Kentucky basketball’s 84-75 win over Illinois in the second round of the NCAA Tournament this past March was memorable for the sole reason that it sent the Wildcats to their first Sweet 16 in six years.
However, there was a lot more to that win that makes it a truly impressive victory for Kentucky. It came one day after John Calipari and Arkansas beat Rick Pitino and St. John’s, and BYU beat Wisconsin to both advance to the Sweet 16.
That meant Kentucky’s former head coach and Mark Pope’s former school had both already advanced to the Sweet 16 before the Wildcats took the floor to play a very good Illinois team the following afternoon.
The way Kentucky approached the game and went about winning the game drew high praise from NBC Sports play-by-play announcer Noah Eagle, who was calling the first and second round games in Milwaukee on Westwood One this past NCAA Tournament.
I co-host a podcast called “Waitin’ All Day for Sunday Night” as a Sunday Night Football on NBC enthusiast, and we recently had Noah Eagle as a featured guest on our show. The last question I asked was about his time spent around Mark Pope and the Wildcats that weekend, Pope’s first two NCAA Tournament games coaching at his alma mater.
“His emotional intelligence is what really stands out,” Eagle said. “This past year was fascinating because for most of the year, he was essentially playing with house money. The expectation in Lexington wasn’t what it normally is for Kentucky Basketball. They exceeded expectations, especially early. You go into a [the game vs. Illinois] where there is pressure. If Kentucky had failed to make the Sweet 16 while Arkansas did, then people in Lexington would have viewed the year as more of a failure than it was.
“To watch how they handled themselves in that game and to watch Mark Pope, in particular, handled himself and his team in that game, I was thoroughly impressed. It just showed me that Mark Pope is ready for that big moment. You could just tell he’s a family man, obviously loves his alma mater. If he can win this year, the expectation is now is they’re ready to get back to Final Fours in Lexington and they’re capable of doing it.”
You can watch Noah Eagle’s full answer and our full interview with him in the link above.
Our Dylan Ballard, in his annual end-of-season column, which he writes after every Kentucky basketball season, penned this year’s edition on how the Wildcats and fanbase are together again with the job Pope did in his first season as the Wildcats’ head coach. To see the fanbase back together again certainly raises expectations going into this season.
There is a sense that this team could be the one that brings a ninth national championship to Lexington. Pope understands the mission, and the national play-by-play announcers like Noah Eagle are seeing that first-hand.