UK has won 13 national championships including the 2012 men's basketball title. UK also boasts the 1988 women's cross country national championship; 2020–21 women's volleyball championship; 2011, 2018, and 2021 rifle championships, and 8 men's basketball titles. UK was also crowned an NCAA co-champion, after knocking off #1 Oklahoma in the 1951 Sugar Bowl to win the 1950 National Championship in college football.
Basketball Beginning in the 1890s, students at the University of Kentucky started scheduling
football games with neighboring colleges. The
basketball program began on campus in 1902, originally as a women's sport; During his tenure, he led the Kentucky Wildcats to four
NCAA crowns in 1948, 1949, 1951 and 1958. The Wildcats also won two NIT Championships in 1946 and 1976. The program has garnered 45
SEC regular season titles. Since the 2009–10 season,
John Calipari has coached the Wildcats with a "one-and-done" approach to recruiting, resulting in freshman-laden lineups – including a record 5 first-round draft picks in the
2010 NBA draft and 6 Wildcats taken in the
2012 NBA draft.
Women's The first University of Kentucky women's basketball team was organized in 1902, competing for the first time on February 21, 1903. However, in 1924, the University Senate passed a bill to abolish women's basketball in part because "basketball had proven to be a strenuous sport for boys and therefore was too strenuous for girls." After a 50-year absence, women's basketball finally reached varsity status in 1974. The team was given the nickname "Lady Kats" and was coached by Debbie Yow. Led by UK all-time leading scorer
Valerie Still, Patty Jo Hedges, and Lea Wise, the Lady Kats won the
SEC Tournament in 1982. The following year, the same trio led the team to a #4 ranking in the country, the highest in the team's history. The team was previously coached by
Matthew Mitchell, named as the SEC Coach of the Year in 2010 after leading the
2009–10 team to a surprising 28–8 season in which they set school records for best start, most consecutive SEC wins, best SEC finish, and most wins in a season, culminating in their first
NCAA regional final since
1982. The team also had the conference Player of the Year in
Victoria Dunlap and Freshman of the Year in A'dia Mathies. Under later coach
Kyra Elzy, the Wildcats upset top-ranked South Carolina in the 2022 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament finals. The star of this team,
Rhyne Howard, would become the first overall pick in
that year's WNBA draft. Elzy would be dismissed after the 2023–24 season. The current head coach,
Kenny Brooks, was hired away from
Virginia Tech shortly after Elzy's firing.
Football Kentucky plays at
Kroger Field (formerly Commonwealth Stadium from 1973 to 2017), which replaced
Stoll Field in 1973. ;Paul "Bear" Bryant era and
Memorial Coliseum,
Paul "Bear" Bryant was Kentucky's head football coach for eight seasons. Under Bryant the Wildcats won the 1947
Great Lakes Bowl, lost the 1950
Orange Bowl, won the 1951
Sugar Bowl and the 1952
Cotton Bowl Classic. In final AP polls, the Wildcats were ranked #11 in 1949, #7 in 1950, #15 in 1951, #20 in 1952 and #16 in 1953. At the time of the 1951 Sugar Bowl win over #1 Oklahoma, the final polls were taken before the bowl games. The NCAA has never officially recognized a national champion from among the bowl coalition institutions, but in 2004 the NCAA commissioned Jeff Sagarin to use his computer model to retroactively determine the highest ranked teams for the years prior to the BCS. His champion for the 1950 season is Kentucky. ;Fran Curci era The 1976 Wildcats retroactively claimed a share of the
Southeastern Conference championship under coach
Fran Curci via a loss later forfeited by Mississippi State (and despite losing at home to conference champion Georgia) and won the
Peach Bowl, finishing #18 in the final AP poll. The 1977 Kentucky team went 10–1 and was undefeated in SEC play but, despite finishing the season ranked #6 in the AP poll, did not play in a bowl game due to NCAA sanctions. Kentucky finished at #6 and Penn State at #5 despite the fact that Kentucky defeated Penn State at Penn State during the regular season. ;Jerry Claiborne era Coach
Jerry Claiborne led the Wildcats to the 1983
Hall of Fame Bowl. In 1984 Kentucky returned to the Hall of Fame Bowl and defeated a ranked Wisconsin team to finish the season with a 9–3 record and a #19 ranking in the final AP poll. ;Bill Curry era The Wildcats played in the 1993 Peach Bowl under coach
Bill Curry. ;Hal Mumme era Coach
Hal Mumme led the Wildcats to the 1998
Outback Bowl and the 1999
Music City Bowl but the program was hit with severe sanctions for infractions during Mumme's tenure. ;Guy Morriss era Under coach
Guy Morriss the Wildcats posted a 7–5 record in 2002 but were not eligible for postseason play due to NCAA sanctions. ;Rich Brooks era Coach
Rich Brooks led the team to an 8–5 regular season record in
2006, including a memorable upset over the defending SEC champion Georgia, snapping a nine-game losing streak to the Bulldogs. Brooks also led the football team to its first bowl game since 1999 and its first bowl game victory since 1984, as Kentucky defeated the
Clemson University Tigers 28–20 in the
2006 Music City Bowl. On September 15, 2007. Brooks led UK to a 40–34 win over number 9 ranked
