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Kentucky ‘failed miserably’ at shooting 30 threes per game last season: “We’d like to remedy that”

 

Mark Pope thrilled to host Purdue in exhibition: “I’m excited about it for college basketball.”

 

Mark Pope was (jokingly) taken aback when he heard the news Kentucky would be taking on Purdue — a preseason top-five team with Final Four aspirations — in an October exhibition battle inside Rupp Arena later this year.

 

“Wait, what? Who scheduled that?” he said, laughing to himself at the audacity of his team taking on a national powerhouse when most go out of their way to host cupcakes in early tune-up opportunities.

 

Is it crazy? Probably, but it’s just the way he likes it. Any chance he can to build up the schedule and create big-time environments or tests for his program, he wants to take them. When this one came along, he was thrilled to take advantage of it and what it will mean for the Wildcats in the long run.

 

“This is what I know,” he said this week. “This is going to sound terrible and uncalculating, but I love playing great teams all the time. I love it. I think it’s really important. Anytime there’s any chance we can get great teams to come into Rupp, we’re going to take it. If it’s in the exhibition season or the preseason or the conference season, we’ll take it.”

 

It’s for his team’s growth first and foremost, seeing how they stack up as a perceived contender against another perceived contender when stakes are low. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose. Beyond that, though, it’s a massive opportunity for fans to get a game you’d see in a high-profile non-conference event or March Madness in the comfort of their own home venue, only earlier and cheaper.

 

For those reasons, Pope is thrilled to host the Boilermakers on October 24 — and another program he hopes to add to the exhibition schedule in the near future.

 

“Listen, we care about it — I’m just excited for BBN, that we get to walk in here in late October and play the No. 1 team in the country. I’m really excited about that. I’m excited about that for our fan base. We’re working on another exhibition game that I think is going to be terrific. I’m excited for it, for our fan base.

 

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“I’m excited about it for college basketball. I’m excited about it for our guys, because when you play against great teams, it teaches you so much about yourself.

 

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Another positive? It gives his group something to look forward to, more so than a lesser-known program from a lower level like most matchups that time of the year. There is a sense of urgency when practice rolls around that they won’t have time for a ramp-up period to beat up on poor competition before the real stuff begins.

If they’re not prepared, they’ll get punched in the mouth before Halloween.

“The chance to do that in an exhibition where the cost might not be so high, and get to do it really early in the season where it’s not just the data you receive after the game and during the game, but it’s all of the energy and juice that it adds to your locker room every day during the summer and during the fall, when you’re like, ‘Hey, we’re preparing for it, guys. This is coming way faster than you might anticipate.’ I think those are all real bonuses,” he added.

Oh, and don’t forget about bringing a coach he believes to be among the best in the sport to Lexington, too. Matt Painter has been doing it at the highest level for two decades with five Big Ten championships, five Big Ten Coach of the Year awards and a Final Four under his belt.

Pope is pretty excited for that head-to-head battle on the sideline — and just about everything else that comes with hosting Purdue.

“Matt Painter is — I don’t know if he’s the best coach in college basketball, but he’s certainly got to be counted among the top couple. What he’s done at Purdue is incredible,” Pope said. “I have so much respect for him, and he makes life really difficult for the teams that play against him, because he’s got a very unique, distinct style of play and style of coaching.

“In every front, that’s going to be so fun.”

Join the conversation and talk about this article and all things Kentucky Sports in the new KSR Message Board.

 

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Kentucky ‘failed miserably’ at shooting 30 threes per game last season: “We’d like to remedy that”

 

Mar 4, 2025; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats forward Ansley Almonor (15) shoots the ball during the second half against the LSU Tigers at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

Soon after he was hired to coach Kentucky men’s basketball last spring, Mark Pope set a benchmark for his first team in Lexington: shoot at least 30 three-pointers per game.

It was a lofty goal, considering only three programs had done it during the 2023-24 season. But one of those programs was Pope’s BYU squad, which ranked second in the country with 32 three-point attempts per outing. So in that sense, it wasn’t too crazy to believe it could be replicated in his debut season coaching the Wildcats.

It didn’t happen, though. Kentucky finished the 2024-25 season averaging 25.3 three-pointers per contest — a number that still ranked 78th in the country and was coupled by an excellent team-wide shooting clip of 37.5 percent. Taking into account the speed at which Pope had to build his roster in the offseason, combined with injuries up and down the roster for nearly the entire season, 25.3 three-pointers remained an impressive feat.

Going into year two, however, Pope isn’t backing down from the same claim he made this time last offseason.

“You know, I failed miserably at that last year,” Pope said during his Tuesday press conference when asked if he would like his team to shoot 30 threes per game next season. “We’d like to remedy that. It’s really important to us.

 

“It was just one of the places — I felt like we accomplished a lot last year, but that was one of the spaces that was disappointing. We just… It was hard. Part of it was roster changes made it a little bit more complicated, but that’s an important part of how we play the game. It’s an important part of how the game is played now. And so we’d like to chase that.”

that number was 25.3.

 

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Can he get his team to boost that number significantly in year two? On paper, next season’s squad isn’t as efficient — from a percentage/volume perspective — at shooting the ball from deep as this past season’s was. In 2024-25, four Kentucky players shot the ball at a 34 percent clip or better (while making at least one three-pointer per game) from beyond the arc. None of them will return next season. Going off last season’s figures, only Tulane transfer Kam Williams can claim to have achieved those marks (and Jasper Johnson if we factor in high school stats) for the 2025-26 edition of the ‘Cats.

 

That’s not to say Kentucky doesn’t have plenty of capable shooters on the roster, because they certainly do, but Pope addressed other needs in the portal during the offseason that were lacking from last season — chief among them, physicality and athleticism. Jaland Lowe should be a better shooter at UK, Otega Oweh and Collin Chandler should also improve in that area, Denzel Aberdeen showed he can be consistent from deep, and Andrija Jelavic is a perfect floor-spacing big man. There is a world where this is a high-volume, high-efficiency outside shooting unit.

 

Pope will have the pieces necessary to be a good three-point shooting team in 2025-26. But will this group manage to fire up 30 of them per game while also taking advantage of everything else it excels at? Just five teams shot at least 30 outside looks last season. Only one of them made the NCAA Tournament. It’s a fun goal to set, but if last season is any indication, Pope isn’t going to force his team into taking shots they (or he, to an extent) aren’t fully comfortable with.

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