Gonzaga Bulldogs Dominate Kentucky Wildcats
If you were hanging around Bridgestone Arena on Friday night hoping for a Kentucky revival, you probably left wishing you’d spent the evening at a honky-tonk instead. The Wildcats rolled into Nashville looking for a signature win. Instead, they ran face-first into a brick wall named Gonzaga, getting dismantled 94-59 in a game that wasn’t nearly as close as the scoreboard suggests.
For a fanbase that treats basketball like a religion, this season is starting to feel like a crisis of faith. Kentucky is now 0-4 against ranked opponents this year, and frankly, Friday night looked less like a competitive college basketball game and more like a varsity squad scrimmaging the JV team.
The Paint Was a No-Fly Zone
Let’s be real: Gonzaga didn’t just beat Kentucky inside; they evicted them. The Bulldogs feasted in the paint, racking up 46 points at the rim while the Wildcats managed a paltry 18. It was a clinic in physicality.
Graham Ike was the professor, and Kentucky’s bigs were failing students. Ike dropped a cool 28 points and grabbed 10 boards, doing pretty much whatever he wanted against Malachi Moreno and Brandon Garrison. Those two combined for just 10 points and spent most of the night in foul trouble. When your frontcourt is getting outscored, outworked, and outmuscled to that degree, you aren’t winning a game in the SEC, let alone against a powerhouse like the Zags.
An Offense Stuck In Neutral
Remember when Kentucky basketball was synonymous with fast breaks and high-flying scoring? The offense on Friday was tough to watch. It took the Cats over seven minutes to hit their first field goal. Seven minutes! In a 40-minute game, that’s an eternity.
By halftime, Kentucky had scraped together just 20 points on 5-of-31 shooting. That is 16.1% from the field. You could almost hear the collective groan from Big Blue Nation stretching from Nashville back to Lexington. They finished the night shooting 27% overall. When you can’t buy a bucket, and you can’t stop the other guys from scoring at will, you get a 35-point drubbing.
Where Do We Go From Here?
This was supposed to be the “season of hope,” but right now, it’s feeling a lot like the season of “nope.” The return of Point Guard Jaland Lowe was supposed to provide a spark, but he finished with one point on 0-of-5 shooting. The team looks disjointed, lacking flow, and devoid of the swagger that usually defines Kentucky basketball.
The Wildcats fall to 5-4. They’ve got NC Central up next at Rupp Arena, which should be a “get right” game, but at this point, nothing feels guaranteed. The rankings will likely vanish from next to their name come Monday, and deservedly so. Coach Mark Pope has some serious soul-searching to do because right now, this team is playing like strangers wearing the same jersey.
