LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky’s second 10-win finish in four years is an indication of how Mark Stoops has transformed the once-moribund program he took over 10 seasons ago.

Success has raised expectations for the No. 20 Wildcats, who begin with their first preseason ranking since 1978 and media predictions of finishing second to defending national champion and No. 3 Georgia in the Southeastern Conference’s East Division.


What You Need To Know

  • Mark Stoops and his Kentucky Wildcats have high expectations for success this season

  • UK will kick off with their first preseason ranking since 1978 and high projections in the SEC East

  • Stoops needs two wins to surpass legend Paul “Bear” Bryant (60) as Kentucky’s winningest coach

  • The Wildcats (10-3) will return 13 starters after winning the Citrus Bowl and finishing No. 18 in the rankings

Stoops appreciates the recognition, but wants Kentucky to tune out the noise and focus on improvement to maintain the respect it has worked so long to earn.

“I am proud of that, and I appreciate the work,” said Stoops, who needs two wins to surpass legend Paul “Bear” Bryant (60) as Kentucky’s winningest coach. Bryant went on to win six national titles at Alabama after leaving Lexington.

“However, we’re not satisfied,” Stoops added at SEC media days. “We want to continue to grow. We want to continue to push it. Obviously, some teams at the top of the food chain in the East and the West are doing some really special things. So, you have to continue to elevate your game.”

Stoops certainly has elevated his defense when it comes to defending his rising program.

He quickly snapped back on social media to a recent comment by Wildcats men's basketball coach John Calipari saying that Kentucky was a “basketball school” as he pitched for an upgraded hoop practice facility. Calipari eventually apologized, two days after Stoops tweeted a reminder that the school is part of the football-dominant SEC with the hashtag “#4straightpostseasonwins.”

Now Stoops' Wildcats intend on becoming part of the championship discussion like Kentucky's men's hoop team routinely is in.

The Wildcats (10-3, 5-3 SEC last season) return 13 starters — including six from the SEC’s fourth-ranked defense — after winning the Citrus Bowl and finishing No. 18 in the rankings. They remained busy with the transfer portal, landing 10 new players.

Senior quarterback Will Levis directed that 20-17 comeback over Iowa in Florida and returns with under a bigger microscope on and off the field after a breakout season. He has already developed a relationship with new offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Rich Scangerello, who will maintain the pro-style scheme, and looks to take a potent offense a step further.

Scangerello “sees me take reps in practice and understands how my brain works,” said Levis, who’s projected as a possible top-10 selection in next year’s NFL draft.

“It’s just going to get better with the experience, just like I’m going to get better with more reps I can get within this offense and as a quarterback in general.”

Other things to watch in Stoops’ 10th season with the Wildcats:

MULTIPLE CHOICES

Levis passed for 2,827 of his 3,203 yards from scrimmage and 24 of his 33 TDs. Building on those impressive numbers requires bonding with a huge receiver corps and filling the big-play void left by record-setting wideout Wan’Dale Robinson (104 catches, 1,334 yards), who was drafted by the New York Giants. That group includes transfers Tayvion Robinson (1,555 career yards at Virginia Tech) and Dee Beckwith (Tennessee).

RODRIGUEZ’S STATUS

Stoops won’t comment the availability of leading rusher Chris Rodriguez Jr., who pleaded guilty in Lexington this summer to driving under the influence. He’s coming off his own breakout junior season in which he ran for a career-best 1,379 yards and scored eight touchdowns, earning first team All-SEC honors. Kentucky has senior Kavosiey Smoke (416 yards, four TDs) and juniors Mike Drennen and JuTahn McClain back to handle duties if Rodriguez is disciplined. The program also added Sam Houston State transfer Ramon Jefferson, who rushed for 1,907 yards in 22 games the past two seasons.

DEFENSIVE DEPTH

Kentucky returns several key contributors from a unit that allowed 340.1 yards per game last fall. The front seven includes inside linebackers Jacquez Jones (team-high 86 tackles) and DeAndre Square (80) and linemen Josiah Hayes and Octavious Oxendine. The Wildcats’ challenge is replacing a veteran secondary, though Carrington Valentine (61 tackles, five pass breakups) and Tyrell Ajian (46, four) played extensively in 2021.

NEW ASSISTANTS

Rich Scangerello and Zach Yenser (offensive line) came from the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers. Scangerello replaces Liam Coen, who installed the successful scheme before returning to the Super Bowl champion Los Angeles Rams as OC. Stoops’ brother Mike, a former Arizona head coach and Oklahoma assistant, was hired as inside linebackers coach.

THE SCHEDULE

Kentucky has eight home games this season, providing a good opportunity to match last year’s win total. The Wildcats open Sept. 3 against Miami (Ohio) in the first of three non-conference home contests sandwiched around a SEC East showdown at Florida in Week 2. Georgia visits on Nov. 19 to wrap up league play, followed by in-state rival Louisville following the next week. Kentucky has dominated the past three series meetings by a 153-44 margin.