Just one week after Kentucky basketball looked like world-beaters in a physical, dominant win over No. 1 Purdue, the hype train came to a screeching halt. Friday night’s 84-70 exhibition loss to the Georgetown Hoyas wasn’t just a loss; it was a blaring, five-alarm warning sign about this roster’s most significant potential weakness.
It reminded this writer of the bad Ohio State loss last year.
The good news? It didn’t count. The bad news? It exposed just how thin the margin for error is in the Wildcats’
A backcourt in scramble mode
The primary cause for the collapse was clear: Kentucky was without its two primary ball-handlers. Point guard Jaland Lowe (shoulder) remained sidelined, and veteran combo guard Denzel Aberdeen was a late scratch with what Mark Pope called a precautionary “sore leg.”
“DA (Denzel Aberdeen) has just got a sore leg. He’s trying to get 100% healthy, and so we’re taking a precaution with him,” said Pope. “I’d like to have, you know, I don’t know where J. Lowe is going to be, but I’d like to have those guys back in action within the next week or two, I’m hoping.”
Without them, the offense fell into complete disarray. Sophomore Collin Chandler was thrust into the starting point guard role, a position he isn’t naturally suited for. The results were predictable and painful: Chandler struggled to initiate any offense, finishing just 2-for-9 from the field with five turnovers.
The team as a whole looked disjointed, lost, and completely out of rhythm. After looking so connected against Purdue, the Cats reverted to one-on-one, hero-ball possessions that went nowhere. The final stat line was a testament to the chaos: only 20 made field goals compared to 15 turnovers.
How fragile is this roster?
This loss raises a frightening question: Is Kentucky’s depth an illusion? The win over Purdue suggested a “wave after wave” mentality, but the loss to Georgetown suggested that just two injuries, one of them minor, are enough to completely derail the entire operation.
Without Lowe and Aberdeen, the team had no one who could consistently create a shot, break down the defense, or get the offense into its complex sets. The ball stuck, players looked confused, and Georgetown’s defense feasted on the lack of a true floor general. It proves that while Kentucky’s frontcourt may be deep, its backcourt ball-handling is perilously thin.
Pope’s cautious timeline
After the game, Mark Pope provided an update on the injured guards on the radio with Tom Leach, saying, “We’ll see. I think they’re both close. We will proceed with caution on both of them… day by day.”
Kentucky desperately needs at least one of them, and this game proves it.
 
			






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