Men's Basketball

Jan. 25, 2000

PDF Formatted Notes

LEXINGTON, Kty. – After winning nine of their last 10 games, including their last two road games, the Kentucky Wildcats return to Stegeman Coliseum, formerly known as “The Tub,” to take on Georgia and first-year coach Jim Harrick. The Wildcats have won three straight games, including a thrilling 81-73 overtime victory at Vanderbilt on Saturday. Host Georgia dismantled South Carolina, 90-62, last weekend for its second Southeastern Conference victory of the season and its sixth home win in eight tries. For Tubby Smith, the return to Athens marks his first as UK coach without his oldest son, G.G., leading the Bulldogs at point guard.

With the win over Vanderbilt, Smith won his 200th game as a head coach after spending the last nine years at three schools — Tulsa, Georgia and Kentucky. The 48-year-old is now 200-80 (71.4%) overall, including a 76-18 (80.9%) record at UK, where he has won two SEC Tournament crowns, an SEC Championship and an NCAA title. Prior to this season, only five other coaches have won 200 games in their first nine seasons or less — Everett Case, Roy Williams, Jerry Tarkanian, Denny Crum and Jim Boeheim. Even with 12 regular-season games remaining, plus postseason play, Smith is currently averaging a remarkable 22.2 wins per year during his tenure as a college head coach, 25.3 wins each season at UK.

The Wildcats’ “Road Tour 2000” continues to Athens with their fourth away game in the last five outings. During the stretch, UK’s only loss came at No. 4 Auburn, 66-63. UK is 2-2 in road action this season. The rugged stretch ends Saturday at Miami, Fla.

In both RPI polls again this week, UK owns the nation’s toughest basketball schedule. CollegeRPI.com and College Basketball News both list UK’s schedule No. 1 and both rank the Cats second in the nation overall behind Cincinnati. The Wildcats have played eight ranked opponents this season including three top-10 teams. UK’s 17 Division I opponents played this season have a 192-90 combined record against D-I competition.

Kentucky is tied for 12th nationally in scoring defense, allowing 58.9 ppg. Eight opponents have been held to 53 points or less, and only four teams have scored more than 70 points against the Wildcats.

The Cats’ next game is UK’s final non-conference game of the season — at Miami, Fla. on Saturday, Jan. 30.

#16 – #18 Kentucky Wildcats (13-5, 4-1)
vs. Georgia Bulldogs (9-9, 2-4)


Jan. 26, 2000 – 8:07 p.m. ET
Stegeman Coliseum (10,523) – Athens, Ga.

UK Radio Network — 6:30 p.m. ET
Tom Leach, Sam Bowie, Dave Baker

? Jefferson-Pilot Sports
Tom Hammond, Larry Conley

To follow the Wildcats in cyberspace, log ontohttp://www.ukathletics.com/www.ukathletics.com. Live stats, notes andinformation on this year’s team is available.

Probable Starters

KENTUCKY

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl. Ppg Rpg Hometown
21

Tayshaun Prince

G/F 6-9 215 So. 13.7 5.8 Compton, Calif.
32

Desmond Allison

G/F 6-5 214 So. 6.8 3.2 Tampa, Fla.
42

Jamaal Magloire

C 6-10 260 Sr. 13.5 8.3 Toronto, Ontario
11

Saul Smith

G 6-2 175 Jr. 6.6 *3.3 Athens, Ga.
10

Keith Bogans

G 6-5 2-5 Fr. 9.1 3.1 Alexandria, Va.

Key Cats Off The Bench

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl. Ppg Rpg Hometown
3

J.P. Blevins

G 6-2 181 So. 4.2 1.3 Edmonton, Ky.
40 Jules Camara F 6-11 223 So. 7.6 4.6 Dakar, Senegal
24

Marvin Stone

F/C 6-10 256 Fr. 5.0 4.5 Huntsville, Ala.

GEORGIA

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl. Ppg Rpg Hometown
4 Anthony Evans F 6-7 265 Jr. 16.1 8.9 Decatur, Ga.
51 Shon Coleman F 6-6 215 Jr. 11.4 8.1 Statesville, N.C.
11 Adrian Jones G 6-5 195 Jr. 9.1 5.5 Atlanta, Ga.
32 D.A. Layne G 6-0 190 So. 17.2 *3.2 Marietta, Ga.
3 Moses White G 5-10 160 Fr. 3.2 *3.2 Tallahassee, Fla.

