*NOTE: The opinions discussed in this article, as is the case with all columns produced by the Kentucky Kernel, is the sole opinion of the writer and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the staff as a whole.
If there’s one thing Kentuckians care about more than University of Kentucky basketball, it’s when one of their own holds a spot on the roster.
Historically speaking, if a player grows up bleeding blue and earns the chance to wear that jersey, the state of Kentucky has their back unless they choose to leave on their own.
In return, there’s been a seemingly unspoken rule that nearly every UK coach has followed: loyalty to the hometown heroes isn’t optional, but instead a tradition that should never be compromised.

In theory, when a player gives everything to live out their dream at Kentucky, especially in the toughest circumstances, the program owes them more than a quiet exit.
There’s no denying Kenny Brooks’ success during his first season as head coach.
Recognized as a National Head Coach of the Year, he brought back a program at its lowest with a new team, leading the Wildcats to historic milestones, including their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2022.
While a revived culture and optimistic future for Kentucky matters, one bizarre decision has turned what could’ve been a celebratory offseason into a public relations disaster: cutting a rising senior in Cassidy Rowe.
While outliers may view the program’s choice as a business decision, fans across the Bluegrass know her impact on the team went far beyond the numbers.
Rowe grew up only 155 miles outside of Lexington and, like many young in-state athletes, she hoped that one day she’d be playing for UK and representing blue and white.
At the age of 14, the Virgie native had the opportunity to fulfill her dream and committed to the University of Kentucky as only a freshman in high school.
Through two ACL tears, surgeries, adversities, losing seasons and coaching changes, Rowe stuck with the program and became Kentucky’s constant.
She was the first to take a charge, the loudest voice in the huddle and a walking example of what it means to play for the name on the front of her jersey, something that has become emphasized heavily in Kentucky basketball spheres as of late.
The hard work, blood, sweat and, as Kenny Brooks himself put it, the “blue tears,” will now be swept under the rug without a proper goodbye or a Senior Night honoring her.
Brooks emphasized the culture he was building all season: a family-first environment rooted in trust and transparency. After a conference game earlier in the year, he proudly stood by those values.

“We are family,” Brooks said. “My relationship with them goes deeper than 40 minutes on the floor. They are my kids and we speak the truth, and when we speak the truth, we get great results.”
But when it came time to decide the team’s future, Brooks didn’t just let one of his “kids” go; he cut the heart of his bench, a locker room leader and the face of Kentucky loyalty.
Based on her announcement, the news seemed just as shocking to her as it was to BBN.
“Wow…I wasn’t expecting this to be a goodbye post. I wanted nothing more than to play my senior year in a Kentucky uniform, but I know that God has bigger and better plans for me,” she wrote on Instagram. “Sometimes ‘no’ is God’s way of preventing us from greater heartbreak.”
Following the announcement, multiple sources reported that Rowe was told her scholarship would not be available for the 2025-26 season.
Unsurprisingly, instead of finding a new team, she made the only decision that felt right to her: retiring from basketball altogether.
Rowe didn’t want to transfer or quit, she just wasn’t seen as valuable to the program anymore, despite what Brooks had said earlier in the season.
“When I met with each and every player from last year’s team, some of them were already in the portal, and Cassidy—she started talking about her experiences here,” Brooks said on media day. “I swore when she started crying, it was blue tears, and I’m like, ‘Man, this kid had me.’ She had me at, ‘Hello,’ just because she knew how much she loved Kentucky.”
Five months later, Kentucky played in the first round of March Madness, and with 16 seconds left and Liberty within one point of the Cats, Brooks defended his decision of putting her on the court.
“I called her name, and she sprinted to the desk, checked in, and she was the one that received the basketball and did a really good job of helping take some of the pressure off of Georgia,” he said. “So it added an extra element—but she’s been that way all year long, just ready to handle anything that’s come her way.”

Rowe was valuable enough to be put into the game in one of the most crucial times of the season, but now she was told that she is no longer worthy of a roster spot.
Her retirement wasn’t because she was done with basketball, but because playing at UK was her dream. Rowe had such a deep loyalty to Kentucky, and if she couldn’t play in blue and white, she wouldn’t play anywhere.
The responses of Big Blue Nation took the internet by storm because Kentucky fans know Cassidy Rowe wasn’t just a player, she was the dream in motion. She became the example parents pointed to and the athlete young girls watched and aspired to be.
“It was a great pleasure cheering on Cassidy Rowe with my daughter,” one parent wrote on X. “She is a fantastic role model for our girls. Always selflessly cheering on her teammates. A tremendous loss.”
“You’re trying to build a program and a fan base,” another fan posted. “…and you ask a kid who grew up in Eastern Kentucky bleeding blue to leave? That’s absolutely insane and shameful.”
The support Rowe has gotten in the past few days is exactly why Kentucky is special, and what Brooks might’ve failed to realize is that this goes far beyond Rowe.
It’s about the message it sends to every future player, especially the ones who grow up in small Kentucky towns with big dreams.
The decision tells them that their loyalty will not be returned, that the name on the front of their jersey won’t always have their back and that no matter how much of their heart they give to the program, there is no promise it will return the love.
This season, Kentucky ranked 352nd out of 353 Division-I women’s basketball teams in bench scoring, with Brooks using a short rotation of eight or nine players throughout the entire season.
Division-I women’s basketball teams can offer up to 15 scholarships, but for the 2024-25 season, Kentucky only used 13. Even if Brooks eventually fills all 15 spots, he is likely to keep his bench rotation relatively small.

