NCAA History

All-time wins: 1926 - (NCAA rank #1)
All-time winning percentage: .763 (1926-596) (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA 20 win-seasons: 51 - (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA 25 win-seasons: 28 - (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA 30 win-seasons: 11 - (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA winning seasons: 86 - (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA Championships: 7 - (NCAA rank #2)
NCAA Championship Game appearances: 10 (NCAA rank #2)
NCAA Final-Four appearances: 13 (NCAA rank #3)
NCAA Final-Eight appearances: 31 (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA Sweet-16 appearances: 40 (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA Tournament wins: 97 (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA Tournament games played: 139 (NCAA rank #1)
NCAA Tournament winning percentage: .70 (97-42) (NCAA rank
#4)
NCAA Tournament appearances: 47 (NCAA rank #1)
All-Americans: 39, (NCAA rank #2)
All-American Selections: 57, (NCAA rank #1)
First-Team All-Americans: 15, (NCAA rank #1)
First-Team All-American selections: 20, (NCAA rank #1)
All-time AP Top-10 Finishes: 38, (NCAA rank #1)
All-time AP #1 Finishes: 8, (NCAA rank #1)
Just A Little History
*through 2006-07 season
Kentucky has made at least 1 Final Four appearance in six
different decades(NCAA rank #2)
Kentucky is the only school to win National Championships
under four different coaches.(Rupp, Hall, Pitino, Smith)
Kentucky was chosen by “Street and Smith” magazine as the #1
program all-time based on 15 different criteria, in 2005.
In 1948, the University of Kentucky men’s basketball team
represented the United States in the Olympic Games, played in
London, and went on to win the gold medal.
Kentucky holds the all-time longest home winning streak,
running off 129 consecutive home wins.
SEC History
All-time wins: 832 (SEC rank #1)
All-time winning percentage: .787 (832-224) (SEC rank #1)
All-time Conference Championships; 43 (SEC rank #1)
SEC Tournament wins: 109, (SEC rank #1).
SEC Tournament winning percentage: 852 (109-19) (SEC rank
#1).
SEC Tournament Championships; 25 (SEC rank #1)
All-SEC: 109, (SEC rank #1)
All-SEC Selections: 191, (SEC rank #1)
First Team All-SEC Selections: 125, (SEC rank #1)
All-SEC; 68, (SEC rank #1)
All-SEC Tournament Selections: 101 (SEC rank #1)
All-SEC First-Team Selections: 84, (SEC rank #1)
Kentucky has 43 SEC regular season Championships, more
than ALL the OTHER SEC schools COMBINED
Kentucky has 25 SEC Tournament Championships,more than
ALL the OTHER SEC schools COMBINED

BASKETBALL TIMELINE

Feb. 6, 1903 -- First organized basketball game at State College (later UK).
Feb. 18, 1903 -- State College wins its first basketball game, vs. Lexington YMCA, 11-10. State goes on to
a 1-3 record that season.
Feb. 19, 1909 -- State defeats Cincinnati, 28-23, to ensure the school's first winning season in basketball.
January, 1910 - R. Sweetland signs a three-year pact as State's Director of Athletics and its first basketball
coach.
March 1, 1921 -- Kentucky State upsets Tulane, Mercer, Mississippi A & M and Georgia to win the first
Southern Intercollegiate Athletic
Association basketball championship. Hundreds of Wildcats fans await "play-by-play" via telegraph, and
greet the team's train with a
celebration and parade in downtown Lexington.
Spring, 1921 -- Basil Hayden becomes UK's first All-America basketball player.
Dec. 13, 1924 -- The Wildcats defeat Cincinnati in their first game in the new, 2,800-seat, $100,000 Alumni
Gymnasium, considered by
many to be a "white elephant."
March 23, 1930 -- A Freeport, Ill., high school coach named Adolph Rupp is named head basketball coach
at the University of Kentucky.
Dec. 18, 1930 -- UK defeats Georgetown College, 67-19, for the first of Adolph Rupp's 876 victories.
Feb. 28, 1933 -- UK wins its first Southeastern Conference championship by defeating Mississippi State, 46-
27, in the finals in Atlanta.
Feb. 17, 1934 -- UK establishes a national record with its 23rd consecutive win (47-27 over Vanderbilt).
Near riots erupt as fans vie for
seats in Alumni Gym.
Feb. 14, 1938 -- Joe Hagan's 48-foot shot with 12 seconds left lifts the Wildcats over Marquette, 35-33.
After the game, Gov. A. B. "Happy"
Chandler pounds a nail into the floor to mark the spot where the shot was taken.
March 20, 1941 -- After winning its sixth SEC championship, UK wins its first NCAA Tournament game, 46-
44, over Illinois.
March 20, 1946 -- UK wins the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) with a 46-45 victory over Rhode Island.
March 23, 1948 -- Adolph Rupp's "Fabulous Five" wins UK's first NCAA championship, 58-42, over Baylor.
The team is met in Lexington by
15,000 fans and given a parade on a fire truck.
August 13, 1948 -- The U.S. Olympic basketball team, featuring Kentucky's Fabulous Five, wins the gold
medal by defeating France, 64-
21, at Wembley Stadium in London.