* Assists per game

Series Facts

Overall Record: UK leads 95-17
In Lexington: UK leads 48-2
In Athens: UK leads 30-12
At Neutral Sites: UK leads 17-3

This is the 113th meeting between the two teams. UK has won the last 12 games in the series and 19 of the last 20, including the last five contests in Athens. Georgia’s last win over Kentucky was Jan. 8, 1994, a 94-90 overtime victory in Athens.

While this is Jim Harrick’s first meeting with Kentucky as coach of Georgia, he’s faced the Wildcats twice previously as a head coach. At Pepperdine, Harrick’s Waves lost to the Cats in the 1985 UKIT, 88-56, a Pepperdine team that went on to finish 25-5 and win the West Coast Athletic Conference. At UCLA, he led the Bruins to an 82-81 victory over UK at the 1994 Wooden Classic.

Tubby Smith has matched coaching wits with Harrick when Smith’s Tulsa squad upset the Bruins, 112-102, in the 1994 NCAA Tournament’s first round. It was Smith’s first appearance as a head coach in March Madness and helped to establish his Golden Hurricane on the national basketball landscape.

Other Georgia connections besides Coach Tubby Smith are assistant coaches Shawn Finney and Mike Sutton, who both coached on Smith’s two staffs in Athens. Dawgs’ sophomore Shawn Fields played his high school basketball at Lexington (Ky.) Catholic High. He’s one of five Kentuckians playing at other SEC schools — joining Rick Jones and Dan Langhi (Vanderbilt), Isiah Victor (Tennessee) and Daymeon Fish-back (Auburn). Former Bulldog G.G. Smith is now coaching and teaching at Lexington Catholic after graduating in education from UGA in December.

The two teams meet again in Lexington on Feb. 19.

The Skinny on Georgia

Under first-year coach Jim Harrick, who guided the UCLA Bruins to the 1995 NCAA Championship, the Bulldogs have begun the season with a 9-9 overall record. The Dawgs are led by sharpshooter D.A. Layne, who’s averaging 17.2 ppg this season and junior college transfer Anthony Evans, who adds 16.1 ppg and a league-leading 8.9 rpg. Thanks to Evans’ board work, the Bulldogs are the SEC’s top team in defensive rebounds, averaging 27.4 pg.

Georgia started the season with three straight losses to top opponents — N.C. State, Kansas and Louisville — before running off five straight wins. After another four-game losing streak, including its first three SEC games, the Dawgs have rebounded to beat Alabama and South Carolina sandwiched around a four-point loss at LSU. The win over the Gamecocks was a blowout, 90-62, last Saturday.

Kentucky and Georgia have played four common opponents this season. The results:

Opponent UK UGA
Louisville W, 76-46 L, 85-62
Ga. Tech W, 80-71 W, 70-68
Auburn L, 66-63 L, 67-52
S. Carolina W, 64-48 W, 90-62

Magloire Soars To Second SEC Honor
Jamaal Magloire earned his second Southeastern Conference Player of the Week honor this season after leading the Wildcats to wins over Ole Miss and Vanderbilt, the league announced Monday.

Magloire, a 6-10, 260-pound center, averaged 21.0 ppg and 14.5 rpg in the two victories. The Canadian had 19 points and 14 rebounds against the Rebels while shooting 63.6 percent from the field. He followed up with a career-high 23 points, along with 15 rebounds, in UK’s thrilling overtime win against the host Commodores. He now has totaled seven double-doubles in the last 11 games.

While Magloire is averaging 13.5 points and 8.3 rebounds per game this season, he’s dominated the league competition ? averaging 17.6 ppg and 9.4 rpg while leading the SEC in field goal percentage (60.8%) ? as the Cats have bolted to a 4-1 SEC start.

Magloire also won the honor three weeks ago (Jan. 3) after his outstanding play over the holidays, and it’s the third time in the last four weeks a UK player has captured the award. He’s the first player to win the award twice in the same season since Auburn’s Chris Porter and Vanderbilt’s Dan Langhi took home the honor twice last season. He is the first Wildcat to receive the honor twice in a season since Ron Mercer in 1997, and the first center to earn the accolade twice in the same season since Tennessee’s Steve Hamer in 1996.

