Kentucky Men’s Basketball SEC Dates Announced

mark-pope
mark-pope

The Southeastern Conference announced the 2025-26 men’s basketball schedule on Wednesday, with most midweek dates still to be confirmed.

Game times and television designations will be announced at a later date. Additionally, UK is still expected to add three nonconference games.

Date  Opponent/Event Location
Oct. 24 Purdue (exhibition) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Oct. 30 Georgetown (exhibition) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Nov. 11 at Louisville KFC Yum! Center (Louisville, Ky.)
Nov. 18 vs. Michigan State (Champions Classic) Madison Square Garden (New York)
Nov. 21 Loyola (Md.) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Nov. 26 Tennessee Tech Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Dec. 2 North Carolina (ACC/SEC Challenge) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Dec. 5 vs. Gonzaga Bridgestone Arena (Nashville, Tenn.)
Dec. 9 North Carolina Central Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Dec. 13 Indiana Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Dec. 20 vs. St. John’s (CBS Sports Classic) State Farm Arena (Atlanta)
Dec. 23 Bellarmine Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Jan. 3 at Alabama (SEC) Coleman Coliseum (Tuscaloosa, Ala.)
Jan. 6/7 Missouri (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Jan. 10 Mississippi State (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Jan. 13/14 at LSU (SEC) Pete Maravich Assembly Center (Baton Rouge, La.)
Jan. 17 at Tennessee (SEC) Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center (Knoxville, Tenn.)
Jan. 20/21 Texas (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Jan. 24 Ole Miss (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Jan. 27/28 at Vanderbilt (SEC) Memorial Gymnasium (Nashville, Tenn.)
Jan. 31 at Arkansas (SEC) Bud Walton Arena (Fayetteville, Ark.)
Feb. 3 Oklahoma (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Feb. 7 Tennessee (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Feb. 14 at Florida (SEC) Exactech Arena at Stephen C. O’Connell Center (Gainesville, Fla.)
Feb. 17/18 Georgia (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
Feb. 21 at Auburn (SEC) Neville Arena (Auburn, Ala.)
Feb. 24/25 at South Carolina (SEC) Colonial Life Arena (Columbia, S.C.)
Feb. 28 Vanderbilt (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center
March 3/4 at Texas A&M (SEC) Reed Arena (Bryan-College Station, Texas)
March 7 Florida (SEC) Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center

Men’s basketball season ticket renewals for the 2025-26 season are currently underway, with a deadline of Aug. 22. Renewals are now available online through each season ticket holders My UK Athletics Account. Fans needing assistance with their online account are encouraged to contact the UK Ticket Office at (859) 257-1818 or send an email to uktickets@uky.edu.

Kentucky head coach Mark Pope and the Wildcats are coming off the program’s first Sweet 16 appearance since 2019 and return Collin Chandler, Brandon Garrison, Trent Noah and Otega Oweh who all contributed to a 24-12 season which featured wins over an NCAA-record-tying eight Associated Press Top 15 foes. Chandler shot 12 for 23 (52.2%) from distance over his final six games – all against NCAA Tournament teams. Garrison produced seven double-figure scoring efforts and shot 50.9% from the field in 17.3 minutes per game as a sophomore, while Noah’s breakthrough performance came in an 11-point effort in an upset of No. 5 Tennessee at home. Oweh led the team in scoring at 16.2 points per game and earned All-SEC Second Team accolades during a breakout junior season. The senior guard churned out 33 double-digit scoring efforts, including 13 performances of 20 or more points, and also led the squad in total steals (57) and steals per game (1.6).

Adding to UK’s firepower in 2025-26 is one of the highest-ranked transfer classes in the country. The Cats will add 2025 National Champion Denzel Aberdeen from Florida; a two-time NCAA Sweet 16 participant in Alabama’s Mouhamed Dioubate; an All-Atlantic Coast Conference performer in Pitt’s Jaland Lowe; Reece Potter from Miami of Ohio who is a Lexington native and a part of the RedHawks who won 25 games in 2024-25; National Defensive Player of the Year late-season finalist Jayden Quaintance from Arizona State; and Kam Williams from Tulane who earned American Athletic Conference All-Freshman Team honors.

Aberdeen logged 7.7 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game while shooting 41.8% from the field, 35.0% from distance and 70.8% from the free-throw line in 2024-25. In his five starts last season, he averaged 14.4 points and shot 41.4% from 3-point range (12 for 29). Dioubate averaged 7.2 points, 5.9 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game for the Crimson Tide in 2024-25. He scored in double-figures in 13 outings and had five double-doubles. Lowe started all 31 games for Pitt and averaged a team-high 16.8 points per game to couple with 5.5 assists, 4.2 rebounds and 1.8 steals per game. Potter averaged 6.3 points and 3.4 rebounds in 15.7 minutes per contest in two seasons at Miami. He shot 45.4 percent from the field and an impressive 39.8 percent from 3-point range. Quaintance started all 24 games in which he played with the Sun Devils, averaging 9.4 points, 7.9 rebounds, 2.6 blocks and 1.5 assists while shooting 52.5 percent from the field. Williams averaged 9.3 points, 4.5 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.4 blocks per game, while shooting 41.2% from distance in his lone season with the Green Wave.

The Cats also have four first-year player signees in Braydon Hawthorne, Andrija Jelavić, Jasper Johnson and Malachi Moreno. Johnson and Moreno were both members of Team USA at the Nike Hoop Summit in April. Johnson averaged 20.3 points, 5.9 rebounds and 5.8 assists per game for Real Wild Energy in the Overtime Elite League. Moreno was named Mr. Kentucky Basketball after leading Great Crossing High School to its first state title in program history where he tallied 24 points, 15 rebounds and five blocks in the championship victory. He was also a McDonald’s All-American selection. Jelavić is one of the top European prospects who has averaged 11.0 points, 7.4 rebounds, 1.5 assists and 1.0 steals per game for Mega Superbet in the Adriatic League. Hawthorne is a consensus four-star prospect and one of the fastest risers in the class of 2025. He averaged 23.5 points, 6.0 rebounds and 4.0 assists per game at Huntington Prep en route to earning the No. 1 overall player ranking from the state of West Virginia.

For the latest on the Kentucky men’s basketball team, follow @KentuckyMBB on TwitterFacebookInstagram and TikTok, and on the web at UKathletics.com.