xt7gqn5z6m5w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gqn5z6m5w/data/mets.xml Wildcat News Company 1988 Volume 13 -- Number 14 athletic publications  English Wildcat News Company Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Cats' Pause UKAW University of Kentucky Men's Basketball (1988-1989) coaches Sutton, Eddie players Farmer, Richie athletic directors Wynne, Chet Shively, Bernie NCAA investigation (1988) University of Kentucky Football (1988) Claiborne, Jerry Roselle, David statistics schedules Cats' Pause Combs, Oscar The Cats' Pause,  December 3, 1988 text The Cats' Pause,  December 3, 1988 1988 2012 true xt7gqn5z6m5w section xt7gqn5z6m5w $1.25 PER ISSUE
Lexington, Kentucky 405
25590
VOLUME 13 - NUMBER 14
The Cats' Pause
spotlighting university of kentucky and southeastern conference
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1988
Sophomore LeRon Ellis le
Trom AiasKa, head to Big Four Classic in Indianapolis
pages 18-19
Should Wildcats leave the SEC? TCP columnist Earl,Cox doesn't think so
page 7
rvciiiuurvy in
Great Alaska Shootout play
page 4 THE
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KENTUCKY 89, CALIFORNIA 71: Just as TCP was going to press, Derrick Miller was lighting up the scoreboard for 36 points as Kentucky claimed to third place in the Alaska Shootout last Monday. Miller hit on an incredible 13 of 15 from the field, including a near-perfect seven-of-eight from three-point territory. Kentucky, 2-2 on the season, will next play in the Big Four against Notre Dame Saturday. Look for the UK-Califomia and the UK-Notre Dame game stories in the next issue.
Women's cross country team wins NCAA title; four 'Cats earn All-American status
The University of Kentucky's No. 1 ranked women's cross country team proved that it was the best in the nation by capturing the NCAA Cross Country Championship earlier last month (Nov. 21) in 30 degree weather at Jester National Park in Des Moines, Iowa.
The only battle the women's team had was against the cold weather as UK coasted to a 53-point victory over second place Oregon. The final score for Kentucky was 75, followed by runner-up Oregon with 128 and third place Nebraska with 142.
Junior Lisa Breiding and Valerie McGovern were the top finishers for UK in 11th and 12th place. Both runners qualified for All-American status as did 24th place Kristy Orre and 33rd place Sherry Hoover. Also assisting in anchoring the win for UK was 47th place Denise Bushallow, 88th place Lynne Segreti and 119th place Donna Combs.
"It hasn't sunk in yet that we are the best in the nation," said head coach Don Weber. "It's very satisfying. The girls were expected to do well and they handled the stress and performed very, very well. They focused on their performance and didn't get caugbt in
the winning."
?The men's team also had reason to celebrate.
Although UK's squad finished eighth in the NCAA meet, the finish is the highest ever recorded in the meet for a UK men's team. Senior Richard Ede was the 16th place finisher in the meet, while his UK teammate Benny Mcintosh finished in 18th place. Both Ede and Mcintosh qualified for All-American status with their high finishes.
University of Kentucky runner Charles Kern finished the NCAA championship meet in 81st place.
Other UK runners are as follows: Jim B. Kaiser, 83rd; Bob Whelan, 119th place; Joe Butler, 134th place; and Alan Thomas, 176th place.
"I've been as pleased with the men as I have with the women," said Weber afterward. "If Kaiser had been healthy, we probably would have finished around fifth. Their SEC win was a tremendous satisfaction and to finish eighth in the country was very significant."
? ? ?
Last weekend the University of Kentucky's Lady Volleyball team captured the SEC Tournament with wins over Tennessee and Louisiana State.
Next on tap for Kathy DeBoer's 11th ranked Lady Kats is the NCAA Division I tournament. Kentucky is scheduled to play No. 19 New Mexico this week.
Kentucky defeated Tennessee in the finals 3-0 (15-9, 15-12, 15-8) last Saturday in Pen-sacola, Fla. UK got to the finals by defeating LSU, 3-1 (8-15, 15-2, 15-11, 15-12).