Team Comparisons

UK UGA
Record 13-5 9-9
Scoring Off. 68.3 72.7
Scoring Def. 58.9 70.8
Scoring Margin +9.4 +1.9
FG % 42.3 47.5
Def. FG % 38.8 39.9
3FG % 28.0 32.8
Def. 3FG % 32.1 32.7
FT Pct. 70.5 66.3
Reb. Avg. 39.2 40.6
Opp. Reb. Avg. 33.1 36.0
Rebound Margin +6.2 +4.6
TO Avg. 15.3 18.3
Opp. TO 16.4 13.0
TO Margin +1.1 +5.3
Blocks Avg. 6.0 3.5
Steals Avg. 7.1 5.2

Coaching Comparisons

Orlando “Tubby” Smith (High Point ’73)

Overall (9th year) 200-80 (71.4%)
at UK (3rd year) 76-18 (80.9%)
SEC Tournament (4 yrs.) 10-2 (83.3%)
NCAA Tournament (6 yrs.) 15-5 (75.0%)
vs. Georgia 4-0

Jim Harrick (Morris-Harvey ’60)

Overall (20th year) 412-191 (68.3%)
at Georgia (1st year) 9-9 (50.0%)
vs. Kentucky 1-1

Vandy Highlights

The Wildcats hit a season-high 12 three-pointers in their overtime win against Vanderbilt, led by Desmond Allison’s career-high six treys. Allison broke his 1-for-13 slump from three-point range in the last seven games to score a career-high 23 points. Kentucky was shooting 26.5 percent from three-point range entering the game, but after its 12-for-27 performance (44.4%) vs. Vandy, UK is now improved its season 3FG shooting to 28.0 percent.

UK held Vanderbilt to 18.5 percent shooting from three-point range. The Commodores entered the contest as the SEC leader, shooting 40.1 percent from beyond the arc this season.

Coach Tubby Smith is 6-0 at UK in overtime games, 14-3 overall.

Blocks Correction
After reviewing the tape of the UK-Vandy game last Saturday, Jules Camara was erroneously credited with one of Jamaal Magloire’s blocked shots in the first half. In addition, Tayshaun Prince was not credited for his key block of James Strong’s breakaway layup in overtime. Corrections have been made and both changes are reflected in the updated UK stats attached to this document as well as the updated SEC stats for this week.

Magloire Madness
How important has the “Big Canadian,” Jamaal Magloire, been to the Wildcats? Crunch these numbers…

  • Seven double-doubles in the last 11 games,
  • Scored in double figures in 15 of the 18 games this season,
  • Second on the team in scoring (13.5 ppg), first in boards (8.3 rpg) and first in blocks (1.8 bpg),
  • Vs. league competition, tops the SEC in FG percentage (60.8%), tops in rebounding (9.4 rpg), third in scoring (17.6 ppg), 8th in FT percentage (72.2%) and tied for fifth in blocks (1.4 bpg).

Double Trouble

When freshman Marvin Stone recorded the Cats’ first double-double of the season against UNC Asheville, it opened the double-double flood gates for the Wildcats. They now have totaled the feat 10 times in the last 12 games, including Jamaal Magloire’s seventh double-double of the season in the Vanderbilt victory Saturday. Since Stone’s accomplishment, UK is 10-2 in the win-loss column.

D-E-F-E-N-S-E

Eight of the 18 opponents UK has played this season have scored 53 points or less against the Wildcats.

UK is 10-0 when holding opponents under 60 points.

Tubby Smith’s “ball-line defense” has held 10 opponents to less than 40 percent shooting this season, including a 38.6-percent effort by Vanderbilt, which entered the contest shooting 48.5 percent from the field. Only three teams have shot better than 45.0 percent from the field against the Wildcats — Auburn (47.5 %), Dayton (46.3%) and Indiana (54.7%).

The Cats have allowed 38.8 percent shooting from the field, the third straight year UK opponents have shot less than 39 percent from the field. The Wildcats have allowed 58.9 ppg this season, which is tied for 12th nationally and second in the SEC behind Auburn.

Voice Relief
Tom Leach is filling in for the ailing Ralph Hacker who has missed three of the last four games due to swollen vocal chords. Hacker was placed on the “disabled list” by Nashville doctors after the problem continued to persist since mid-December. He’s listed “game-by-game.”

Hacker is a 28-year veteran of the network and has spent the past nine years calling play-by-play. Leach serves as play-by-play man for UK football.

UK vs. Top 25

Kentucky is 4-4 against teams ranked in the AP Top 25 this season, and 1-2 vs. top-10 teams. UK owns wins over No. 16 Utah, No. 24 Maryland in the Preseason NIT, No. 5 Michigan State and at No. 20 Vanderbilt. The Cats have lost to No. 8 Arizona and No. 23 Indiana, and on the road at No. 21 Maryland (Dec. 11) and No. 4 Auburn. AP rankings were current at the time of the game.

