No one expected it—not in Nashville, not in December, and certainly not from a fanbase that showed up ready to drown the arena in Kentucky blue. But as the final seconds drained away and Gonzaga’s Braeden Smith casually dribbled out the clock, something happened that stunned even the oldest, most battle-tested members of Big Blue Nation: Kentucky fans booed their own team off the court. And in the middle of the noise—one of the loudest, clearest signs of frustration this proud program has seen in decades—Mark Pope didn’t flinch. He didn’t deflect. He didn’t blame the refs, injuries, or youth. Instead, he delivered a brutally honest truth that immediately sent shockwaves through the fanbase. What happened inside Bridgestone Arena wasn’t just another loss. It was a moment that exposed something deeper, something that demands answers.
Gonzaga guard Braeden Smith dribbled out the final few seconds of the Bulldogs’ victory Friday night, and Kentucky basketball fans in Bridgestone Arena rained boos in the direction of the court.
The boos weren’t directed at Smith or any of his teammates. The UK backers had no beef with the Zags after this one. The three referees on the floor — often the subject of some ridicule whenever the Wildcats fall short — were also safe from the verbal barrage this time around.
The target of these boos? The Kentucky Wildcats themselves.
The fans in Nashville on Friday night were a raucous bunch.
They streamed into the building wearing blue and white — UK blue, to be clear, not the deeper shade worn in Spokane — and by the time the starting lineups were announced, the place was packed, the crowd was live and a conservative estimate said Kentucky was the preference of 95% of those in attendance.
This was a neutral court in name only. Those who love the Wildcats were there to will Mark Pope’s team to its first big win of the 2025-26 season.
They never had a chance.
As Smith dribbled out those final few seconds, and those boos rained down on the Cats, the scoreboard above the Bridgestone Arena court told the story. Gonzaga 94, Kentucky 59.
It was UK’s lowest point total during Pope’s tenure. The previous low had occurred just three days earlier, a 67-64 loss to North Carolina in Rupp Arena on Tuesday night, a defeat that shook a Kentucky fan base that was already on edge.
It was the most lopsided loss of Pope’s tenure, too. The previous worst had occurred the last time he brought a team to this building, a 99-70 defeat at the hands of Alabama in the SEC Tournament quarterfinals last season.
When was the last time a Kentucky team had been beaten that soundly in front of a crowd tilted so heavily in its favor? Perhaps the 76-41 loss to LSU in Rupp on Jan. 18, 1987, multiple seasoned UK basketball observers wondered aloud?
When was the last time a Kentucky team had been booed that loudly in front of a crowd tilted so heavily in its favor? Perhaps … never? No one had an answer to that one.
And the Wildcats had no answers for an 11th-ranked Gonzaga team that had its way from the start. The Zags actually missed five of their first six shots from the field, but they generated good looks, and it was clear that it would just be a matter of time before those shots started to fall.
Kentucky, meanwhile, couldn’t do much of anything right offensively. The Cats started the game 0 for 10. It took them 15 possessions to find the bottom of the net during live play. The first 14 included seven missed 3-pointers, a couple of close-range airballs and five turnovers.
By the time Denzel Aberdeen finally drained a corner 3-pointer, UK was down 19-2.
Pope said he thought his players came out trying to play a physical brand of basketball and ended up tentative on offense as a result.
“And that’s something we gotta figure out,” he said. “(It was) almost like we got ourselves in a space where we were a little paralyzed offensively. I don’t have a lot more than that right now. I felt like, you know, we struggled to get downhill, struggled to turn the corner, struggled to kind of be on our toes on the offensive end. That was surprising. But we’ll figure it out.”
They haven’t figured much out so far.
The offensive woes are nothing new. The Cats, again, were coming off that 64-point effort against North Carolina. In that one, they missed 13 consecutive shots down the stretch and went more than 10 minutes without a basket.
On Friday night, Kentucky shot 26.7% from the field, the worst mark of the Pope era. They were 7 for 34 on 3-pointers and had 12 assists on just 16 made baskets. They made only nine 2-point shots as a team. Gonzaga’s Graham Ike, who had 28 points and 10 rebounds, had 10 2-pointers himself.
Otega Oweh led Kentucky with 16 points. He also led the Cats with five assists. Aberdeen had two of those. No one else had more than one.
Jaland Lowe, the expected starting point guard for this UK team, made his return to the court after missing the past five games with a shoulder injury. He had one point and one assist in 14 minutes of play, and while he added a little flash to Kentucky’s attack, the change of pace didn’t alter the Cats’ fortunes on the offensive end.
The first batch of analytics were as ugly as the game itself. UK earned a 99.0 adjusted offensive efficiency rating, tying that SEC Tournament defeat to Alabama as the low point of the Pope era. The Cats’ adjusted defensive efficiency rating was 115.3, tying the number earned during the NCAA Tournament loss to Tennessee last March.
Only three defensive showings in the Pope era have been worse, and this was the low point of the season. Yes, even worse than what the Wildcats did in losses to Louisville and Michigan State last month.
Gonzaga shot 57.1% from the floor and outscored the Cats 46-18 in the paint.
“I thought we were really poor on the defensive end,” Pope said. “I do think we showed up and tried to have some physicality, but that was about the extent of our functionality on the defensive end.”
For all intents and purposes, this game was over by halftime, when the Wildcats walked toward their locker room on the wrong end of a 43-20 score. The boos started midway through the first half. They persisted from there, reaching a crescendo as the Cats limped off the court and headed backstage to regroup.
Rupp Arena has been home to a smattering of boos over the years — especially toward the end of John Calipari’s tenure as Kentucky’s coach — but nothing like this. And when the Wildcats walked back onto the court for the second half, they were greeted by the same noise.
They weren’t as loud, but they were there. More boos. Halftime clearly hadn’t flushed the angst from some fans’ systems. And UK never narrowed Gonzaga’s lead to fewer than 20 points in the second half.
After the game, the Cats owned it.
“It is disappointing,” sophomore guard Collin Chandler said of the boos. “Because we care about BBN — the people that come and support us, because they come in every night. And so we’re going to do a better job of showing up for them and playing for them.”
Pope let out a long sigh before he addressed the booing.
“I don’t have a great answer for you, other than we’ve kind of diminished a little bit into a bad spot right now. We have to dig ourselves out of it, and it’s going to be an internal group thing,” he said. “And we feel the responsibility we have to this university and this fan base. And all the boos that we earned tonight were incredibly well deserved. Mostly from me. And we have to fix it. That’s all we have.
“As you roll through life, you just have your response. And our response so far has not been adequate. And we have to fix it.”
When Pope said most of the boos were (or should’ve been) directed at him, Chandler, who was sitting next to the coach, shook his head. The look on his face said there was enough blame to go around. It also said that — despite four losses against the only four quality teams they’ve played — Pope hasn’t lost his team.
That can’t be said for everyone else. In addition to the boo-birds in Bridgestone Arena on Friday night, one of the program’s most famous alumni took to social media to sound off on the Cats.
“Can’t lie…this uk team has no heart!” DeMarcus Cousins said on X.
The post was read back to Pope in the postgame press conference.
“I have no issue with what he said, in the sense of — like, if you’re watching that game — you feel like, starting with the coach, this product is completely unacceptable. So I think that, as a former player here, I’m pissed at the coach, too. And that’s just all deserved.
“There’s nothing inappropriate about what he said at all.”