Louisville. This marked UK's first win over a top 10 team since #4 Penn State in 1977. The Wildcats were ranked 8th in the nation before a loss to South Carolina on October 4. After the loss to South Carolina, Kentucky bounced back on October 13 to defeat #1 LSU in an historic triple overtime game. The 2007 Kentucky Wildcats football defeated the
Florida State Seminoles 35–28 in the
2007 Music City Bowl in Nashville, Tennessee, on December 31, 2007. It was the Wildcats second straight bowl appearance. Quarterback
Andre' Woodson was named the Music City Bowl MVP for the second year in a row. The last three bowl appearances for the Cats have been in the Music City Bowl, which they have appeared in more than any other SEC team in the conference's affiliation with the game, which dates back to the inaugural game in 1998. On January 2, 2009, Kentucky football set a record with the school's first back to back to back bowl games. After a bad start in the Liberty Bowl, Kentucky made a comeback from a 16–3 deficit at halftime to beat East Carolina 25–19. After a fumble by the East Carolina running back, UK Defensive Tackle Ventrell Jenkins returned the ball over 50 yards for the score that gave Kentucky their first lead of the game. ;Joker Phillips era Former Wildcat
wide receiver and longtime assistant coach
Joker Phillips was formally named head coach January 6, 2010 after Brooks' retirement. Phillips took Kentucky to the BBVA Compass Bowl in Birmingham, Alabama in his first season as a head coach, losing to Big East Conference co-champion Pittsburgh 27–10. However, the Wildcats would not return to a bowl in either of the next two seasons. The main highlight of those years came in 2011, when Kentucky defeated Tennessee for the first time since 1984. Phillips was fired in November 2012, effective at season's end. ;Mark Stoops era Phillips was replaced by
Florida State defensive coordinator
Mark Stoops, younger brother of
Oklahoma head coach
Bob Stoops. Stoops has gone on to become the winningest coach in Kentucky's history. In 2018, Stoops and Kentucky had arguably the best season in program history going 10–3 and beating Penn State 27–24 in the 2019 Citrus Bowl which was led by 2019 7th overall pick
Josh Hines-Allen and all-time leading rusher
Benny Snell. Stoops also led Kentucky to win the Belk Bowl along with the Gator Bowl. After a historic 6–0 start in 2021, the Wildcats lost three games in a row to fall out of contention for the conference title.
Baseball The Wildcats baseball team began play in their new stadium,
Kentucky Proud Park, in fall 2018, replacing
Cliff Hagan Stadium, where they had played since 1969. The baseball program, partly hampered by being the northernmost school in the heavily warm-weather SEC, has historically achieved only modest success at best. Wildcats baseball hit bottom at the turn of the 21st century, with only one winning season from 1997 through 2004, and last-place finishes in the SEC East division in every season from 2001 through 2005. In 2003, after the retirement of longtime coach Keith Madison, Kentucky hired Florida assistant
John Cohen as head coach. Cohen was able to lead the Cats to a winning overall season in 2005, despite another SEC cellar finish. In 2008, Cohen left Kentucky to accept the coaching position at
Mississippi State University. He was replaced by former Kentucky assistant
Gary Henderson. Few could have expected the season the Cats would have in 2006. They went from worst to first in the SEC, winning a regular-season conference title for the first time in three decades, and being ranked as high as fourth in the country by one major baseball poll during the season. However, the Kentucky fans saw the Cats crash out of the SEC tournament early and fail to make it out of the regionals of the NCAA tournament
at home. In
2012, Kentucky garnered its most successful season ever in program history. Henderson was voted SEC Coach of the Year by the league coaches. Henderson directed the Wildcats to a school-record 45-win season, with UK completing its best finishes in the SEC and NCAA tournaments in school annals. The 2012 season also marked the first time that UK had ever been ranked No. 1. UK finished the season with a No. 11 ranking by Baseball America. UK also achieved a program record by winning seven of ten series in SEC play. UK also ran up a school-record 22-game winning streak, which is the second longest in SEC history. In
2014, Kentucky produced its first ever College Baseball National Player of the Year in
A. J. Reed. During the regular season Reed was 11–2 with a 2.10 earned-run average on the mound and at the plate led the nation in home runs (23)—more than 193 entire Division I teams — slugging percentage (.768) and OPS (1.259). Reed also won SEC Player of the Year honors. The Wildcats made it to the Semifinals of the SEC Tournament and played in the Louisville regional of the
2014 NCAA tournament. In
2017, Henderson had resigned and was replaced by
Nick Mingione, who had been an assistant in the 2006 season. Mingione brought a new attitude to the team and they had a 43–23 record with 19–11 in the SEC. They went on to host an NCAA regional
NCAA Regional. The Cats won the Regional and advanced on the Super Regional and were defeated by Louisville. Minione was named SEC coach of the year.