March 26, 1949 -- UK wins its second consecutive NCAA championship, defeating Oklahoma A&M 46-36 in
Seattle.
Dec. 1, 1950 -- UK plays its first game in the new, $3.9 million, 11,500-seat Memorial Coliseum. Again,
skeptics label the building a "white
elephant."
March 27, 1951 -- UK wins its third NCAA title, defeating Kansas State, 68-58, in the finals in Minneapolis.
1952-53 -- UK's season is suspended by the NCAA.
Dec. 5, 1953 -- Cawood Ledford broadcasts his first game as the radio "Voice of the Wildcats."
Jan. 8, 1955 -- Fans are stunned as Georgia Tech defeats UK, 59-58, in Memorial Coliseum, ending a 129-
game home winning streak
that still stands as a national record.
Dec. 7, 1957 -- The longest game in UK history proves fruitful for the Wildcats as they defeat Temple 85-83
in three overtimes. Vernon
Hatton scores UK's final six points to edge the Owls.
March 21, 1958 -- Vernon Hatton's layup with 17 seconds left pushes the Wildcats past Temple, 61-60, and
into the NCAA championship
game.
March 22, 1958 -- UK wins its fourth NCAA title by defeating Seattle, 84-72, in Louisville. The "Fiddlin' Five"
were led by Vernon Hatton's 30
points. The win gave Rupp his most coveted title, the one he vowed to win after the NCAA had suspended
UK's 1953 season.
March 17, 1962 -- For the second straight year, UK is eliminated from the NCAA Tournament by Ohio State.
The third-ranked Wildcats, the
SEC co-champions, go down 74-64 to the Buckeyes to end a 23- 3 season.
March 19, 1966 -- In one of the biggest upsets in NCAA Tournament history, top-ranked UK, featuring
"Rupp's Runts," loses in the NCAA
championship game, 72-65, to Texas Western.
Jan. 27, 1968 -- At the time, it was believed that Adolph Rupp became college basketball's all-time
winningest coach when the Wildcats
overcame a record-setting 52-point performance by LSU's Pete Maravich to defeat the Tigers, 121-95.
Years later, it was discovered that
he had achieved that feat on Feb. 18, 1967, with a 103-74 win over Mississippi State.
January 18, 1969 -- On the road against its oldest rival, UK became the first team in college basketball
history to win 1,000 games,
defeating Tennessee, 69-66.
June 9, 1969 -- Tom Payne, a seven-foot All-American from Louisville, becomes the first black player to
sign with the University of Kentucky.

Feb. 28, 1970 -- Dan Issel becomes UK's first player to score 2,000 career points as UK defeats Vanderbilt,
90-86.
March 14, 1970 -- Dan Issel scores his 2,138th point, etching his name into the record book as UK's all-time
leading scorer. The top-
ranked Wildcats are upset by Jacksonville 106-100 in the NCAA Tournament.
March 18, 1972 -- Adolph Rupp coaches his last game at UK, a 73-54 loss to Florida State in the NCAA
Tournament.
Dec. 2, 1972 -- Joe B. Hall coaches his first game as head coach at UK, a 75-66 win at Michigan State. UK
goes on to win the SEC
championship and finish 22-8 during Hall's inaugural season.
March 22, 1975 -- UK upsets undefeated Indiana in the Mideast Regional semifinals to earn a trip to the
Final Four. Before the national
championship game with UCLA, legendary coach John Wooden announces his retirement. The Bruins go
on to defeat UK, 92-85, on
March 31.
March 8, 1976 -- Jack Givens keys a late rally as UK outlasts Mississippi State, 94-93 in overtime, in the last
game played at Memorial
Coliseum.
March 21, 1976 -- UK wins its second NIT championship by defeating North Carolina-Charlotte, 71-67 in
New York.
Nov. 27, 1976 -- UK defeats Wisconsin, 72-64, in the new, 23,000-seat, $53 million Rupp Arena.
Dec. 10, 1977 -- As top-ranked UK is defeating Kansas on "Adolph Rupp Night" in Allen Field House on
Naismith Drive in Lawrence,
Kansas, Rupp dies. Thousands would participate in the funeral procession in Lexington.
March 27, 1978 -- Jack "Goose" Givens scores 41 points as UK wins its fifth NCAA championship, 94-88,
over Duke in St. Louis. More
than 10,000 fans greet the team at Blue Grass Airport and 15,000 more celebrate at Memorial Coliseum.
March 26, 1983 -- In the first meeting between the schools in 24 years, Louisville defeats UK 80-68 in
overtime to earn a trip to the Final
Four.
March 31, 1984 -- Georgetown outscores UK 23-2 at the start of the second half to defeat the Wildcats 53-
40 in the NCAA semifinal game.
March 22, 1985 -- Joe B. Hall announces his retirement as UK loses to St. John's, 86-70, in the NCAA West
Regional in Denver.
Nov. 22, 1985 -- Eddie Sutton coaches his first game at Kentucky, a 77-58 win over Northwestern (La.)
State.
