UK Basketball: Coach| Recruiting| Wiki| Forum

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UK Basketball: Coach| Recruiting| Wiki| Forum

The Kentucky Wildcats men’s basketball team is an American college basketball team that represents the University of Kentucky. Kentucky is the most successful NCAA Division I basketball program in history, both in terms of all-time wins (2,327) and all-time win percentage (.765). The Wildcats are currently coached by John Calipari.

University University of Kentucky
First season 1903
Athletic director Mitch Barnhart
Head coach John Calipari (13th season)
Conference SEC
Location Lexington, Kentucky
Arena Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
(Capacity: 20,545)
Nickname Wildcats
Student section eRUPPtion Zone
Colors Blue and white

Coach

UK Basketball: Coach| Recruiting| Wiki| Forum

Former Kentucky player Scott Padgett is familiar with the UK’s first-round opponent at this year’s NCAA Tournament. As an assistant coach for Manhattan, he competes in the same Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference as St. Peter’s.

The St. Peters beat Manhattan twice this season: 73–51 at Manhattan and 77–51 at home.

“The first game, we were really fine,” Padgett said this week. “Then our best player got out, and he fell apart. But the second game, he was total butt whipping.”

Recruiting

UK Basketball: Coach| Recruiting| Wiki| Forum

While the current Kentucky Wildcats are seen as one of the top teams in the country, the class of 2022 signers is getting some love, too.

With the end of the high school basketball season, national ranking outlets are updating their lists for the top players in the class.

Rivals are the latest to issue an update, and three Kentucky signers made the cut because they all came in as top-35 players in the class.

The future lead of the Wildcats is Kaison Wallace, who jumped five places overall to No. He is followed by Chris Livingston, who came in at number 10 overall, and Sky Clark at number 35.

Even though this is a smaller class than the fans used under John Calipari, it still comes in as the sixth-best class in the country, behind Duke, Arkansas, Kansas, Alabama, and Ohio State.

Even with coach Kay retiring, Duke is still crushing it in Jon Scherer’s first-class, as he joins rivals’ top three players in the class. Darrick Whitehead has retaken the top spot, and is followed by Kyle Filipowski and Derek Lively Jr.

With the changing landscape of college athletics over the past year, Coach Kal has made it clear that he can be successful with transfers as well.

This section is not yet complete, as the staff will certainly try to add a player or two to the transfer portal, but coach Calipari has once again shown that he still has a touch on the recruiting trail.

Wiki

Kentucky leads all schools in total NCAA Tournament appearances (59), NCAA Tournament wins (131), NCAA Tournament games (184), NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearances (45), NCAA Elite eight appearances (38), total postseason tournaments ( 68) ), and are second in the regular-season conference championships (53, of which 51 are the Southeastern Conference (SEC) regular-season championships). In addition, Kentucky has played in 17 NCAA Final Fours (third place after North Carolina and UCLA), 12 NCAA championship games (tied with UCLA for the first time of all time), and won eight NCAA championships (11 of UCLA’s). In addition to these titles, Kentucky won the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) in both 1946 and 1976, making it the only school to win multiple NCAA and NIT championships. Kentucky leads sixty-three 20-win seasons, sixteen 30-win seasons, and six 35-win seasons across all schools.

Forum

The nickname “Wildcats” became synonymous with the UK shortly after their 6–2 football road victory over Illinois on October 9, 1909. Commandant Philip W. Corbusier, who was then head of the military department at Old State University, told a group of students in one go. The post-game chapel service that the Kentucky football team “fought like the wildcats.” The name Wildcats later became more popular among UK followers as well as members of the media. As a result, this surname was adopted by the university.[2]

The university adopted blue and white as its official colors in 1892. Originally, however, UK students decided on blue and pale yellow before the Kentucky-Center college football game on December 19, 1887. The shade of blue, which is close to a royal blue, was chosen when a student asked the question, “What color blue?” At the time, Richard C. Stoll (who wrote in Football in the UK in 1889–94) pulled off his necktie and grabbed it. After this the students adopted that particular shade of blue. A year later, UK students officially dropped light yellow for white because the two colors didn’t look good together.

Ratings