There is a role Kentucky football can play in this disappointing 2024 season
If everyone has a role to play, then Kentucky football’s role moving forward is that of playing spoiler.
Mark Stoops’ Cats are 3-5 overall, including 1-5 in the SEC. They’ve lost three straight games. Their offense hasn’t scored more than 20 points in a conference game all season. To reach the six-win requirement for bowl availability, they’d need to win three of their last four. Based on past performance, that’s a tall ask.
They’re also facing a double-edged sword. Three of the four teams left on Kentucky’s schedule have plenty to play for. Two are legitimate contenders for the 12-team College Football Playoff. Set aside FCS opponent Murray State, who comes to Kroger Field on Nov. 19. UK visits No. 7-ranked Tennessee this Saturday. It travels to No. 6 Texas on Nov. 23. Then archrival Louisville brings a chip on its shoulder to Kroger Field on Nov. 30.
Let’s take a closer look.
Tennessee: Coach Josh Heupel’s Vols are 6-1 and have had two weeks to bask in the glow of their 24-17 victory over Alabama on Oct. 19. The lone blemish on the Tennessee resume is a 19-14 loss at Arkansas on Oct. 5.
Heupel’s offense hasn’t hummed as well as previous years, but Tennessee’s defense hasn’t allowed more than 19 points in a game all season. Plus, the Vols ambushed Stoops and Co. 44-6 on UK’s last trip to Rocky Top.
Tennessee’s biggest test comes Nov. 16 at Georgia. Beating the Bulldogs all but clinches UT a spot in the CFP field, if not a spot in the SEC Championship Game. If the Georgia game was next week, maybe Tennessee overlooks Kentucky. Alas, it’s not. Still, if Stoops’ squad could find a way to pull off the upset, spoiling the postseason aspirations of its border rival would be sweet, indeed.
Texas: Coach Steve Sarkisian’s Longhorns are also 6-1. Their lone resume stain is a 30-15 home loss to Georgia in which Texas all but self-destructed in the first half. The ‘Horns have beaten defending national champ Michigan in Ann Arbor and took apart a subpar Oklahoma in the Red River Shootout. Texas outlasted Vanderbilt in Nashville 27-24 last week.
The game to circle on Texas’ remaining schedule is the regular season finale. Before then, Florida A&M visits Austin this Saturday. The Longhorns then visit Arkansas, who, as mentioned earlier, did beat Tennessee. The week after Kentucky plays at DKR Stadium — that’s Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium — Texas plays at Texas A&M on Nov. 30. As it stands now, A&M is the only SEC team unbeaten in conference play.
Maybe the Cats can catch the ‘Horns peeking ahead. A Kentucky win deep in the heart of Texas would certainly be unexpected, but certainly satisfying for a team that to this point has had a disappointing season.
Louisville: At 5-3 overall, including 3-2 in the ACC, Jeff Brohm’s Cardinals aren’t in the CFP hunt and are a long shot to make their conference title game for a second straight year. Louisville is at Clemson this Saturday and has currently unbeaten Pittsburgh at L&N Stadium the week before the Cards come to Kroger Field.
Here’s the thing: Louisville has lost five straight to Kentucky. The Cards last claimed the Governor’s Cup in 2017 when Bobby Petrino was throwing temper tantrums on the U of L sideline. His successor, Scott Satterfield, went 0-3 versus UK. That’s one reason Satterfield is now at Cincinnati. Brohm is 0-1. His then No. 9-ranked Cards lost to the visiting Cats 38-31 a year ago.
Should Kentucky keep the in-state win streak alive, well, that would take some sting out of the season. Especially if the Cats end up falling short of a bowl game, thus ending their own eight-year streak.
And before you assume Kentucky won’t be up to the task in any of these three games, remember September, when UK lost to then No. 1-ranked Georgia by one point (13-12) and surprised then No. 6-ranked Ole Miss (20-17) in Oxford. Believe it or not, these Cats are capable.
The question for Kentucky football: These days, can a head coach survive a bad season?
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