Kim Thompson, 5-foot-10 senior from Rising Sun, Ind., was named the SEC Tourney's Most Valuable Player. Thompson also was named second-team All-SEC. Joining Thompson on the All-Tournament team were teammates Laura Linder (sophomore, Mun-ci, Ind.) and Lisa Bokovoy (senior, Livonia, Mich.). Both Linder and Bokovoy earned first-team All-Conference honors.
The two wins raised Kentucky's record to an impressive 25-6 mark as it prepares for NCAA play. OSCAR L. COMBS
CATS' PAUSE EDITOR/PUBLISHER
Time for the Big Four in Indianapolis...or is it?
Four of college basketball's biggest names will square off in the second Big Four Classic at Indianapolis' Hoosier Dome with national television beaming the action all across the U.S.A.
But three-fourths of the teams are not at their usual strength and the one team which many believe will be a serious threat to the national title next March was upset in its first game of the regular season.
Louisville, picked as high as No. 1 by some experts and in the top five by almost everyone else, was shocked by Xavier of Ohio in the opening round of the preseason National Invitational Tournament at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum two weeks ago.
But fear not, you shall see Denny Crum's Cardinals return to their real form before long, probably as early as today when they challenge the Indiana Hoosiers.
The Cards are deep and talented, perhaps as deep and talented as any team in America. For that lone reason, the Cards are favored to turn back the Hoosiers in the opening game which is set for 2 p.m. on ABC-TV.
Indiana, which lost to Kentucky in a thrilling overtime match at the Big Four last year, doesn't want to become the first team to lose back-to-back games in the Classic. If the Hoosiers can pull the upset, such a fate will rest in the laps of Louisville since the Cards were upset by Notre Dame last season.
Indiana will rest its case in the hands of one Jay Edwards, who has experienced his share of problems on the IU campus over the past year. He was suspended from action for a period of time last season, but returned in time for the stretch drive of the Big Ten Conference race. Last spring, coach Bobby Knight announced the Edwards was suspended from the team after a bout with substance abuse. Before a single real game arrived this season, though, Edwards had been reinstated and hasn't missed a single contest.
Without Edwards, the Hoosiers have almost no chance of pulling an upset. With Edwards, there's hope.
But how much? Indiana was among the four teams which advanced to the finals of the preseason NIT last week, but the Hoosiers came out on the short end of the stick, losing by wide margins to both Syracuse and North Carolina. In Knight's first 17 years as coach at Indiana, the Hoosier defense surrendered 100 points in a single game one time. In a 48-hour period in New York's Madison Square Garden last week, Indiana gave up 100 points in back-to-back games, losing 102-78 to the Orangemen and 106-92 to the Tar Heels.
Which brings us to the second game involving Kentucky and Notre Dame.
Last spring, Kentucky would have appeared to be heading into a familiar role of heavy favorite. You know what's happened to the Kentucky roster since last March.
Three weeks ago, Kentucky might have been penciled in as a solid underdog, but youngsters like Chris Mills and LeRon Ellis showed enough promise against Duke to give Kentucky at least a chance of beating the Irish on a something-less-than neutral floor.
With point guard Sean Sutton back from the injured list, look for Kentucky to do a better job of taking care of the basketball and making each trip down the floor count more on the scoreboard.
For Notre Dame, this is the time Digger Phelps badly wants to take advantage of. Throughout his career, Digger's most frustrating moments have come when competing with the Big Blue on the hardwoods. If this one gets away from Digger, he may never again have as good an opportunity to collect a victory.
? ? ?
Coach Eddie Sutton and his Wildcats will finally return to the friendly confines of Rupp Arena for the regular-season home opener next Wednesday night as the 'Cats entertain Northwestern (La.) State.
The Dec. 7 clash will be the second-latest home opener for the Wildcats since 1975, when the 'Cats didn't open at home until Dec. 10 with a 91-69 victory over Miami of Ohio. UK opened that 1975-76 card with a 89-77 road loss to Northwestern (of the Big Ten) and then lost to North Carolina 90-77 in Charlotte, N.C.
Kentucky did not open at home in the 1979-80 season until Dec. 8, when the 'Cats beat Baylor 80^t6. That season, UK lost the opener to Duke in the inaugural Hall of Fame Tipoff Classic before bouncing back to win the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage.
Later in the week, Kentucky will host Western Carolina in a tune-up for the next weekend's annual University of Kentucky Invitational Tournament, which includes Arkansas State taking on Marshall in the first game and Kentucky hosting Bowling Green of Ohio in the nightcap.
