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Kentucky women's basketball keeps improving under coach Kenny Brooks

Published on Sunday, 29 March 2026 at 10:18 am

Kentucky women's basketball keeps improving under coach Kenny Brooks
FORT WORTH, Texas — The Kentucky women’s basketball program’s climb back to national relevance hit another milestone Saturday night at Dickies Arena, and while the season ended with a 76-54 loss to top-seeded Texas in the Sweet 16, the Wildcats departed Fort Worth convinced the best is still ahead.
The defeat closed Year 2 under head coach Kenny Brooks and marked Kentucky’s first trip to the regional semifinals in a decade—only the seventh in program history. It also capped a 25-win campaign, two more victories than Brooks’ first team posted a year ago.
“There’s so much excitement that is surrounding our program right now,” Brooks said afterward. “What we were able to accomplish … I would call it a tremendous success, but we won’t rest on our laurels.”
Preseason forecasts barely hinted at such a surge. Picked eighth in the SEC by league media, Kentucky finished 8-8 in conference play and tied for sixth, though tiebreakers dropped it to the No. 9 seed for the SEC Tournament. The Wildcats opened the year No. 20 in the USA TODAY Sports Women’s Basketball Coaches Poll and No. 24 in the AP Top 25.
They quickly outgrew those rankings. Highlights included:
- A 10-point home win over in-state rival Louisville, the first time UK has recorded back-to-back double-digit victories over the Cardinals since 1999 and 2000. - Regular-season upsets of two AP top-five opponents—LSU on Jan. 1 and Oklahoma on Jan. 11—the first such pair of top-five wins in school history. - Three wins over AP top-15 teams (LSU, Oklahoma and No. 14 Ole Miss on Feb. 15), the most in a single season since 1982-83.
Individual milestones mirrored the team’s rise. Junior center Clara Strack led Kentucky in scoring, rebounding, blocks and steals, joining Tennessee legend Candace Parker as the only SEC players to amass 1,000 points, 600 rebounds, 150 blocks, 125 assists and 50 steals within their first two seasons.
Transfer point guard Tonie Morgan shattered the program’s single-season assists record, dishing out 286—third-most in SEC history behind Curtyce Knox (304, 2016-17) and Temeka Johnson (289, 2003-04). Forward Amelia Hassett set a school record with 99 3-pointers, while guard Asia Boone added 96, eclipsing the previous mark of 84 held by Rhyne Howard.
“We’ve had some really good wins this year,” Brooks said. “That just lays the foundation for who we can be.”
Players echoed the optimism. “This was a great year,” Morgan said. “We made it to the Sweet 16. Is that where we wanted to end? No, but we stayed together through all the ups and downs.”
With the 2025-26 season in the books, Kentucky has now advanced one round further in each of Brooks’ first two seasons. After finishing on the SEC cellar floor before his arrival, the Wildcats believe the trajectory is still pointing up.
“We’ll probably be talking about some stuff for next year when we’re on the plane going back,” Brooks said. “That’s how hardworking a group that we have.”
Kentucky women’s basketball, long absent from spring’s biggest stage, suddenly has reason to keep talking deep into March.

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Source: yahoo

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