While Kentucky has played six non-conference teams ranked in the Top 25, all the other Southeastern Conference teams have combined to play 10. Auburn lost to No. 2 Stanford, Florida lost to No. 24 Purdue in Maui, Georgia fell to No. 8 Kansas and beat No. 25 Wake Forest, and South Carolina has lost to No. 5 Michigan State, No. 19 DePaul and No. 7 Syracuse. Arkansas lost to No. 23 Wake Forest, Mississippi State fell to No. 1 Stanford and LSU beat No.11 Oklahoma State. Alabama, Ole Miss, Tennessee and Vanderbilt did not face a ranked opponent prior to the league schedule. In the 10 games the SEC teams have played against ranked opponents, they have a combined record of 2-8.

SEC Stat Highlights
In key SEC stats, UK’s rankings are different in comparing all games vs. SEC games only. For instance, the Cats are 12th in field goal percentage for the season (42.3%) but fourth in league games (43.6%). Some of the disparity is due to UK’s tough pre-conference schedule.

In the 10 categories listed below, UK has improved its ranking in six areas, remained unchanged in three and declined in one. Here’s the breakdown:

Category All Games SEC Only
Scoring Off. 11th (68.3) 4th (70.8)
Scoring Margin 6th (9.4) 2nd (9.2)
Scoring Def. 2nd (58.9) 2nd (61.6)
FG % 12th (.423) 4th (.436)
3FG% 12th (.280) 11th (.274)
FT % 2nd (.705) 2nd (.724)
FG% Def. 2nd (.388) 3rd (.392)
3FG% Def. 5th (.321) 5th (.330)
Rebounds 7th (39.2) 5th (38.2)
A-TO Ratio 11th (0.81) 3rd (0.96)

SEC Marks

UK has won 58 of its last 69 (84.1%) regular-season SEC games. The Cats were 14-2 in 1995, tallied the league’s first perfect record in 40 years, 16-0, in 1996, and went 13-3 and 11-5 the last two seasons.

The Wildcats are playing their 67th season of SEC basketball. The league kingpin has won 39 SEC Championships and 22 SEC Tournament titles, more titles in each category than all the other league teams combined. Kentucky is 748-199 (.790) in regular-season conference play. Last season, the Cats finished second in the SEC Eastern Division with an 11-5 record, but rebounded to win their seventh SEC Tournament in the last eight years.

Power Rankings

Poll Rank Sch. Strength
CollegeRPI.com 2nd 1st
CBN RPI 2nd 1st
Sagarin 9th 2nd

Georgia is ranked 126th by Sagarin with a strength of schedule rated 95th.

Consecutive Threes

The Cats have hit three-pointers in 392 consecutive games. The last time UK was held without a three-point field goal was Nov. 26, 1988, a “three-point” loss to Seton Hall in the Great Alaska Shootout (63-60). UK’s current streak ranks fourth nationally. UNLV, Vanderbilt and Princeton have had a three-pointer in every game since the rule was implemented in 1986-87.

Y2UK Trends

Only one team in 13 has come back to win against Kentucky this season when the Cats entered the final five minutes of the contest with the lead — Auburn. In addition, UK is 11-1 when leading at halftime.

Since Tubby Smith made a lineup change against Louisville — inserting Keith Bogans at guard — UK has won nine of its last 10 games. Eleven opponents have hit more threes than UK, but the Cats have won all but two of those meetings.

The one glitch has been offensively, where UK has shot better than 50 percent from the field only twice this season — 59.6% vs. Louisville and 51.0% vs. South Carolina.

Back in the Top 25

The Wildcats are 16th in the AP poll, 18th in the USA Today/ESPN poll this week.

In the AP poll, UK has been ranked in nine of the 12 polls. On Dec. 13, UK was out of the AP poll for the first time since Dec. 4, 1990. The streak ended at 164 consecutive weeks in the rankings, the fifth-longest streak on record. UCLA owns the most consecutive weeks in the poll with 221 between 1966-80, followed by North Carolina’s streak that ended this week at 172 weeks, North Carolina’s previous streak of 171 weeks (1972-82) and Marquette’s mark of 166 weeks (1969-79).