March 10, 1989 -- Kentucky finishes the year with a 13-19 record, its first losing mark in 61 seasons.
March 19, 1989 -- In the wake of an NCAA investigation, Eddie Sutton resigns as UK basketball coach.
May 19, 1989 -- The NCAA places Kentucky's basketball program on probation.
June 2, 1989 -- Rick Pitino is named head basketball coach at Kentucky.
Nov. 28, 1989 -- Rick Pitino wins his first Kentucky game, 76-73 over Ohio University.
June, 1990 -- Rick Pitino makes history by naming Bernadette Locke, an assistant for the University of
Georgia Lady Bulldogs basketball
team, to his coaching staff at Kentucky.
March 2, 1991 -- Before a crowd of 24,310 at Rupp Arena, Kentucky defeats Auburn 114-93 to claim the
best record in the Southeastern
Conference and end its two-year probation.
March 15, 1992 -- Eligible for postseason play for the first time in three years, Kentucky dominates
Alabama, 80-54, to take its 16th SEC
Tournament championship.
March 28, 1992 -- In what many called the "best NCAA Tournament game ever," Kentucky takes defending
NCAA champion Duke into
overtime in the East Regional finals in Philadelphia. A last-second shot by Christian Laettner sends Duke to
the Final Four, and breaks
the hearts of Wildcats fans everywhere. It is Cawood Ledford's last game as the "Voice of the Wildcats."
March 27, 1993 -- Kentucky beats Florida State 106-81 to advance to the NCAA Final Four in New Orleans.
The victory completes a string
of four games in which the Wildcats blitzed their Southeast Region opponents by an average of 31.0 ppg -
the largest margin of victory ever
by a team through four games en route to the Final Four.
April 3, 1993 -- Kentucky faces Michigan in the NCAA semifinals, marking UK's 10th Final Four appearance.
An 81-78 overtime loss to the
Wolverines ended Kentucky's season at 30-4 and marked All-American Jamal Mashburn's last game in UK
blue.
Feb. 15, 1994 -- Trailing by 31 points with 15:34 remaining in the game at LSU, the Wildcats pull off a Mardi
Gras miracle. Connecting on
11 three-pointers and outscoring the Bayou Bengals 62-27 during the final 15:34, UK storms back to a 99-
95 victory - the greatest
comeback in UK history.
March 2, 1996 -- With a 101-63 victory over Vanderbilt in Rupp Arena on Senior Day, UK became the first
team in 40 years to finish with a
perfect record in the SEC, a 16-0 sweep. It was the Wildcats' 25th win in a row, tying the school record for
consecutive wins in a season
set in 1966. Two games later, they set the new record at 27 games.
April 1,1996 -- After avenging an early season loss to UMass with a win in the NCAA semifinals two days
before, UK squashed a late
Syracuse rally to win its sixth national title, 76-67.
May 20, 1996 -- The championship squad made an official visit to the White House at the invitation of
President Bill Clinton. Tony Delk and
Mark Pope award President Clinton and Vice President Al Gore with official UK jerseys.
March 31, 1997 ---- Despite losing its star, Derek Anderson, to a knee injury on Jan. 18, UK returns to
defend its NCAA title in the national
championship game, falling in overtime to Arizona, 84-79. It would be the final game with Rick Pitino as
coach.
May 6, 1997 -- Rick Pitino announced his resignation at Kentucky to take the challenge of rebuilding the
NBA's most storied franchise, the
Boston Celtics.
May 12, 1997 -- UK's director of athletics, C.M. Newton, introduced Orlando "Tubby" Smith as head coach.
Nov. 20, 1997 -- It was the dawning of an era when new coaches Tubby Smith and Morehead State's Kyle
Macy tipped off the season in
Rupp Arena. Smith won his first game at UK, 88-49, over the former UK All-American and his Morehead
State Eagles.
March 22, 1998 -- In one of the most anticipated matchups of the NCAA Tournament, UK roared back from
a 17-point deficit with 9:38
remaining to defeat Duke, 86-84. The victory buried the nightmare of UK-Duke '92 and advanced the
Wildcats to their third straight Final
Four.
March 30, 1998 -- The "Comeback Cats" rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit to defeat Utah, 78-69,
winning UK's second national title in
three years, its seventh overall.
Sept. 5, 2001 -- After a long illness, Cawood Ledford dies at his home in Harlan. A planned tribute at Rupp
Arena was canceled following
the “9/11” terrorists attacks.
Dec. 8, 2001 -- Kentucky beats North Carolina for the Cats’ 1,800th victory, the first college basketball team
to reach that milestone.
March 16, 2003 -- After running the table in regular-season Southeastern Conference play, Kentucky
defeats Mississippi State, 64-57, in
the finals of the SEC Tournament to secure its 24th league tourney crown and complete a 19-0 season
sweep of conference opponents. It
marks the first time the feat has been accomplished in 51 seasons.
March 23, 2007 -- Tubby smith quits as head coach of the university of kentucky. He takes the head
coaching job at the university of
minnisota.
April 6, 2007 -- Billy Gillispie is hired as the new head coach of the university of kentucky.
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