koby comes off of an action that we think is so creative and then he stops and he lets the defense recover because he just wants to go off the bounce and just wants to just shoot off the bounce. He was magical tonight, wasn’t he? I don’t know, you are hard-pressed to make a real cogent argument that he’s not the best shooter in the country, it’s just ridiculous. The way he shoots it, how he gets it off, where he shoots it, how high he shoots it. Clearly, he was massively important for us and he was also another huge catalyst in those runs. We had some fatigue on the floor and had to go with some makeshift lineups maybe that were a little heavier on different guys than traditionally we do. And Koby was like, don’t worry – I got it. I’m just going to make shots. He was spectacular. He has also grown immensely on the defensive end. He’s also like the most beautiful kid you are ever going to meet man, he’s special.
Q With the runs and the crowd in the switch of momentum, it felt like a game from 30 years ago with you guys playing Arkansas or something. This place was different today, was it not?
MARK POPE: Well, I told the staff we were just meeting for a second meeting with the guys after the game and I told them I was like, I’m so happy for you guys because they are now going to be able to start to connect the experience of being in this gym with a real experience they are having. When I walk into this gym and it’s totally dead silent and there is no one here and the lights are out, which I love to do. That’s all I hear is what we heard today because I got to live it for so long and I’m just really grateful that my guys, the guys on this team, my staff, they are going to learn that. And there is just nowhere like it. BBN was ridiculous tonight. I mean, how fun was it to be in that gym? It was pretty special.
Q Coach, in the back. You said earlier this week that the SEC would teach you a lot about yourselves. What did you learn today?
MARK POPE: We learned that we got to get a lot more physical. We learned that it’s going to be like a life or death fight on the boards every single night. We learned that we are going to have to be really creative changing the way that we guard throughout the game. Which our guys, our players were unbelievable in receiving adjustments during the course of the game. We learned, just incredibly talented guys. There was a minute there where I was like – Elijah Martin might not miss another shot for the rest of his life. He was unbelievable. We had one coach saying – we’ve got to force him inside of the three, and another coach saying – he just made 3 straight twos. You know, he was absolutely terrific. And we are learning how fun this is. I think that’s the overwhelming thing for us is we only get to do this 17 more times. We just can’t waste a minute man. I hope BBN doesn’t miss a second of it. It’s going to be great times and hard times and they are all going to be growing times and that’s why it’s so fun to play in this league.
Q How does it feel to get your first SEC win as a Kentucky head coach?
MARK POPE: I actually don’t know; I hadn’t considered that. I’m so happy, you know. The one thing that you learn when you have been coaching for a little while is that it just really doesn’t have to do with us. I mean, this is about this community and these players growing and learning and the fact that we get to be here to bear witness is unbelievable. It’s really special.
Q Mark, you mentioned physicality a second ago. I know not every team will pose the unique challenges that Florida did but you guys did get hit pretty hard on the glass, offensive rebounding, second chance points tonight. How do you go about adjusting and combating that and also what were the challenges of doing that in season on the Tuesday Saturday schedule?
MARK POPE: Yeah, it’s a beautiful thing, this league. Tonight, it’s on the glass. On Tuesday it’s going to be something else that’s really exploited. This league is going to needle any space where you are not the best in the country. Florida is the second best rebounding team in the country right now. You know, our guys, we hung in there is probably the best way we can say it is we hung in there. Also, the last six games, the number one analytical half-court defense in the entire country and our guys were 25 assists and six turnovers. Like that number guys, I was going to say breathtaking but Lee Anne gets mad at me when I say breathtaking. That number is insane. 25 assists, six turnovers against the number one defensive team in the half-court in the country over the last six games, that’s crazy. It’s what you want, you just want to go against the biggest challenge, you want to go against the best teams. Undefeated teams, what are they ranked? Six, seven, five something? Another top 10 matchup. It just makes you get better. In regards to rebounding, well, first we are going to get into the training room to try to get healed up. Then we get into the weight room and then we get into the film room and try to figure out some different things schematically and habit-wise that we can do. The one thing I’m not worried about is our guys fight.
Q Coach, this team now has three wins over top 10 programs. What can you talk about this team’s ability to show up in the big time games?
MARK POPE: They love it, they love it. Every day we are learning to love each other a little bit more. Just the opportunity to compete, you know, there is nothing better. You only get to do this for a little time in your life, to just compete like this. Our guys are falling in love with competing, they are falling in love with it. I don’t think they are scared. I don’t think they spend a ton of time stressing or fretting about outcome. I think they are doing a terrific job as best as anybody can about staying in the moment and just competing on this possession. And then when we do get sideways, somebody else steps up and says I will be present right now. I think our guys are doing a great job at that.