Aside from Brooks’ coaching style, very few teams still give more than 10 players meaningful minutes. There can still be walk-ons, but they do count against the 15-player limit. Seemingly, Rowe wasn’t even offered one of these spots.
Either way, her role on the team was never about stats or minutes, and it could not have hurt the team to have her take up a roster spot.
In fact, her presence and leadership propelled the team forward in ways that didn’t show up on a box score. She was the bright spot in the program when it was at its lowest and became “Kentucky’s sweetheart.” Her attitude never faltered, whether she played four quarters or zero minutes.
She was the first one off the bench during timeouts, the first to high-five her teammates and the kind of bench leader most coaches can only dream of having.
On the court, she gave everything, whether it was throwing her body into charges, hustling for loose balls or simply playing with a level of grit coaches can’t teach.
Kentucky has seven open scholarships for next season, and it is disappointing for much of BBN that none were saved for the player who represented everything the program says it stands for, leaving a void that will be hard to fill.
Most feel Rowe should be spending her senior year with the program she dedicated her entire life to. That she should be walking across the court on Senior Night, hearing the roar of a fanbase that watched her grow up, suit up and show up every day, even when no one was watching.
Brooks may have fixed Kentucky’s record, but if he wants to build something that lasts, he’ll need to take into account something that Kentuckians hold very close to their hearts: loyalty is everything in this state.

