The Big Blueprint is back. A rapid recap of the game, the Big Blueprint looks at the nuts and bolts of the latest UK game. Some of you may remember the Big Blueprint from the 2009 football season. Cat Scratches is re-introducing it for the Kentucky men’s basketball game Tuesday night and will use it for road games that we don’t personally attend. The skinny: Ole Miss pulled off a shocker over the Kentucky men’s basketball team in Oxford, Miss., on Tuesday night on Chris Warren’s go-ahead 3-pointer with 2.9 seconds left. After storming back from an 11-point deficit in the closing minutes and taking a one-point lead on four straight Terrence Jones free throws, the Cats dropped a heartbreaker to a struggling Ole Miss team when Warren rattled in a 3-pointer from three feet behind the arc. Freshman guard Doron Lamb, who scored 20 points on 8-of-13 shooting, missed a 3 at the buzzer. The loss drops UK to 16-5 on the season, 4-3 in Southeastern Conference play. Ole Miss, in desperate need of a victory to turn its season around, improves to 14-8, 2-5 in the league. Jones led UK with 22 points and 12 rebounds for his seventh double-double of the year. Warren was the man for the Rebels with a game-high-tying 22 points.The difference: Focus and intensity. Ole Miss desperately needed a win and played like it. UK did not. The Cats looked like a team that may have been peering ahead to Saturday’s showdown in Gainesville, Fla., and it showed. UK committed a season-high 18 turnovers and played with the same lack or urgency and focus in the first 15 minutes that it did at Alabama.Player of the game: This one’s pretty simple. Warren has been a one-man show for the Rebels this year. Although he had help from the likes of Zach Graham (16 points), Reginald Bucker (12 points, five blocks) and Terrance Henry (12 points), Warren provided the biggest shots of the game when the Rebels needed them the most. Warren finished 9 of 15 from the floor, including 4 of 7 from the 3-point line.Turning point: After Kentucky took a 43-41 lead on a bucket from Lamb, Ole Miss broke the game open with a 13-0 run. Warren’s lob pass to Reginald Buckner for a dunk got the run started, followed by a Warren 3 and a fast-break dunk by Buckner. UK aided the run with crucial turnovers, including three bad ones from Darius Miller, whose best five-game span of his career was ended with a three-point, four-turnover night. Lamb finally ended the drought with a layup with 11:29 left.Play of the game: Ten straight points by Brandon Knight to pull Kentucky back in the game was quickly overshadowed by one nasty rejection from Buckner. After pulling within five points, Knight tried to posterize Buckner with a one-hand dunk, only Buckner wasn’t having any of that. The 6-foot-9 forward stuffed Knight at the hoop, setting up a fast-break layup for Graham. The sequence gave Ole Miss a 65-55 lead and stole momentum from UK.Key stat: Liggins’ foul trouble loomed large in this loss. Thought to have a decisive size advantage over Warren because of his 8-inch height advantage, Liggins struggled to stay on the floor with frequent foul trouble. After picking up his fourth foul with more than 12 minutes left in the game, head coach John Calipari was forced to move Liggins off Warren for most of the remaining game.He said what? “You’ve got to give Ole Miss credit. They battled and wanted it worse than we did. We’re not going to win that way. We are what we are. We’re playing six or seven guys. If a couple of guys don’t show or play poorly, we’ll struggle.” — Calipari

“I told them, ‘You can’t go on the road and expect freshmen to carry us.’ Two of the freshmen played well; one didn’t play particularly well. We didn’t get enough from the upperclassmen.” — CalipariUnsung hero(es): The performances of Knight, Jones and Lamb will be lost in this one, but all three played spectacular. Without Knight’s personal 10-point run and Lamb’s smooth shooting, UK could have been blown out of this one. Jones struggled at times, but his five blocks were big late the game, and his four straight free throws in the final two minutes nearly pulled off the comeback win.What this one means: That Kentucky’s road woes haven’t been solved quite yet. All five of UK’s losses this year have come on the road, and this one might have been the most disturbing. Calipari has emphasized the need for experience since the Georgia win, but his veterans did not step up Tuesday. Kentucky’s trio of leaders, Miller, Liggins and Josh Harrellson, combined for nine points, 12 rebounds and six turnovers in 80 minutes of play. Half the season still remains, but UK’s once promising hopes of defending its SEC title took a major hit, especially with six games still remaining against Florida, Vanderbilt and Tennessee. If Florida defeats Vanderbilt late Tuesday night, the Cats will trail the Gators by a game and a half heading into Saturday’s game in Gainesville. The depth issue also came up in this loss. Foul trouble really limits how far a six-man rotation can take a team.

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