Rupp Arena

The Kentucky Wildcats, in their 24th season of basketball at Rupp Arena, are 311-35 (89.9%) in the facility. UK has recorded seven perfect home seasons and four years with only one defeat since Rupp Arena opened in 1976-77. The Big Blue earned its 300th victory in the 23,000-seat gymnasium on Jan. 30, 1999, an 86-62 win over LSU. Kentucky was 12-1 in the facility last year.

With an 8-0 record at Rupp this season, the Wildcats have won 14 straight games in the facility. Kentucky’s next home game is Tennessee on Feb. 1.

With Kentucky’s win over Alaska-Anchorage, the Cats finished the ’90s with a 54-2 record at home against non-conference opponents.

Lineup Changes
Three times this season Coach Tubby Smith has altered the starting lineup. Against Louisville, he went small, inserting freshman Keith Bogans at shooting guard, moved Desmond Allison to small forward and Tayshaun Prince to power forward, and brought Jules Camara off the bench. The move paid off with six straight victories.

Against Indiana on Dec. 4, Nate Knight earned the start at power forward and J.P. Blevins got his first start against Missouri. Both moves were in response to disciplinary measures.

Youthful Contributions

Sophomore Tayshaun Prince is the Wildcats’ leading scorer, averaging 13.7 ppg. If Prince finishes the season as the top scorer, he’ll become the fourth UK sophomore in the last decade to accomplish that feat, joining Jamal Mashburn, Tony Delk and Ron Mercer. He’s led UK in scoring in seven games and on three occasions tallied at least 20 points this season.

Freshman Keith Bogans is third on the team in scoring averaging 9.1 ppg. The 6-2 guard could become the first frosh since Jamal Mashburn to finish in the top three in scoring at UK. Mashburn averaged 12.9 ppg during his first season in 1991, good for third on the team.

SEASON REVIEW

Three UK Jerseys Retired
The jerseys of Bill Spivey, Pat Riley and Jamal Mashburn were retired in pregame ceremonies, Jan. 19, prior to UK’s win over Ole Miss.

Spivey, who died in 1995, was college basketball’s Player of the Year in 1951, leading the Wildcats to their third NCAA Championship in four seasons. The All-American center nicknamed “Grits,” “The Georgia Pine” and “Mr. Poison Ivy” hailed from Macon, Ga., stood 7-foot tall, 230 pounds and was widely considered the first “big man” who could run the floor. In two seasons, he scored 1,213 points, becoming only the seventh college player to top 1,000 points in his sophomore and junior years. Old No. 77 set SEC scoring records with 578 points in 1950 and 635 points the following season. In rebounding, he grabbed a league record 567 in 1951 and his 34 rebounds against Xavier still tops the UK single-game list.

Riley, a 6-4 forward from Schenectady, N.Y., was a member of UK’s famed Rupp’s Runts team of 1966. That season was his best, earning All-SEC and All-American honors while leading the Cats on a 23-game win streak and a berth in the national championship game against Texas Western. Legendary coach Adolph Rupp called Riley one of the most complete athletes he had ever coached. Riley averaged 22.0 ppg as a junior in ’66 and 17.4 ppg as a senior the following year, finishing his three-year career with 1,464 points, which still ranks 15th all-time at UK. Riley, who wore No. 42, is the current head coach of the Miami Heat, and is in his 18th season coaching in the NBA. He was named “Coach of the Decade” for the 1980s, leading the Los Angeles Lakers to four World Championships. As an NBA player, he was a member of the Lakers’ 1972 championship squad.

Mashburn, who wore No. 24, has been credited for accelerating Coach Rick Pitino’s rebuilding effort of the UK basketball program in the 1990s. The 6-8 forward from New York City started every game of his three-year career (1991-93) and was a three-time All-SEC selection and a consensus All-American in 1993. He became the 15th sophomore in SEC history to score 1,000 points and ended his career with 1,843 points, fourth most in UK history at the time. Blessed with an accurate perimeter game, Mashburn shot 51.6 percent from the field during his career, and 37.6 percent from three-point range. In 1992, he averaged 21.3 ppg, and shot a school-record 43.9 percent outside the arc, to lead UK to an exciting Southeast Regional final against Duke. The following year, he led the Cats to the 1993 Final Four, the team’s first Final Four appearance in nine seasons. “The Monster Mash” entered the NBA Draft after his junior season and was selected fourth overall by the Dallas Mavericks.

UK has now retired 39 jerseys of former Wildcat players, coaches and contributors.