Look for a large following of fans from Marshall, which has been one of the up-and-coming teams under former LSU star Rick Huckabay the last few years. Marshall fans take their basketball seriously and the Thundering Herd has become the dominant force in the Southern Conference.
Plenty of tickets for the UKIT remain available at the UK basketball ticket office in Memorial Coliseum.
? ? ?
Two traditional early December games have been pushed back to late December on the Kentucky schedule this season, those involving Indiana and Louisville.
Former UK coach Joe B. Hall always wanted to play the games early in December to keep them a safe distance from, the Southeastern Conference league schedule. It was never a big issue with
Like his predecessor, Dr. Otis Singletary, UK president Dr. David Roselle will represent the Southeastern Conference with the College Football Association.
Indiana, but Louisville had long advocated a late December or even a January date for the grudge match.
Louisville argued the game would get more media attention if it were played after the football bowl season. Some observers noted that Louisville usually struggles early and refines its machinery along the way.
Nevertheless, Kentucky will host Indiana at Rupp Arena on Dec. 20 and then travel 10 or 11 days later to Freedom Hall for a date with the Cardinals.
The exact date won't be known until around Christmas Eve. No, ol' Saint Nick isn't setting the date, but the National Football League is. CBS-TV will televise the game nationally, but will not select which day (Dec. 31 or Jan. 1) until the NFL playoff game is set the week before. Watch your television listings Christmas Eve for the exact date.
And a few days later (Jan. 4 to be exact), the Wildcats will leap into the thick of the SEC race, taking on preseason favorite Georgia at Rupp Arena.
? ? ?
HITS AND MISSES . . . Former Wildcat and ex-Pitt assistant coach Reggie Warford has finally resurfaced in the coaching field, where he has joined the staff of Robert Morris College as a volunteer assistant in Pittsburgh. Warford. if you recall, was named in the Pultizer Prize winning series of articles published by the Lexington Herald-Leader back in
1985. Later, he filed a libel suit against the newspaper and the suit is still pending in court . . . Congratulations to UK President David Roselle. who has been selected to represent the Southeastern Conference on the College Football Association's board of directors. The appointment will be good for both the CPA and UK sports, football in particular. Good for UK, because it shows Dr. Roselle is making a commitment to become involved in the athletics programs of not only Kentucky, but of the SEC as well. He is the second UK president to represent the SEC. Retired UK president Otis Singletary represented the SEC for years and served two terms as president of the CFA during its fledging years . . . When Indiana, Louisville. Notre Dame and Kentucky officials get together this weekend in Indianapolis, it'll be interesting to see if a possible television ban on Kentucky might affect future Big Four Classics. Louisville coach Denny Crum has already been quoted as saying that if UK should be put on probation and is prohibited from being on live television, it could cause UL to cancel its regular-season game with the Wildcats because of a loss of money . . . It'll also be interesting to see how many Kentucky fans follow the Wildcats to the Hoosier Dome this Saturday, given the current state of affairs. Almost 10,000 went to the inaugural contest last December . . . There are some insiders around the UK (Cortkwcd ob pap m (77ie (oats' &au&e
Kentucky holds on to defeat lona, gain first win; Seton Hall 'sneaks' past 'Cats in second round
Kentucky broke even in its first two games in Alaska defeating lona in the first round 56-54 in the Alaska Shootout before falling to Seton Hall 63-60. Due to 771*? Cats'Pause Monday night deadine we were unable to report the UK-California contest for third place in the Anchorage tournament.
Kentucky 56, lona 54: LeRon Ellis and freshman Chris Mills combined for 36 of UK's 56 points as Kentucky he'd on to defeat lona. The victory, the Wildcats' first of the season, evened UK's mark at 1-1.
The win sent the 'Cats into the semifinals the next day against Big East representative Seton Hall.
Even though the 'Cats were outrebounded 46-28, Eddie Sutton was glad to get the initial victory of the 1988-89 year.
"A typical performance for a very young basketball team," Sutton was quoted afterward. "Up and down. That's the way it's going to be. Not only for our ballclub. When you have many youthful players, you will be inconsistent."