Q Mark, down here. December there was some inconsistent offensive performances. 106 points in your first SEC game. Just how promising of a sign is that going forward?
MARK POPE: I would like to do that every game. I don’t know how. I don’t know if we are going to be 14 for 29 every game. The 29 is the part I’m super happy about, you know it’s been really hard for us to get close to 30. We have a bunch of guys stepping up. You know, you think about us offensively. Think about Amari Williams tonight. He was 6 for 7 from the field, he’s 5 assists. You think about our starting 4 and 5, they are 10 assists, 1 turnover, like that’s insane. As a group are starting 4 and 5 are 10 for 15 from the field. Offensively what those guys are delivering right now in terms of playmaking. You know, five games ago Amari really really dug into this idea that I’m not turning the ball over anymore. I’m going to get on top of my – he had just gone underwater on assistive turnover ratio, it was under a 1 to 1. He hasn’t had more than one turnover in a game in the last six games now, he’s a 5 and 1. Offensively those kind of things are the markers that keeps us. We won’t be 14 for 29 every night, but if we can protect the ball like this against the number one half-court defensive team in the country and we can share the ball like we did with 25 assists, it will bode well for our offense every single night.
Q Mark, down here. Speak on Amari Williams play. He was on foul trouble for most of the game. What do you take from a performance like that when he is in foul trouble? How hard is it to do something like that when you are in foul trouble?
MARK POPE: I think Rueben was what made the game hard. I think, he’s a monster. You know, number nine, I’m going to say his name wrong so forgive me. Rueben Chinyelu. You talk about – what a special player because he walks on the floor and he is not distracted by any other agenda, just doing what he does great. What he does great is he moves bodies, I mean it’s incredible. He was a bully tonight. I thought that was probably the biggest challenge that Amari faced foul wise. Is this true, Deb? I think Amari has never still fouled out of a game in his whole career, is that true? It was probably a little bit more of an anomaly foul wise for him. Super grateful, guys. Enjoyed it.
#4, Koby Brea, G
On how it felt playing in this game….
“Honestly, it felt amazing—just being able to look up into the stand of the scene. The whole gym was crowded, and everybody was super excited and loud about the game. I think that’s the loudest I have probably heard it all year. So, it was unbelievable to just be in that atmosphere and play against such a good opponent. “
On recovering from an 11 point deficit….
“We just have good players on this team. It was [Otega Oweh] and me tonight, but any night could be anybody. So, I think we just went into [the game] and we lit that fire that was needed a little bit. That is just the toughness that we bring to every game. We have so many [players] on this team that could do that, and it was us tonight. It was a nice game. It could be somebody else just playing our game”
On playing in the big games…
“We show up. We really show up. It does not matter who it is. I feel like playing against any team—it doesn’t have to be top 10—it doesn’t matter. We are coming for everyone. I think the SEC is pretty loaded this year, and that is what we want. We want those games, so we are super excited.
#22, Amari Williams, C
On having 15 points…
“It was a great game. It started off slow, but we felt the energy from the crowd and that helped.”
On Amari’s offensive game…
“After I got going, I felt more confident in my passing, attacking the rim, and everything like that. I feel like it was a good game.”
On guarding Kentucky…
“I feel like anyone can have a good night, especially with the amount of time that we have. It’s just tough for other teams to know who is going to have that night and how they are going to guard us, so it was great having that.”
#5, Lamont Butler , G
On the energy from BBN…
“[It was] crazy. I think Koby [Brea] deserves [the love]— he was hot tonight. But it was a great effort from everyone. I try to do my part. At the end of the game, it was just a winning mentality.”
On his on-ball defense…
“The guards that they have are big time, really good guards. They score at a high rate, and they did that tonight. I just try to go out there and try to make it difficult and impossible when I was out there. It was tough. They played a lot of ball screen, so I just tried to do my best. We got that win that is all that matters.
On guarding Florida…
“It was tough to guard them. You cannot really focus on one guy. I think that is going to help us throughout the year.”
Here are the postgame notes via UK Athletics.
Final Score: No. 10/11 Kentucky 106, No. 6/5 Florida 100
Team Records and Series Notes
- Kentucky is now 12-2 and Florida is 13-1. This was the Southeastern Conference opener for both teams.
- Today’s game marked the first time in the history of The Associated Press poll that UK began SEC play with a top-10 matchup and just the fourth time starting league action with a game in which both teams are ranked in the AP top 25.
- UK is 3-0 vs. top-10 opponents this season, also vs. Duke and Gonzaga. The three wins against top 10 opponents are the most in college basketball this season
- Kentucky leads the series 111-42, including 56-12 in Lexington.