Cheerleader Champions VI

The University of Kentucky cheerleaders won their sixth consecutive national championship earlier this month in Orlando, Fla. Overall, its the group’s 10th UCA title in the last 16 seasons.

Squad members Brooke Davis and Tim Passalalqua also won the partner competition. The team has won titles in 1985 ,’86, ’88, ’92 and 1995-2000.

The cheerleaders are led by fourth-year coach Saleem Habash. The event will be televised by ESPN next month.

Prince Named Player of the Week

UK forward Tayshaun Prince won his first SEC Player of the Week award on Jan. 10 after leading the Cats to wins over Georgia Tech and Vanderbilt. It was the second time in two weeks a UK player won the honor. Jamaal Magloire captured the award the previous week.

Prince recorded his first double-double — 21 points and 10 rebounds — against Georgia Tech while shooting 3-of-6 from three-point range. He followed up with a career-high five three-pointers and 17 points against Vanderbilt, becoming only the second leading scorer from an opponent to top his season average against the Commodores. For the week, the 6-9 sophomore averaged 19.0 ppg and 7.5 rpg and shot a blistering 61.5 percent from three-point range (8-13).

Magloire Earns First League Honor of 2000

University of Kentucky center Jamaal Magloire was named the SEC Player of the Week on Jan. 3 after leading the Wildcats to wins over Louisville, then-No. 5-ranked Michigan State, Alaska-Anchorage and Missouri.

Magloire averaged 15.3 points, 9.3 rebounds and 2.3 blocks per game over the holidays, tallying four double-doubles in five games and becoming the first Wildcat since 1990 to string together three double-doubles in a row. The Toronto native had 12 points and 10 rebounds vs. U of L, 18 points and 11 boards against Michigan State, 10 points and three rebounds vs. Alaska-Anchorage and a career-high 21 points and 13 rebounds against Missouri. He shot 52.5 percent from the field and 86.4 percent from the foul line while becoming the school’s all-time leader in blocked shots.

It was Magloire’s first SEC Player of the Week honor and UK’s first since Wayne Turner and Heshimu Evans won back-to-back awards in December ’98.

Cats in the ’90s

While Kentucky completed the decade with 282 wins (NCAA recognizes 1989-90 thru 1998-99), the Wildcats were 285-62 (82.1%) between Jan. 1, 1990 and Dec. 31, 1999.

Knight Leaves UK Program

University of Kentucky junior Nate Knight left the Wildcats’ basketball program on Jan. 4.

Knight, a 6-9 forward from Sandy, Utah, had transferred to Kentucky last summer from Utah Valley State (Junior) College after a one-year Mormon mission and one season at Oregon State.

For the Cats, Knight appeared in nine games, averaging 8.8 minutes per game. He scored 15 points (1.7 ppg) and grabbed 20 rebounds (2.2 rpg).

According to reports, he recently enrolled at BYU for the spring semester. He’ll sit out until next January and have one semester of eligibility remaining.

Three Straight Doubles

Jamaal Magloire’s three consecutive double-doubles in December was a rarity. Not since Reggie Hanson accomplished the feat 10 years ago has another Wildcat had at least three straight in a season. Hanson had 24 points and 14 rebounds vs. Ohio, 13 and 11 vs. Indiana, 19 and 10 against Mississippi State and 18 and 10 against Tennessee Tech to start the 1989-90 season, reeling off four consecutive double-doubles.

Magloire followed up with a 21-point, 13-rebound performance vs. Missouri in the Sugar Bowl Classic to run his streak of double-doubles to four in five games.

“Show Me” Magloire

After UK beat Missouri on Dec. 30, Jamaal Magloire said, “Maybe they should join the SEC.” The senior had just tallied a career-high 21 points and 13 rebounds in UK’s 17-point victory. Two years ago, at the start of his sophomore season, Magloire tallied a then career-high 18 points and 17 rebounds against the Tigers in Maui. His two-game Missouri averages: 19.5 ppg and 15.0 rpg.

Preseason NIT Final Four Results

Kentucky earned wins over Penn, Utah and Maryland before losing in the championship of the Preseason NIT to Arizona. It was the “western” Wildcats third straight win over UK, dating back to an overtime win in the 1997 NCAA Championship game. UK finished second in the 16-team tournament field that included Ohio State, Notre Dame and Tulane. The final four results from New York’s Madison Square Garden:

Nov. 24

Arizona 76, Notre Dame 60
Kentucky 61, Maryland 58

Nov. 26

Maryland 72, ND 67
Arizona 63, Kentucky 51

Prince Makes All-Tourney

Tayshaun Prince, UK’s leading scorer and rebounder, had a career-high 21 points and nine rebounds in the Cats’ win over Maryland in the semifinals and followed up with an 18-point, five-rebound performance against Arizona to earn All-Tournament team honors at the Preseason NIT.