The game was close throughout the first-round contest. However, the Wildcats built an 11 point lead with five minutes to go. But. . ."We're so young we've never been in a game like this," said starting point guard Sean Sutton to Lexington Herald-Leader writer Jerry Tipton. "Everybody tightened up a little. We blew a lead. We did get a little rattled."
Sutton, the player, kept things under control, dishing out a team-high 10 assists. The Lexington sophomore returned for the first time after suffering a broken cheekbone in Kentucky's first Blue-White scrimmage.
With the score 56-54 Ellis secured the victory with six seconds left when he grabbed a missed free throw by Mills. "They didn't have anyone to my left, so I decided to fake it," said Ellis. "I just got a lucky bounce."
lona, which was missing three starters who were serving one-game suspensions (Nestor Payne, the Gaels leading scorer; and guards Joey Johnson and Glenn Grant) was paced by freshman center Kevin Cooper (13 points).
"Our poorest area was our defensive board play," said Sutton, the coach. "If you had to pick one area that didn't allow us to win by a big margin, that was it."
Sophomore Reggie Hanson was the 'Cats' only other player in double figures, scoring 12.
UK-Iona Notes: Kentucky's starting lineup against lona looked like this: forwards, Reggie Hanson and John Pelphrey (no points, three rebounds); center LeRon Ellis; and guards, Sean Sutton and Chris Mills. . .Mills became only the second 'true' freshman to start for an Eddie Sutton coached team. The other, of course, was Rex Chapman, now a rookie performer for the Charlotte Hornets. . .Kentucky's field goal shooting was nothing to brag about. The 'Cats hit on 38.2 percent (21-55) while lona wasn't much better 38.5 percent (20 of 52). . .From three-point land UK hit on three of nine (Mills, 2-4; and Derrick Miller 1-4). lona hit on one of five. . .Kentucky, which turned the ball over 29 times against Duke, improved that mark with only nine miscues. . .UK hit on only 11 of 19 shots from the charity stripe while lona cashed in on two more (13-20). . .lona coach Gary Brokaw said he was "proud" of his Gael's performance. . .Kentucky once led 29-19 with five minutes remaining in the first half, but a 10-0 run by the Gaels gave them their first lead. . The halftime score: Kentucky 31, lona 29. . .A crowd of 3,365 attended the Shootout's initial game at Sullivan Arena. . .This marked the
11th annual Alaska Shootout.
Seton Hall 63,  Kentucky 60: The
Wildcats' quest to make it two in a row, not to mention a spot in the championship game opposite Kansas, was spoiled by Seton Hall.
Kentucky had a chance in the final seconds to tie the game, but a three-point try by Deron Feldhaus fell short. His attempt, above the key, bounced off as Kentucky claimed the rebound in vain. "It felt good," Feldhaus said of his jumper. "I thought I really had it. It was on line the whole way."
For the second straight day freshman Chris Mills contributed a good portion of Kentucky's offense (21 in this contest). The same held true for Ellis, who poured in 20 points, several coming on dunks. However, the 6-11 center hit on eight of 21 field goal attempts.
"Again, like what hurt us yesterday, probably the deciding factor was rebounding," said Eddie Sutton. "We gave up too many second shots. That's the most glaring thing that concerns me most. We're just not rebounding. It's not that we're not getting offensive rebounds, you could work all season and not get better at that."
While defensive boards worried the UK coach (18 offensive boards by Seton Hall), overall UK amazingly outrebounded the stronger club from the Big East31-30.
Perhaps the turning point came in the final minute. Seton Hall took a bad shot but nowhere was there a UK defender to be found under the basket. Six-foot-eight forward Daryll Walker slipped in underneath, grabbed the offensive rebound and hit the easy bucket to give his team a 61-58 advantage.
"If you go hard, you'll get what you want,"
Walker said. "You'll get the rebound."
Kentucky's inability to box out was exactly what what Sutton was referring to.
While Kentucky's frigid shooting warmed up to 52 percent (26 of 50), Seton Hall connected on just 38.5 percent (20 of 52).
Mills and Ellis contributed 41 of UK's 60 points. Mike Scott, who started at center, was next with six, followed by Reggie Hanson with five. Hanson fouled out.
