


Tayshaun Prince starred at times, and played well enough to once again earn All-American honors. One bright spot was the development of freshman Chuck Hayes who took over a starting spot late in the season and demonstrated some badly needed toughness and maturity. Kentucky showed flashes of their talent during the season, but were never able to put things together for an extended stretch and were eventually done in by too many distractions off the court and too many mistakes and a stagnant offense on the court. Kentucky played tough through most of the game, but missed opportunities down the stretch proved deadly against the experienced Terrapins and, they pulled away at the end, winning 78-68. Finally, Kentucky's season came to an abrupt halt in the face of #1 seeded Maryland Terrapins. Louis, the same city "Goose" Givens scored 41 points in Kentucky's 1978 NCAA Championship victory over Duke. As it was, the Wildcats thoroughly controlled the game and that set the stage for a tough victory over Tulsa, which saw senior Tayshaun Prince score 41 points in St. They soundly put away a Valparaiso squad which, no doubt spurred on by the media reports of internal strife, was emboldened enough to believe that they would run up a large lead on the Wildcats. Freshmen Rashaad Carruth and Adam Chiles were two of more notable disaffected players.ĭespite the problems, and a deflating loss to South Carolina in the first round of the SEC Tournament, Kentucky was able to regroup and put together a commendable NCAA Tournament showing.

The season continued to spiral out of control as players, unhappy with playing time and UK's style of play which was apparently different than what they expected when they were recruited, foolishly began to air their gripes to the local media. The low point likely occurred after an exasperated Tubby Smith suggested during a press conference that further transgressions could lead to banishment from the team, only to discover that Gerald Fitch and Erik Daniels immediately proceeded to break curfew and tried to enter a local Lexington drinking establishment using fake ID's. The team seemed to right itself in December, with the aforementioned stand-off with Duke along with other highlights including a phenonmenal shooting exhibition by Tayshaun Prince against North Carolina in a 20-point victory and an emotional rout of rival Louisville and former UK head man Rick Pitino.īut as the season wore on, a key mid-season transfer by Marvin Stone, deflating losses where large leads were given up and discipline problems started popping up and continued to grow despite the UK staff's efforts to quell them. Then UK struggled out of the gate, losing to a determined Western Kentucky squad in home opener. Starting center Jason Parker reinjured the knee he was rehabilitating in the off-season minutes before Midnight Madness began and that effectively put him out of action for the year. Even before the first minute of practice began, bad breaks at inopportune times seemed to dog the team. Kentucky also gave the eventual NCAA Champion Maryland Terrapins their stiffest challenge of the NCAA Tournament before bowing out in the final minutes and losing 78-68.īut the team will be remembered more for what went wrong than what went right. They also gave returning champion and #1 ranked Duke all they could handle in mid-December matchup in the New Jersey Meadowlands when they took the Blue Devils to overtime, before losing 95-92. Despite this, "Team Turmoil" (as dubbed by the local media) still managed to grab a share of the Southeastern Conference Eastern regular-season championship with the Florida Gators and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen. The 2001-2002 Kentucky Wildcats struggled down the stretch as injuries, discipline problems and questionable team chemistry torpedoed the hopes of what Coach Orlando "Tubby" Smith said at the start was the most talented squad he had ever coached.