Joining Prince on the All-Tournament team were Notre Dame’s Troy Murphy, Maryland’s Lonny Baxter and Arizona’s Jason Gardner and Richard Jefferson. The MVP was Arizona’s Gilbert Arenas.

America’s Team Wins #1,750

The Wildcats became the first team to record 1,750 wins with their victory over Utah on Nov. 19.

UK is in its 97th season of college basketball, and its record number of victories include seven NCAA Championships, two (postseason) NIT titles, a record 84 NCAA Tournament victories and 39 Southeastern Conference Championships, more than all the other league teams combined.

November Blues

For the fifth consecutive year, UK lost a game in the month of November. In 1995, UK lost to UMass in the Great Eight. In ’96, the Cats fell to Clemson in the BCA Classic. In ’97, Arizona knocked UK into the loser’s bracket of the Maui Invitational. Last season, Pittsburgh sent the Cats to the third-place game of the Puerto Rico Shootout. This November, Arizona earned a win over UK in the Preseason NIT final before the Cats fell to Dayton.

For the 11th time in the last 12 seasons, the Cats lost one of their first five games of the season. The dubious streak began in 1988-89 with a loss to Duke in the Tip-Off Classic.

Home In November

Since 1980, Kentucky has lost only one home game in November, establishing a mark of 18-1 during the past two decades, including its victories over Penn and Utah. The only defeat? To Pittsburgh in the second round of the Preseason NIT in Nov. 1991.

All-time in November, UK is 45-10, including a 28-1 mark at home, a 3-0 record on the road and a 14-9 slate at neutral sites.

December Results

At home in December, the Wildcats were 4-0 this season and 271-37 all-time, a winning percentage of 88.0 percent. Overall — home, away and neutral — UK is 418-98 (81.0%) in December.

Season Openers

With the Penn win, Kentucky has now won 10 of its last 11 season openers. UK’s one defeat came at the hands of Clemson, a 79-71 overtime loss in the BCA Classic double-header at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis on Nov. 15, 1996.

UK has not lost a home opener since Northwestern State upset the Cats in 1988-89, a streak of 11 consecutive victories.

PRESEASON CAT SCRATCHES

Cats Short on Experience, Long on Talent

Seven of the 11 Wildcats on the ’99-2000 roster are freshmen or sophomores. UK lost its top four scorers, its top three rebounders and its top three assists men from last season. The Cats’ leading returning scorer and rebounder is senior Jamaal Magloire, who averaged 7.0 ppg and 4.4 rpg, while the leading returning assist man is Saul Smith, who averaged 1.6 apg last season. The only returning starter is Desmond Allison.

Returning production includes:

Points: 35.8%
Rebounds: 38.9%
Assists: 33.1 %
Blocks 63.8%
Steals: 37.8%

The NBA Connection

Kentucky led all Southeastern Conference teams with 10 Wildcats on 1999-2000 opening day NBA rosters. No other SEC team had more than six former players in the league. For UK, the Cats had Derek Anderson (Clippers), Tony Delk (Kings), Rex Chapman (Suns), Jamal Mashburn (Heat), Ron Mercer (Nuggets), Nazr Mohammed (76ers), Walter McCarty, Antoine Walker and Wayne Turner (Celtics) and Scott Padgett (Jazz). Turner has since been waived.

Magloire Earns Preseason All-SEC Honor

In early November, media members at the Southeastern Conference Media Days in Birmingham picked the Wildcats to finish second in the Eastern Division behind Florida and selected Jamaal Magloire to the preseason All-SEC team. Auburn, which returns Chris Porter and Doc Robinson from last year’s Sweet 16 team, was chosen to win the regular-season crown.