UK-Seton Hall Notes: LeRon Ellis, who
was held to two rebounds against lona. grabbed six against Seton Hall to tie Reggie Hanson for team-high honors. . .Seton Hall's P. J. Carlesimo said John Morton's badly missed shot late in the game, which was turned into two points by Daryll Walker, was not a bad choice on the player's part. "John Morton took what some people would consider a bad shot. We were trying to play two possessions for one down the stretch. We handled the situation better than it looked." . .For the third straight game Johnathon Davis did not see any action. Freshman Richie Farmer did not play against Seton Hall. . .Eddie Sutton said he thought Seton Hall was the best team in the eight-team field. . The game was not a thing of beauty. To wit: Kentucky committed 21 turnovers while Seton Hall had 20. . .Kentucky had six more field goals but only hit eight of 13 free throws compared to Seton Hall's 21 connections on 25 attempts. . .Sean Sutton, for the second straight game, was the game's top assist man, handing out six. In two games, Sutton dished out 16 assists. And heading into Monday night's games, Sutton was the tournament's leader in assists.
Sean Sutton came back to dish out 16 assists in two games Lexington wasn't big enough for both of em
So it was Wynne, not Rupp, who left town
Chct Wynne seemed too good to be true when he was signed to a three-year contract as athletics director and football coach at the University of Kentucky in 1934, but so had several other fine men who had failed to survive
Russell Rice
Cats' Pause Columnist
what was becoming known as the "graveyard of football coaches."
The first Notre Dame alumnus to coach a UK athletic team, the 35-year-old Wynne had a fine record as a player and coach. With George Gipp. Frank Thomas and Johnny Mahardt, he had helped form one of the most famous backfields ever produced by legendary Irish coach Knute Rockne.
Wynne coached Missouri College to two football championships and then won two more at Creighton. In 1932. he led Auburn to an undefeated season and a conference co-championship. While at Creighton, he was admitted to the bar and served two years in the Nebraska state legislature.
Wynne stepped into a rather turbulent situation at UK. where Harry Gamage, a good coach, had finally been released after compiling a record of 32-25-5 during a seven-year reign, which included break-even slates (5-5) his last two years.
The university at the time had completed 43 seasons of football since playing its first full schedule in 1892, compiling a record of 201-131-23 under 22 different coaches.
Gamage was in his fourth year (1930) in Lexington when the university hired Adolph Rupp, a Kansas graduate and successful basketball coach at Freeport (111.) High School, as head basketball and assistant football coach. Rupp assisted Gamage one year as a freshman coach and pressbox observer and then turned his attention strictly to basketball after leading the Wildcat cagers to a 15-3 record, losing to Maryland 29-27 in the final game of the Southern Tournament.
THE WILDCATS WERE 15-2 the following year, losing to North Carolina 43-42 in the second round of the tournament. After winning 20 of 23 games and the inaugural Southeastern Conference tournament the following year. Rupp and his "boys" were the toast of the commonwealth.
While Gamage and his football Wildcats continued to struggle in his final year at UK, the basketball team won all 17 of its regular-season games, but was upset by Florida in the SEC tournament.
In his column welcoming Wynne to UK, **Danforth warned that "again it must be realized that football has been a minor sport at Kentucky. Basketball is tops! Even on campus they talk basketball during the football season. Into this unsettled realm, Chet Wynne is going."
Describing Wynne as a "diplomat from here to yonder" and "one of the few coaches who could make a go of it," Danforth predicted that the Notre Dame grad would give UK a well-coached team and "bring order to chaos."
Wynne faced a dissenting voice in Rupp; who thought Gamage did a good job at UK and would have fared much better with more support from what Rupp described as the "downtown element."
While Wynne's teams fared no better than those of Gamage, winning 20 of 39 games during his four years at UK, Rupp's basketball teams were 64-18, with two SEC championships during that period.
"My relationship with Chet was never too pleasant,"
Chet Wynne (far left) found out Adolph Rupp was telling the truth when he said that the fastest way to get fired was to be football coach and athletics director, combined. Pictured to Wynne's left are: Ted Twomey Porter Grant, Birkett Pribble, Frank Moseley and Bernie Shively, who will be featured next week.
"Well, in that case, when you go home tonight, you ought to tell your wife to start packing because I don't plan to leave."
Adolph Rupp, upon being told by football coach and athletics director Chet Wynne that Lexington wasn't big enough for both of them.
