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Basketball Timeline
February 18, 1903
State College (Kentucky) records its first win, an 11-10 decision over Lexington
YMCA. The Wildcats finished that first season with a 1-2 record.
February 18, 1909
With a 28-23 win over Cincinnati, Kentucky clinched its first winning season
in school history. Following a “Senior Day” loss to Central University,
the Wildcats ended the year with a 5-4 record.
January, 1910
E. R. Sweetland signs a three-year pact as State’s Director of Athletics
and its first basketball coach.
March 1, 1912
Kentucky defeats Georgetown College, 19-18, to complete the season with a perfect
9-0 record and earn its first title as Southern Champions.
March 1, 1921
Kentucky 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.
It is believed to be the first college basketball tournament ever played.
Spring, 1921
Basil Hayden becomes UK’s first All-America basketball player.
January 21, 1922
The Wildcats beat Louisville, 29-22, for their 100th victory.
Dec. 13, 1924
The Wildcats defeat Cincinnati in their first game in the new, 2,800-seat,
$100,000 Alumni Gymnasium.
March 21, 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 the first Southeastern Conference Tournament Championship by defeating
Mississippi State, 46-27, in Atlanta.
Feb. 17, 1934
UK establishes a national record with its 23rd consecutive win (47-27 over
Vanderbilt). Near riot erupts 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, 1942
After winning its sixth SEC championship, UK wins its first NCAA Tournament
game, 46-44, over Illinois.
March 20, 1946
UK wins Rupp’s first national title, with a 46-45 victory over Rhode
Island.
March 24, 1947
Before a Madison Square Garden record crowd of 18,493, Wat Misaka held Ralph
Beard to two points and Utah ended the Wildcats’ bid for back-to-back
NIT Championships.
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 8, 1949
Kentucky ends the year ranked No. 1 in the first season of the Associated Press
basketball poll.
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.
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.”
March 9, 1954
Kentucky beats LSU, 63-56, in an SEC playoff game to cap a perfect 25-0 season
and finish with the nation’s No. 1 ranking.
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
What was then referred to as “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
In the Wildcats’ first game in Freedom Hall 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” was
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 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.
Jan. 18, 1969
On the road against its long-time 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 title 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.
Rick Robey scores the first goal in Rupp with 19:30 left to play in the first
half.
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 in Seattle.
March 22, 1985
Joe B. Hall announces his retirement after 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.
Dec. 29, 1986
Following the Wildcats’ 85-51 win at Louisville on Dec. 27, more than
19,000 fans filled Freedom Hall for a Kentucky practice to usher in the era
of school-boy legend Rex Chapman.
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.
June, 1990
Rick Pitino makes history by naming Bernadette Locke, a former assistant for
the 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 before losing 104-103 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 Wildcat fans everywhere.
It is Cawood Ledford’s last game as the “Voice of the Wildcats.”
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. 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 squashes a late Syracuse rally to win its sixth national
title, 76-67.
May 20, 1996
The championship squad makes an official visit to the White House at the invitation
of President Clinton. Tony Delk and Mark Pope present President Clinton and
Vice President Al Gore with 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 announces 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 as new head 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 Eagles.
March 22, 1998
In one of the most anticipated matchups of the NCAA Tournament, UK roars 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 marked the first time the feat had been accomplished
in 51 seasons.
April 6, 2007
Billy Gillispie is named Kentucky’s new head basketball coach. He is
introduced to a crowd of more than 4,000 fans at a pep rally announcing his
hiring. Gillispie replaced Tubby Smith, who left after 10 seasons at the helm
of Kentucky basketball to become the head coach at Minnesota.
March 31, 2008
Long time Kentucky basketball manager Bill Keightley passed away at the age
of 81 in Cincinnati. Affectionately known as “Mr. Wildcat”, he
had been associated with the Wildcats’ basketball program since 1962.
Keightley, who manned the “Bill Keightley Equipment Room” in
Memorial Coliseum, was as much a fixture around UK basketball as the seven
national championship trophies on display in the Joe Craft Center. A crowd
of over 3,000 payed their respects at a tribute to Mr. Keightley held in
Rupp Arena. Former players, coaches and managers traveled from across the
country to eulogize him.