SEC Media Day Predictions

Champion (Votes)
Auburn 29
Florida 10
Kentucky 5
Eastern Division Western Division
Florida (30) 227 Auburn (40) 240
Kentucky (3) 188 Arkansas 177
Tennessee (7) 181 Alabama 142
Vanderbilt 100 Miss. State 121
Georgia 85 LSU 67
South Carolina 56 Ole Miss 58

All-SEC

G – Tony Harris, Tennessee 27
G – Doc Robinson, Auburn 41
F – Chris Porter, Auburn 49
F – Mike Miller, Florida 37
C – Jamaal Magloire, Kentucky 17

SEC Player of the Year

Chris Porter, Auburn 45
Doc Robinson, Auburn 1
Mike Miller, Florida 1

Team of the Decade

Kentucky staked its claim for the title of “Team of the Decade” during the 1990s. Only two NCAA Division I schools can claim two national titles during the last 10 years, UK and Duke.

NCAA Championships 2
Final Four Appearances 4
NCAA Runner-up 1
NCAA Tourney Record (App.) 31-6 (8)
NCAA Tourney Winning % 83.8%
Decade Wins (Pct.) 282 (81.7%)
30-Win Seasons 4
Losing Seasons 0
AP Top-10 Finishes 9
All-Americans 3
NBA Draft Picks (1st Rd.) 10 (8)
SEC Championships 3
SEC Tournament Titles 7

News from the Summer Drought

The ’99-2000 schedule includes 17 teams that played in the 1999 NCAA Tournament, including Final-Four qualifier Michigan State. There will be 14 home dates during the regular season since Kentucky advanced in the Preseason NIT. The Cats will appear on national TV 18 times, including 12 times on ESPN or espn2 and five games on CBS. SEC games televised on “Super Tuesdays” by ESPN will begin at 9 p.m. instead of 9:30 p.m.

Tubby Smith spent nearly all of July as an assistant coach for the 1999 USA Senior National Team. After winning the Tournament of the Americas in Puerto Rico, the squad qualified for the 2000 Olympics next September in Sydney, Australia. Smith will continue to serve on that staff as well, coaching such NBA greats as Tim Hardaway, Kevin Garnett, Steve Smith and Gary Peyton.

Point guard Saul Smith competed for the SEC All-Stars, which toured Japan in August. Smith helped the team to a 4-1 record against the Japan National Team.

Steve Masiello was awarded a scholarship for his senior season. The former walk-on from White Plains, N.Y. has been a member of UK’s ’97 NCAA runner-up squad, its ’98 NCAA Championship team and the Elite-Eight qualifier last season.

Jamaal Magloire declared his intentions for the NBA Draft in May, but withdrew one week before the event and decided to return to UK for his senior season.

Scott Padgett became the seventh Wildcat in the last four years to be selected in the first round of the NBA Draft when he was taken 28th by the Utah Jazz. Padgett was one of 11 Wildcats on NBA rosters as of opening day. In addition, seven other Cats are playing professionally, including Heshimu Evans, who is participating in a French league this winter. (See pages 154-157 of the 2000 UK Media Guide.)

Fall Signees

Cliff Hawkins, a 6-1, 180-pound guard at Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, Va., and Michael Southall, a 6-10, 225-pound forward/center from West Salem, Wis., have both signed national letters-of-intent during the fall signing period to play their college basketball at the University of Kentucky.

Hawkins, a native of Dumfries, Va., helped the Warriors to a perfect 32-0 record last season and a final No. 1 ranking by USA Today, ESPN and The Associated Press, earning the crown of national champions.

As a junior, Hawkins averaged 11.7 points, 2.3 rebounds and 5.4 assists per game last season while starting every contest. The southpaw, who his coach called the “best on-the-ball defender he’s ever coached,” also led the team in steals, averaging 3.9 per game. He shot 50.0 percent from the field, 62.5 percent from the foul line and 30.0 percent from three-point range during the ’99 season.

Hawkins played his sophomore season at Potomac High School, leading the squad to a state runner-up finish. In the state semifinals, he held Ronald Curry, the 1998 National Player of the Year, to six points, while tallying 31 in the winning effort. He earned first-team Class AAA All-State honors before transferring to Oak Hill.

Hawkins, who chose UK over New Mexico, played on the 1998 DC Team Assault summer AAU squad with current Wildcat Keith Bogans.

Southall, who plays at West Salem High School, was the Coulee Conference and Region Player of the Year last season, averaging 20.7 points and 13.0 rebounds per game. He was named the team’s Most Valuable Player and earned third team All-State honors from the Lacrosse Tribune after leading his squad to a 14-8 record. He shot 65.0 percent from the field, 66.0 percent from the foul.

Southall also was named team MVP during his sophomore year, averaging 13.7 points and 12.0 rebounds a game while leading West Salem to the sectional final.

He chose UK over Utah, Georgia Tech, Michigan and Ohio State.

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