After capping off a perfect 31-0 regular season with an 18-game excursion through the Southeastern Conference, the No. 1 Kentucky Wildcats head into the SEC Tournament with little reason for adjustment.”I don’t think there are going to be many changes, because what we’re doing right now is working,” said freshly crowned SEC Sixth Man of the Year Devin Booker. “I feel like if it’s working, why change it?”Junior forward Willie Cauley-Stein, 2015’s SEC Defensive Player of the Year, echoed Booker’s sentiment.”(We’re doing) the same stuff we’ve always been doing,” Cauley-Stein said. “Now, it’s do-or-die. It’s win-or-go-home, and just have a lot of fun doing it. This is the (most fun) time of the year. From the first workout, now it’s all about business. That’s what you play for.”For 2015 SEC Coach of the Year John Calipari, the reason for which his team will be playing on Friday has never been in question. For the first (and last) time all season, Kentucky’s next three potential games will not be about the players.”We all talked about it,” Calipari said. “We’re going to play for our fans.”Despite four SEC Tournament championship-game appearances through his first five seasons in Lexington, Calipari has adamantly denied personal stake in the event since he came to Kentucky.”I just want the kids to focus on why we’re (competing) this week,” said Calipari. “Next week will be about us. This week has no bearing on (NCAA Tournament seeding) and the most important thing for us, which is to be the best and the last team standing.”Instead of shining the spotlight on his perpetually celebrated student-athletes, Calipari hopes to shift focus in the direction of Kentucky’s loyal fan base before making one last postseason push.”Our fans, they make an effort to get here,” Calipari said. “It’s not easy, and they do it. That’s why I’m saying, ‘Let’s play for them. Let them enjoy you for the last time they can see you in person.’ Because, again, it’s going to be hard for that core group (of fans) to get to the NCAA Tournament.”Cauley-Stein — one of two Kentucky players recently named First Team All-SEC — has no problem sharing the limelight with his devoted supporters. “This tournament is for the fans,” said Cauley-Stein. “Our fans (are) going to come full force, and it’s like a getaway weekend for them. That’s kind of the way we approach it.”With just over three hours of driving time separating Rupp Arena from Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena (and a detailed history of traveling in droves), Cats fans are expected to invade Music City by Friday afternoon.”(There are) fans who can’t get into (Rupp Arena),” Calipari said. “You’re saying, ‘What do you mean? There are 25,000!’ There are probably another 100,000 (fans) who want to come, but can’t get tickets. They come to the (SEC Tournament), they spend their rent money, mortgage money, their car money… They get money, take loans, and they go to the tournament because they can’t get into (Rupp Arena).”Like Calipari, Cauley-Stein emphasized that Nashville’s close proximity to Lexington will allow even more UK fans than usual fill Bridgestone Arena’s 20,000-seat capacity. “We’re not really worried about the SEC Tournament,” said Cauley-Stein. “It’s more like we’re playing for the fans there. They’re going to travel everywhere anyway, but especially (to Nashville). That’s really what we’re playing for when we go there, for the fans and everything.”Kentucky will face the winner of eighth-seeded Florida and No. 9 Alabama on Friday, March 13 at 1 p.m. The Cats defeated both teams twice this season. But with an undefeated record and a shot at history on the line, it’s safe to assume that UK will be making more than just a friendly appearance when they play for the 28th SEC Tournament title in program history. “The mindset is we want to win it,” said big man Karl-Anthony Towns, Kentucky’s other First-Team All-SEC selection and 2015’s SEC Freshman of the Year. “Of course we’re trying to win every game we’re in. We’re going out there, and we’re trying to get prepared for this SEC Tournament. We’re trying to make a great run. We’re trying to use these games definitely to get better as a team before the NCAA Tournament, but we’re also there to win.”