NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jaland Lowe, the point guard Kentucky has been missing, did the point guard thing, darting into the lane with a subtle glance to the right at the shot he wanted to create.
Denzel Aberdeen, the combo guard who is really more of a scorer than a creator but has had to man the point for the Wildcats, was the object of that glance. And recipient of the pass, after Lowe forced Gonzaga help and zipped it to him. And scorer of Kentucky’s first basket, a feathery 3-pointer from the right corner.
The Kentucky fans who took up roughly 95 percent of the available seating at 18,507-seat Bridgestone Arena roared, the kind of roar you might expect to hear for a decisive shot in a huge game. But this blast of noise was dripping with frustration and tinged with sarcasm — as of that basket, the game had seen 8 minutes and 56 seconds of action, 10 Kentucky shots, 10 Kentucky misses, five Kentucky turnovers and a 17-point Gonzaga advantage that would gradually bloat to a final score of No. 11 Bulldogs 94, No. 18 Wildcats 59.
We’re not just talking about a horrific loss, we’re talking the first 30-point loss for UK since 2018, the eighth since 1950 and the second-largest margin ever as a ranked team. We’re not just talking misses, we’re talking air balls and potential rim denters. We’re not just talking turnovers, we’re talking passes bouncing off teammates’ knees and sailing untouched out of bounds, though one went off an official to save the face of an unsuspecting spectator.
We’re not just talking about a tough start to Mark Pope’s second season anymore. We’re talking crisis.
This is the craziest booing I’ve ever seen of a Head Coach, maybe ever
Wild scene as Kentucky is getting blasted by a Gonzaga team that just got blasted 🤯
pic.twitter.com/lgnKLQlNZW
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) December 6, 2025
The most expensive team in men’s college basketball is 5-4, with no direction or discernible plan on offense and way too little connection and consistency on defense. It’s a bad team. It might not be an NCAA Tournament team. It’s a team that has officially enraged the most rabid fans in the sport — as of halftime, The Athletic official stat book had the Wildcats down for five baskets and eight instances of being booed loudly by those fans.
“Incredibly well-deserved,” Pope said afterward, in a news conference that was essentially a coach verbally punching himself in the face. “Especially by me.”
Much has been made and will continue to be made of the reported $22 million price tag for this roster, which would be mildly irresponsible even if the Cats won every game. But if this were a $2 million team, its performance to this point would be embarrassing. Tough competition considered. Injuries, to Lowe (shoulder) and Mouhamed Dioubate (ankle) and Jayden Quaintance (ACL recovery), taken into account as well.
For as much goodwill as Pope earned in his debut season with a rapidly constructed roster that fit well together, played a lot of pretty offense, beat Duke, Gonzaga and Louisville and made the Sweet 16, he’s earning some serious side eye this fall. This just looks like a collection of talented players who don’t fit together, don’t know how to play together and perhaps in some cases don’t enjoy trying to play together.
For most of the night, the Cats looked slow, sluggish, indecisive and mopey as those traits consistently added to their deficit. But there were boiling points. Pope finally had to take a timeout with 5:44 left in the first half after communication and effort vacated the Cats’ ball-screen defense, allowing one of Gonzaga’s 11 layups on the night. Before Pope gave any instructions, assistant coach Jason Hart was in the face of several players with direct challenges.
They did not respond as hoped. Gonzaga ended up with an absurd 1.424 points per possession and 57.1 percent shooting, 10 days after losing 101-61 to Michigan. Graham Ike, who had a single point against the Wolverines, put 28 on the Cats.
“I think everybody got their frustrations out,” Gonzaga coach Mark Few said of his players.
Kentucky’s players will have more such opportunities after losses to the Zags, North Carolina, Michigan State and Louisville. Indiana, St. John’s and Alabama await in the next month. There’s no respite in sight.
Pope said he has “great young men” who have “diminished into a little bit of a bad spot” and need to way fight their way out of it. DeMarcus “Boogie” Cousins, like Pope, a former Kentucky big man, was more pointed in a post on X that read: “Can’t lie … this uk team has no heart! This is hard to watch smh”
Told of that sentiment, Pope replied: “I have no issue with what he said in the sense of, if you’re watching this game, starting with the head coach, this product is completely unacceptable. As a former player, I’m pissed at the coach, too.”
Uppercut to own chin. Right cross to the right cheek.
Pope even specified, when asked of a defensive effort that was overshadowed by unsightly offense — 7-for-34 (20.6 percent) on 3-pointers, 9-for-26 (34.6 percent) on 2-pointers, 0.868 points per possession — that the Cats got “probably not quite enough clarity from me” on the defensive game plan.
Pope looked as if he needed someone in that moment to remind him that all is not lost. Lowe should matter as he gets healthier. The Pittsburgh transfer played only 14 minutes, missing all five shots and recording a single assist. But his skill set is a needed add and should help things mesh together better.
Well enough to get the Cats to stop casting up triples even though they’re at 31.9 percent (230th nationally) and were a combined 27-for-111 (24.3 percent) in the four big games? We’ll see. Quaintance should help, too. A lot. He’s a rim-protecting projected lottery pick, and that, in tandem with the defensive ability on this team — which was largely on display in Tuesday’s hard-fought 67-64 loss to the Tar Heels — is its only path to relevance this season.
The idea that this loaded Kentucky team, which was supposed to be on the short list of national title contenders, might have to sweat out its inclusion in the tournament to determine a champion is stunning. So was the sight of thousands of Kentucky fans standing and booing their team off the floor. So was the sound of Pope laying verbal waste to the job he has done trying to coach it.
Stunning, yet accurate.





