Rupp recalled many years later. "He told me in no uncertain terms that he thought basketball interfered with football and as long as we had the high interest on the campus in basketball we could not have a good football team. We were going to New York to play games. We were getting more publicity than Chet was in football."
HERE IS HOW RUPP RECALLED one of his exchanges with Wynne:
Wynne: "Now. coach, there isn't enough room here on the campus for both football and basketball. There isn't room for both you and me. One of us has got to go."
Rupp: "Well, in that case, when you go home tonight, you ought to tell your wife to start packing because I don't plan to leave."
"I was very frank with Chet," Rupp said. "He was the athletic director, but I don't think he could have fired me if he had wanted to. During his last year at Kentucky, we did not get along at all. I was glad when the board finally dismissed him."
Rupp was in a Louisville hospital at the time recovering from a spinal operation that hospitalized him for more than a month.
"After I returned home," he said, "they asked me to coach football and be athletic director. I told them it sounded like a nice arrangement, but I couldn't coach because chances were I'd be in a wheelchair for a while. They pointed out that Rockne coached in a wheelchair. They said they'd get me all the assistants I wanted.
"I told them I was not Rockne and the arrangement would not work."
Three board members returned the following day, insisting that he coach and take the directorship. He replied that the fastest way he knew to get fired was to be the football coach and athletic director combined.
"I planned to go on winning basketball games," he said. "I didn't know if I could win football games. If the football team didn't win, they would say Rupp was putting all his emphasis on basketball and the thing to do was get rid of him. I turned them down."
NEXT WEEK:
? Rupp recommends Bernie Shively, who came to UK with Gamage, but switched to teaching physical education after Wynne failed to renew his coaching contract. t77ie (jots' &ause
Now Available!
THE OFFICIAL CATS PAUSE tM9 KENTUCKY BASKETBALL YEARBOOK
ABOUT THE COYER:
Can han  x*ad doubtful. Kanlucky'l * ~**> F*""'
Muck   boyhood oraam of playing tot ma WMdcai  anay P 
CONTENTS
*0 THf NINTH YlAP ,N A ROW. BPINOINO YOU THE MOST COUPHEHENSIVE COVEHAOtOEUK BASXETBAU
A irrrm no* rm pumjtm.....i
100**9 AHEAD:
vtm at PiH..................................'
SEC laaill.i.....................................
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Untvaralty of Kantucky nxcir)......42
ft rang of ma HuigiMi (wm.ai W*t UK tnm photo.....................203
............295
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LOOK/NO BACK
'0780 Hnl uutoaianoa atendlnge......20
Noting tha '07A8 wadcaii................70
'07-00 (I 001 rtVIWILf taami...............01
Float Four al-toomamant Mini.......00
Coaaoo bMMl an-nma *t W .90
'0700 a"-SEC Mia.......................120
MumKN moffwywi In hocp Nwtary... 132 '00 Kantucky atata tovmay raviaia...200
Al-tlma RMi tournay racorda..........224
All-tlma atata tournay final!.............202
An-rlma ffn tournay participant* 263 Kantucky'II*. OhHHHIi UMara. ?66 '07-00 Kentucky-Indiana aertea........266
SPFCMl Fr/iruncs:
E*duatve O&A with Richie Farmer.....S
KHSAA 0 UK   FlutaX Plot..............17
Earl Coa'i art-time "Cata w*Cw 2J Omenta Oudtee...............................*0
jrnruriciiar kiwo:
'07-00 NCAA CW I leedere................30
'00 NCAA Champaxiahlp boxecore...70
'00 NCAA Ftegtonel bc*ecorei..........70
'07-00 SEC Individual atari................02
'07-00 SEC taam atata.......................03
07 00 SEC taam by teem atata.........04
6700 UK bi*(1 atata..........04
0700 UK final Individual atata........129
'0740 NAM Otatrtct 32 Matt............200
KENTUCKY atSKETBALL HISTORY:
UK'a eft-time eoooara.........................02
UK'i atWIme att-eter partormam........93
Yaar-by-yaer UK raaulta...................120
UK'i aMkna Amvvnerica nlai,l>:ii'n -127 UK'i record agatnet all opponent! 129
UK'i racord egeinet eontarancaa.....130
UK'i racord agalnat atataa...............131
truootr furoi motile J-
Johnathon Davla...............................50
Lofton Ella .....................................52
54 50 50
. 50 62 . 54 .00 65 .70
Saan Sutton......................................72
Sean Vtooda.....................................74
atT KEMruCKT'S O#T>0firjr
Kentucky opponaota' photo qutl.......IS
Alabama Crlmaon Tida.....................90
Ataeea-Anchorege Seamyi............99
Shawn Kemp...