Softball The
University of Kentucky softball team had their inaugural season in 1997. University of Kentucky Athletic Director
Mitch Barnhart hired Rachel Lawson in July 2007. Since Lawson's hire she has become the winningest coach in program history. She has also guided UK to six NCAA Super Regionals since 2011 including an appearance in the
2014 College World Series, the program's first. Now sitting at 361–232 in her eleven seasons at Kentucky, Lawson is the winningest head coach in school history and already has more wins in SEC play than UK had total as a program when she took over in 2007. UK also finished 2016 in the top 14 of both collegiate softball rankings for the third time in school history with eleven wins over ranked teams. Another accomplishment since Lawson's hire in 2007 is the integration of John Cropp Stadium. The facility cost $9.5 million, and debuted for the 2013 season. UK hosted the 2013 SEC Tournament as well as an NCAA regional, another first for the program. Since 2013, UK has hosted an NCAA regional in 2014 and 2016–2018.
Track and field Edrick Floréal was hired a UK Track and Field coach in 2012, and has led the Wildcats to 6 NCAA individual championships and 29 individual SEC championships. Notable track athletes: •
Kendra Harrison –
100 meters hurdles •
Jasmine Quinn – 100 meters hurdles •
Rondel Sorrillo –
sprinter •
Dezerea Bryant – sprinter •
Andrew Evans –
discus •
Sydney McLaughlin –
400 meters hurdles •
Daniel Roberts –
110 meters hurdles •
Abby Steiner -
200 meters Women's volleyball The Wildcats women's volleyball became an official varsity sport in 1977 and has won the SEC regular season 14 times and won the
NCAA championship in 2020. Under coach
Craig Skinner, the team has become a national power.
Cheerleading and stunt The University of Kentucky cheerleaders have won the UCA (Division I-A)
Cheerleading Championship 24 times, more than any other school. They are the only school to win more than two consecutive championships, having won each year from 1995 through 2002 and from 2004 through 2006, and are the only school to win consecutive championships on multiple occasions, having done so four times (1987–1988, 1995–2002, 2004–2006, and 2008–2010). They have won championships in 1985, 1987, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019; have also placed second four times, and have finished in the top ten every year since the existence of the UCA National College Championships. The squad has been featured on the "
CBS Evening News",
Connie Chung's "Eye to Eye", and the "CBS Morning Show", NBC's
The Today Show, in "Southern Living" and ''
Gentlemen's Quarterly'', "ESPN the Magazine", and "
Seventeen" magazines. A reality show on
WE: Women's Entertainment called "Cheerleader U." followed the team during the 2006–07 season. Although cheerleading as a whole has no NCAA recognition, UK considers it to be a varsity sport. In recent years, UK added a team in stunt (often stylized as STUNT), an emerging all-female cheerleading discipline that emphasizes the sport's acrobatic and technical aspects. The stunt program was initially sponsored at club level until being elevated to varsity status in 2022–23, a year before stunt became part of the
NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program.
Golf The men's and women's golf teams call the
University Club of Kentucky their home course. Notable alumni of the golf team include
1967 Masters tournament winner
Gay Brewer, current
PGA Tour golfers
J. B. Holmes and
Steve Flesch, current
Champions Tour golfer
Russ Cochran, and former Kentucky governor
John Y. Brown Jr. Soccer The University of Kentucky fields both men's and women's varsity soccer teams competing in NCAA Division I. Both programs play their home matches at the Wendell & Vickie Bell Soccer Complex in Lexington, Kentucky. The men's soccer team, established in 1991, competes as an affiliate member of the Sun Belt Conference and has made multiple NCAA Tournament appearances, earning a reputation as a consistent postseason contender. The women's soccer team competes in the Southeastern Conference (SEC) and has developed into a competitive program within one of the nation's strongest women's soccer conferences, with several NCAA Tournament berths and strong recent seasons.
Men's tennis The University of Kentucky Men's Tennis Team is coached by longtime assistant coach and former All-American
Cedric Kauffmann. They play their home matches at the Boone Tennis Center since January 1986. They have won the SEC Regular season title twice (1992,2012) and the SEC tournament once (1992) Notable Kentucky tennis athletes: •
Cedric Kauffmann •
Andy Jackson •
Mario Rincón •
Greg Van Emburgh •
Jesse Witten Rifle The co-ed Rifle team is coached by Harry Mullins. It began as a club sport in 1982. UK is a member of the single-sport
Great America Rifle Conference. UK won the team national championship in 2011, as well as the title in smallbore. Individual National Champions include: Nancy Napolski – 1994 Air Rifle, Ethan Settlemires – 2011 Smallbore, Connor Davis – 2014 Air Rifle, Henrik Larsen – 2018 Air Rifle, and Mary Tucker - 2021 Smallbore and 2021 Air Rifle. :Facility: Buell Armory :Head Coach: Harry Mullins :NCAA Appearances: 21 :NCAA Team Championships: 4 :NCAA Team Runner up: 6 :National Individual Champions: 6 :NCAA All-Americans: 86 :
Conference Championships (Regular season): 8 :
Conference Championships (Tournament): 6 ==Championships==