Mark Pope Faces A Kentucky Debate That Is Not Going Away

As Kentucky gears up for a new season, all eyes are on Coach Mark Pope to see if he will adjust his strategy on player rotations to better align with the high demands of Big Blue Nation.

Mark Pope enters this season with one of the clearest pressure points on his Kentucky team: how he handles the minutes.

Last year’s Wildcats had the buzz, the expectations and, for a while, the look of a group that could hang a banner. Instead, injuries helped derail the season, and Kentucky’s run ended with a loss to Iowa State in the Round of 32. For a fan base that expected more, the rotation was one of the biggest sore spots.

The frustration wasn’t just about who played. It was about when they came out.

Pope has repeatedly said he doesn’t want to overwork his players, but that approach left plenty of Kentucky fans wondering why the lineup was being shuffled so quickly. Players, meanwhile, made it clear they believed they could handle more.

Andrija Jelavic addressed the media last season and pointed out that the whole team has played four or five games in a day their entire life.

This year, Big Blue Nation wants a different feel. Otega Oweh logged about 33 minutes a game last season, and the hope is that Alex Wilkins, Zoom Diallo and Milan Momcilovic can all live in that same range, or at least get close to it. Those are the names expected to carry a big load, and the idea is simple: keep the best players on the floor.

There’s also a specific number fans want to see for Moreno, who should be around 28 minutes per game. Pope has not been eager to leave seven-footers out there for long stretches - Amari Williams played 24 minutes per game last season - but Kentucky supporters would like Moreno to get a heavier workload. That would also help Franck Kepnang stay healthy, which matters for the Wildcats’ chances.

Another complaint from last season was the timing of substitutions. In some games, Kentucky would build a lead, only for Pope to go to the bench early in the first half and watch the opponent swing momentum back the other way. Fans want him to let the first half breathe a little longer before making those changes.

Pope appears pretty committed to his own style, so the real question is whether he’ll adjust at all once the games start counting. For now, the message from BBN is loud and clear: let the stars play more.

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