- UK is now 16-7 vs. Florida when both teams were ranked in the AP top 25 and 5-0 vs. the Gators when both were rated in the top 10.
- This was the second-most points UK has scored vs. Florida (110 in 1970)
- This is the first time since 1963-64 that the teams will meet only once during the regular season.
- Mark Pope is 199-110 as head coach, including 12-2 at Kentucky.
- UK coaches (also Rupp, Hall, Sutton, Pitino, Smith, Gillispie, Calipari) are now 8-0 in their SEC debuts (six home, two away) and 8-0 in their SEC home lidlifters.
- Next for Kentucky: the Wildcats have their first SEC road game Tuesday at Georgia. Game time is 7 p.m. ET and it will be televised on the SEC Network.
Team Notes
- Florida’s 13-0 record was the third-best record for a team entering Rupp Arena in the venue’s history. Only the 1998-99 Auburn Tigers (17-0) and the 2007-08 Vanderbilt Commodores (16-0) had better records, and UK won both of those games as well.
- This was the fifth time this season Kentucky scored at least 100 points.
- UK entered the game third in the nation in scoring at 89 points per game.
- First time scoring at least 100 points vs. Florida since a 100-76 win in the 1996 SEC Tournament.
- Second-most points ever vs. Florida, 110 against the Gators in 1970.
- Kentucky had six players score in double figures, the third time this season at least six Wildcats have done so.
- Four Cats scored at least 15, first time this season to do that.
- Kentucky shot 57.8 percent from the field and the Wildcats are 7-0 this season when making at least half their shots.
- Kentucky made 14 3-point shots, second most this season and the ninth game this season the Wildcats have made double-digit threes. UK is 9-0 in those games.
- Kentucky made 18 of 24 free throws (75 percent), the third straight game the Wildcats have made at least 75 percent at the foul line.
- Kentucky had 25 assists and only six turnovers, a 4.17 assist/TO ratio. UK entered the game third in the nation in that category with a ratio of 1.99.
- UK had 25 assists on 37 made baskets, notching an assist on 67.6 percent of its baskets.
- Kentucky had three runs of at least 10 points – 16-0 and 10-0 in the first half and 10-0 in the second half.
Player Notes
- Koby Brea had a career-high 23 points, featuring a career-best seven 3-pointers.
- He has made at least one 3-pointer in every game this season and this was his 12th game with multiples threes.
- He becomes the third Wildcat with at least seven 3s against a top 25 opponent dating back to 1996-97
- Lamont Butler had 19 points and a career-high eight assists. He has at least five assists in five of the last six games.
- Otega Oweh had 16 points and has scored in double figures in every game this season.
- He played a key role at two crucial junctures in the game.
- With Florida having its largest lead at 26-15, he scored 10 points in UK’s 16-0 run and the Wildcats never trailed again.
- When Florida pulled within 70-69, he scored six straight points.
- Amari Williams had 15 points, tying his season high, with an efficient 6 of 7 shooting.
- He led UK with eight rebounds and had a season-best five assists.
- Jaxson Robinson tallied 14 points, giving him 1,004 points in his collegiate career.
- He is the seventh Wildcat on the current roster with 1,000 points in his career and the third to reach the millennium mark this season (also Koby Brea and Kerr Kriisa).
- Andrew Carr had 14 points, his sixth straight double-figure game and 11th of the season. He also had five assists with no turnovers.
- Despite not scoring, Ansley Almonor had a game-best +20 in the plus/minus statistic. He had three rebounds, one assist and one steal.
In the First Half
- Kentucky’s starters were Lamont Butler, Jaxson Robinson, Otega Oweh, Andrew Carr and Amari Williams. UK has a 10-2 record with this lineup.
- Brandon Garrison was the first substitution at 16:58.
- Florida scored on its first two possessions for a 5-0 lead.
- Florida had its largest lead of the half (26-15) when the Wildcats countered with a 16-0 run. Oweh had 10 points during the spurt and Brea added the other six.
- Kentucky never trailed again.
- Florida rallied to tie at 40 but UK replied with a 10-0 run.
- A steal and driving layup by Butler gave UK a 52-42 lead at halftime as the Wildcats made 13 of their last 16 shots of the opening period.
In the Second Half
- Kentucky began the second half with the starters.
- Florida came out hot, scoring 27 points in the first eight minutes to pull within 70-69 at the 12:05 mark.
- Oweh quelled the advance with a short jumper, two free throws and a driving jumper, sparking a 10-0 run to make it 80-69.
- With UK ahead 89-80, Florida went on a 7-0 spurt to pull within 89-87, but Butler rescued with a 3-pointer (3:49 left) and two free throws to make it 94-87.
- Carr’s triple with 1:30 left made it 99-91 and the Wildcats held on for the win.