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‘We’re running out of guys.’ But Kentucky basketball still found a way to beat Ole Miss

 

 

There are some wins that sparkle — crisp ball movement, hot shooting, highlight-reel moments that make the final score feel inevitable. And then there are wins like this one. The kind you feel more than you admire. The kind that happens when the building is emptying early, the snow is falling outside, the roster is shrinking by the week, and the only thing holding a team together is stubborn belief. Kentucky’s 72–63 win over Ole Miss on Saturday morning was not pretty, not smooth, and not comfortable. But it was real. And in many ways, it might have been one of the most revealing victories of the Mark Pope era so far.

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On a day when everything seemed to say just survive and get out, the Wildcats did exactly that — and learned something important about themselves in the process.

 

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A strange day, an earlier tip, and a sense of urgency

 

This game already felt different long before the opening tip.

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Originally scheduled for later in the day, the matchup was moved up to an 11:01 a.m. ET start in an effort to beat an incoming winter storm expected to dump more than a foot of snow on Lexington. The goal was simple: play the game, finish it quickly, and send everyone home safely. That urgency hung over Rupp Arena from the moment fans walked in.

 

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By the time the final buzzer sounded, the scoreboard read Kentucky 72, Ole Miss 63 — Kentucky’s fifth straight win — and an announcement urged fans to head for the exits immediately. The usual postgame radio show was canceled. Media availability was brief. Ole Miss coach Chris Beard and his team skipped postgame interviews altogether, opting to leave town as quickly as possible.

 

Mark Pope summed it up perfectly at the podium.

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“Guys, be safe. Get home.”

 

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And just like that, everyone scattered — except the meaning of what had just happened on the court.

 

A win built on grit, not aesthetics

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Under normal circumstances, a 36-percent shooting performance would raise red flags. Kentucky missed shots. The offense stalled for long stretches. The first half, in particular, was another grind — something that has become a recurring theme this season.

 

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But Pope wasn’t interested in how the win looked.

 

“It’s not really about fixing it and making it beautiful,” he said afterward. “It’s about, can you keep your mentality focused, even through the frustration?”

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Against Ole Miss, Kentucky did exactly that.

 

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The Wildcats led just 29–23 at halftime in a game that felt far uglier than even that modest score suggested. And yet, for Pope, that lead felt like progress. It had been only the second time all season — in 13 games against high-major competition — that Kentucky went into the locker room with a halftime advantage.

 

In a season filled with early deficits and frantic comebacks, simply being ahead felt like a small victory within the larger one.

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Otega Oweh: the closer Kentucky needed

 

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If there was one constant in the chaos, it was Otega Oweh.

 

Despite spending much of the first half on the bench due to foul trouble, Oweh completely took over after the break. He scored 20 of his 23 points in the second half, repeatedly answering Ole Miss runs with timely baskets or trips to the free-throw line.

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When the game tightened — and it did, over and over again — Oweh steadied Kentucky.

 

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He didn’t just score; he led. And when asked about his performance afterward, he deflected praise toward his teammates, reinforcing the tone Pope has tried to set all season.

 

Kentucky didn’t win this game because of one player. They won because everyone did just enough.

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Contributions from everywhere — and everyone

 

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That may sound like a cliché, but it was undeniably true on Saturday.

 

Collin Chandler finished with 12 points, matched a career-high with seven rebounds, and hit the biggest shot of the game — a calm, confident three-pointer with 47 seconds left that pushed Kentucky’s lead to six and effectively sealed the win.

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Jasper Johnson, the freshman who has taken his share of criticism this season, provided the spark Kentucky desperately needed in the first half. With the Wildcats struggling mightily out of the gate, Johnson scored eight points in just 94 seconds, igniting an 18–4 run that flipped the momentum and gave Kentucky control.

 

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“Yeah, my son did good, bro. He was hoopin’,” Oweh said with a grin. “He was a spark for us.”

 

Johnson finished with 11 points, continuing a stretch of steady improvement that has begun to quiet the noise surrounding his early-season struggles.

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Beyond the scoring, the box score told a deeper story:

 

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Denzel Aberdeen led the team with five assists, quietly organizing the offense.

