Home US SportsNCAAB No. 18 Kentucky has potential for greatness in Year 2 under Brooks

No. 18 Kentucky has potential for greatness in Year 2 under Brooks

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The Kentucky Wildcats made it to the Round of 32 in Kenny Brooks’ first year at the helm.

Brooks brought over superstar—and eventual No. 6 pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft—Georgia Amoore from Virginia Tech, where he, Amoore and Elizabeth Kitley had made the 2023 Final Four. Amoore dazzled in her one year in Lexington with 19.6 points (including 78 3s) and 6.9 assists per game, leading the ‘Cats to a No. 4 seed. It was a thrilling trip to the Big Dance for Kentucky, as they defeated Liberty by just a point in the first round before falling to Kansas State by just a point in overtime in the second round.

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Brooks turned the Hokies into a perennial NCAA Tournament team, making four-straight Dances from 2021 to 2024. (In my estimation, it would have been five-straight, with the team going 21-9 overall and 11-7 in the ACC in 2020 when the tourney was canceled.) Before VT, Brooks led James Madison to six Dances in 13 years, including the second round in 2014.

He was a high-profile hire, replacing Kyra Elzy, a former Tennessee Lady Vol coached by Pat Summitt, who took the Wildcats to two tournaments with Rhyne Howard, but went 24-38 (6-26 SEC) without Howard. Before Elzy, Matthew Mitchell steered the most successful stretch in the program’s history with nine (should have been 10 with 2020) tournament appearances in 13 years, including five Sweet 16s and three Elite Eights.

Brooks’ Final Four season with the Hokies was particularly impressive, as they got the better of bouts with ACC heavyweights en route to a second-place tie in the conference’s regular season and a victory in the tournament championship game. Virginia Tech earned a No. 1 seed in the Dance when their previous-best was a No. 4. They had never been past the Round of 32.

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Because of all this, and because Amoore came with him, Brooks brought a lot of excitement to Lexington ahead of Year 1. Though the team didn’t begin the season very highly-ranked (No. 22), it was a bit disappointing that they missed the Sweet 16, especially with it happening at home on a missed Amoore floater at the buzzer.

This year, the Wildcats (19-7, 6-6 SEC) were tied at No. 24 when the season began. They have since risen as high as No. 6, but inconsistency, impacted by a notable injury to senior forward Teonni Key, has led them to their current No. 18 status.

The high point of the season was a buzzer-beating win at national championship contender LSU (now No. 6) that had people believing Kentucky could be contenders themselves. Senior point guard Tonie Morgan went for 24 points and 12 assists, and nailed the game-winning, contested 3-pointer. On the season, Morgan, a Georgia Tech transfer, is second on the team with 14.5 points per game and second in the nation with 8.4 helpers. She has 219 total assists and counting, eclipsing the Kentucky single-season record (previously 213 by Amoore) in the Wildcats’ Thursday win over Texas A&M.

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