Eric Manual.....
Derrick Matter..,
ChCl* MrtS ........
John P^phtwf . ma* Scon.......
ArXansa* Stattj Indian*...
Aobum Tiger*.................
Austin Peey Governor* ... BowHng Green Falcons .. C**tiomla GoMen Boars.
Ouka Blu* Oavii*............
Florida Gator*................
Georgia Buitdoo*......-----
(rvdiana Hcc**ier*............
. 100 .101 .102 103
,!0
.105 106
.108
lona Gaol*......................................
Kanas Jayhawka............................110
LSU Tiger*......................................Hi
LoonrviB* Cardmai*.........................112
Marshal Thundering Hard...............113
Mfsvsaippl Stale Bulldogs...............114
Noiihwwltwn (La ) Slate Demons.... 115
Notre Dama FtgMmg Irish...............116
O* Mia* Rebel*..............................117
Solon Hall PlratM............................118
Syracuse Orangemen......................119
Tannasaao \A>untaars.....................120
Ulan Runnm' Ula*..........................121
Varvdarbllt Comrnodora*.................122
vvawarn Carolina Catamounts.........123
tTATl COLLCOe PREVIEW.
A*c* Lloyd Gagte*..........................136
DaHtymlno Knighta........................-139
Baraa Mountainaar*........................140
Bntacia Boorcata.............................141
CajrtpboffsviMa T^ars.....................142
Contra Cotona**..............................143
Curnboriond Indian*........................144
Eastom Kantucky Cotonots..............145
Gaorgaiown Tigar*..........................146
Karrtucky Siata Ttvorobrad*.............147
Kantucky Wa*lyan Panthari..........146
Lindsay WVtson Blu* Riklar*..........UB
Morahaad Stat* Eagtaa
Murray Stat* Fiacars................
Northern Kantucky laaraarnan.. Piko.Wa Bom.........................
150
151 .152 .153 .154 ..155 .156 .157
Union Bufldogs.......................
V%i*larn Kantucky HiMoppors.
Ml Aft JUMKm COCXfOC *ewfw.
Junior coOaga roatar*......................156
Lao* Cottog* Ganoral*...................159
Paducah Indians.............................159
Si Calhaftna Painots......................160
Sua Bannoft Dragons......................160
HtQH SCHOOL RQJOHAL P*f VHW
First Ragton   Kavtn StawarT............226
Sacond Ragkm  Jim Pickmnt........226
Third Region   Siova Vmd..............230
Fourth Regon  Jo* M*dtty............232
Fifth Region  Don 8r*c**y.............234
Sixth Region   Heyn* FowkK...........236
Seventh Region tAeyn* Fowiw........236
Eighth Region  Jeff DAtnvo.........240
Nmlh Region   Ken floon*on ........242
Tanlh Regon   JerT Karr..............244
EVsventh Region   Dan SsarKJanOu/g 246
Twerfth Ragon  Jeff Nee/................24
Thirteenth Regon fony Sereoes .250 Fc**%*enth Regon   C*rm Combs 252
Fifteenth Regon   -Wry Spear*.........254
Sixteenth Regon  M*/fc Waynard.....256
HCCfiUiriHQ ROUNDUP: Bob G*toon' Fabuloua Fraehmen... 124
NiKaMBCO /uVAmancan Camp.........164
Rick Botu*' Kantucky preview............172
Beat in the Bkjegraa*  Jm Gneech.. 174
Rick Bc+us' top Kantucky player*......166
Sasketbef Times' '66 "fop 50 ........... 271
Bob Gfcconi  op WO......................272
Bob Gabon's Top 25 prep teams......TH
Bob Gtfoon* Top Junors.................276
BoC CdDtont' 5ofTr>w Camp Rporr 277 Bid Cronauer* B/C Camp Report. 262
Way