 

Malachi Moreno grabbed nine rebounds and battled inside despite foul trouble.

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Andrija Jelavic added seven boards and three assists.

 

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Brandon Garrison chipped in five rebounds.

 

Trent Noah, who had barely played in SEC action prior to this stretch, hit a first-half three and recorded three steals.

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Mouhamed Dioubate delivered one of the game’s most important plays — an offensive rebound in the final minute that led to a jump ball and preserved possession for Kentucky.

 

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Every single Wildcat who played made a meaningful contribution.

 

And Pope noticed.

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“We’re getting contributions from every single guy on this team,” he said. “We don’t have that many, so we’re kind of using everybody we have. And we’re gonna have to do that, because we’re running out of guys.”

 

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Winning while shorthanded — again

 

That quote wasn’t hyperbole.

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Kentucky entered Saturday’s game already missing key pieces — and the list keeps growing.

 

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This was the Wildcats’ first game without Kam Williams, who broke his foot in Wednesday’s win over Texas and underwent surgery on Friday. His return timeline remains uncertain, and while Pope hasn’t ruled him out for the season, the clock is not on Kentucky’s side.

 

The Cats were also without Jayden Quaintance, the projected NBA lottery pick who has now missed five straight games due to swelling in his surgically repaired knee.

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And then there’s Jaland Lowe, who was ruled out for the season with a shoulder injury two weeks ago and wasn’t even in Rupp Arena as he prepares for surgery.

 

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Three key rotation players gone. And yet, Kentucky keeps winning.

 

That reality is reshaping the identity of this team in real time.

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A team finding itself through adversity

 

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“I think every team takes on a unique character,” Pope said. “And the specialness of this group might not be what I anticipated exactly, but there’s some real specialness right now.”

 

That “specialness” isn’t built on dominance or star power. It’s built on adaptability.

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Kentucky is learning to survive ugly possessions, to value rebounds and loose balls as much as points, and to stay mentally connected even when the offense stalls. In many ways, this group looks nothing like what people imagined back in November — and that may be its greatest strength.

 

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All nine available players logged double-digit minutes against Ole Miss. Roles are fluid. Responsibilities shift night to night. And instead of resisting that reality, the Wildcats are embracing it.

 

The turning point that decided it

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Ole Miss refused to go away.

 

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The Rebels tied the game at 39 with just under 14 minutes remaining, and for the rest of the second half, Kentucky never led by more than six points. Every possession felt heavy. Every miss felt dangerous.

 

The defining sequence came with just over a minute left.

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After Moreno made one of two free throws to give Kentucky a 63–60 lead, Ole Miss appeared to have an opportunity to tie or take the lead. Instead, Dioubate fought through traffic to secure an offensive rebound, forcing a jump ball that stayed with Kentucky.

 

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On the very next possession, Aberdeen found Chandler, who drilled the dagger three.

 

That was it.

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A handful of fans started heading for the exits early — eager to beat the snow — but Kentucky still had to finish the job. They did, calmly and collectively.

 

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What this win really means

 

This wasn’t a résumé win. It won’t dominate highlight shows. And it didn’t answer every lingering question about Kentucky’s ceiling.

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But it answered something else.

 

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It showed that this team can endure.

 

Kentucky is 14–6 overall and 5–2 in SEC play — one game better than it was at this point last season. The Wildcats are winning games they cannot afford to lose while navigating injuries, inconsistency, and constant change.

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More importantly, they’re learning who they are.

 

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“We’re going to need everybody,” Chandler said afterward. “Our roles are ever-changing, so we’re learning to adapt.”

 

That mindset may end up defining this season.

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Final thought: ugly wins still count

 

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As snow piled up outside Rupp Arena and players hurried out into the cold, one thing was clear: Kentucky didn’t leave with style points, but they left with something arguably more valuable — belief.

 

Belief that effort can compensate for missing talent.

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Belief that depth can be manufactured through trust.

Belief that winning ugly is still winning.

 

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The Wildcats may be running out of guys.

 

But for now, they are not running out of fight.

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