Brooks is a talented coach with the tools to take this program to unprecedented heights and even win championships.
However, this move was an act of betrayal to many around the Commonwealth, and no amount of wins will undo the anger fans feel after seeing the state’s most loyal player forced into an early goodbye.
Loyalty built Kentucky, and it is the backbone of the culture that BBN has long loved.
Rowe was a hometown hero that embodied it better than almost any player who wore Kentucky across their chest, because she didn’t play just for Kentucky — she lived and breathed for it.
Keeping her on scholarship for one more year did not run the risk of hurting the program on the court or off of it, but letting her go did.
Cassidy Rowe never turned her back on Kentucky. Kentucky should’ve done the same for her.
Sean J Sellards • Apr 3, 2025 at 8:28 am
I totally agree. Coach Brooks better get her back on the team. I don’t see any other way to make this right.
Tom Willis • Apr 2, 2025 at 3:34 pm
Cassidy says she is leaving Basketball to concentrate on on her Physical Therapy Program. This is a demanding Doctor’s program where the time away to play basketball would be too much; so I believe her. Then her father comes out saying her scholarship was pulled. Either way the Rowe family is not on the same page. If her father is right and her scholarship was pulled then the question is why. There are only two reasons I can think of to pull a scholarship. (1) The scholarship is need to fill a roster spot with a better player. I do not see that being the case with 6 or 7 spots left. (2) Cassidy is seen as unfavorable for UK girls basketball. That is unthinkable for me. Even if that is the case I think Brooks would take the criticism before he would say anything bad about Cassidy. So I believe Cassidy and I stand behind Brooks.
Sgahafer • Apr 3, 2025 at 7:12 pm
She did not say she was leaving basketball to concentrate on her PT program. This is what she said and I quote “Wow…I wasn’t expecting this to be a goodbye post. I wanted nothing more than to play my senior year in a Kentucky uniform, but I know that God has bigger and better plans for me. Sometimes “no” is God’s way of preventing us from greater heartbreak. ……..While I still have a year of eligibility left, I will not be entering the transfer portal. I will be pursuing my new dream of becoming a physical therapist through UK’s DPT program.”
JW1964 • Apr 2, 2025 at 2:03 pm
Zero class and zero character, I will not follow program as long as he is coach
Rodney Ballard • Apr 2, 2025 at 1:36 pm
Shame on UK!
Tom Lester • Apr 2, 2025 at 12:35 pm
Listen to his [scripted?] sound bites, but don’t believe him. Believe your lying eyes.
VT now has a former Notre Dame elite point guard as HC who has character and class.
Leon Keerps • Apr 2, 2025 at 8:56 am
She is the 1 that made the post why are all of u blaming the University it is her fault
Tom • Apr 2, 2025 at 8:01 am
Going to miss that young lady on the team
Zach • Apr 2, 2025 at 7:50 am
This is a bad look is it too late that woman should be there senior night she has earned it! It does turn me off from supporting a program that does this. It is very sad to see lip service in its highest regard!!
Meg • Apr 1, 2025 at 11:59 pm
And you’re surprised? Did you not see how he treated the VT players and fans when he just left?? Guess it doesn’t matter until it negatively affects you directly
Danny Pendleton • Apr 1, 2025 at 8:50 pm
Great article, Jenna. Truly sad what happened, and I guess I’ll never totally understood why.
Frances G Parker • Apr 1, 2025 at 8:30 pm
I stumbled upon this article, I’m a South Carolina alum and I find this despicable. I didn’t like the way he treated Owusu at VT and now doing this to Rowe! I felt like he was a bad choice for the SEC and he proved it in short time. Clearly a woman’s bb coach who doesn’t respect women. Is his daughter still on the team?
sgahafer • Apr 3, 2025 at 7:14 pm
Yes she is.
D.J. • Apr 1, 2025 at 3:35 pm
In the world of NIL there is no more loyalty. Brooks owes her nothing! He didn’t recruit her anyway! So you fanboys and girls get over it!
Carolyn Tackett • Apr 1, 2025 at 2:56 pm
This makes me so sick to my stomach. Why would he do this to this child this is her dream her life. He just destroyed a young girl. I was told he left room for his daughter I don’t know if that’s true but anyway he has lost a van basic here in Kentucky. This is our home town girl. We are proud of this young lady. Hope you are feeling bad because you deserve it. I’m finished with UK girls because of this stupid thing this coach has done.
Jeff s • Apr 1, 2025 at 2:38 pm
I feel Brookes is another John Calipari and doesn’t see any value in a Kentucky kid playing basketball for UK. Kentucky has had some great Women’s and men’s athletes over years. Brookes would rather have girls from over sea and calipari loves New York kids that have no idea how to play defense or team ball.. Brooks needs to be replaced!!
Rady Martin • Apr 1, 2025 at 12:23 pm
This is shameful!
Judy Justice • Apr 1, 2025 at 10:51 am
I honestly was never a fan of women’s basketball and truly don’t know why. I started watching our hometown girl. You could look and see the love she has for the game.UK has really messed up! If Cassidy doesn’t play, I don’t watch. What they are showing is collegiate ball doesn’t care about the athletes.
Shrugs Shoulders • Apr 1, 2025 at 9:44 am
Anybody else on the team taking up a scholarship space that can be used? Is that person receiving any NIL? Is that same person also going to be receiving revenue sharing $ next year? Always follow the $…… Do a couple of Google searches as to the reasoning behind the VT Brooks split.
Michael Ward • Apr 1, 2025 at 7:25 am
He took her scholarship, now she has to pay to go to PT school. Really despicable.
J E • Apr 1, 2025 at 5:45 am
About the most classless thing I’ve read in a long, long time. Be better.
Jeff Barbour • Mar 31, 2025 at 11:58 pm
I’m not going to speak badly about the coach. I don’t know him from Adam. I do know he gets paid to make decisions. Considering the team’s record, apparently he made several good ones this season. Apparently he was good enough to be trusted to run the women’s basketball program at UK. Unless there is something really bizarre that comes out down the road that is disturbingly wrong or illegal, I’m going to simply plead “coaches get paid to make decisions”. He made this one and will have to live with it.
Again, I don’t know him and I actually watch very little women’s basketball, but I doubt he made it to hurt the team or Cassidy, for that matter. A lot of what is being said by many of his critics sounds good and reasonable, but these comments are coming from people who don’t get paid to make the tough decisions.
I don’t have any idea what the chances are for the team to win the SEC title or the NCAA title, but hypothetically, let’s just say they win one or both without Cassidy. What will his critics say or focus on then? Will they still base their comments on KY tradition or say he made a lot of good decisions that helped the team win. I have a feeling that even the ones who have said they no longer are Lady Cat Fans until he leaves, will be there celebrating the titles, because that’s what loyal KY fans do.
In the 10 or so comments I’ve read attached to this article, maybe one comment speaks to Cassidy’s response to his decision.
That’s what gives me hope in her and her future. As disappointed as she was with his decision not to offer her a spot to play her senior season, she’s choosing not to be bitter, but instead is putting her Trust in The Lord. Wow! That’s Huge!! That’s the only perspective or comment that I read that gives me hope for her future. As much as Cassidy would have loved to be playing ball next year, she sounds like she can’t wait to see what God has in store for her. “She knows God, her Creator, her Redeemer and her Sustainer has Bigger & Better plans for her.” Then she comes back with “Sometimes “NO” is God’s Way . . .” Double WoW!! She’s basically acknowledging that sometimes “NO” is the best possible answer she could get, because He has Something greater for her than basketball.
I’m sure the coach’s decision still stings a little for Cassidy, but she has already risen above the hurt and ugliness that the fans speak of. I don’t know Cassidy from Eve, but what I read in her comments speaks volumes.
God’s ways are not our ways. I’m excited to see just how God will lift Cassidy up. I believe and she believes, In His Timing, Cassidy Rowe Will Be Just Fine!!
As for the fans, well, they have several months to make their next tough decision. Are they True Lady Cat Basketball Fans or not?
Angela • Apr 1, 2025 at 2:46 pm
So you don’t know anything about Brooks, very little about women’s basketball, and I’m guessing nothing except what you’ve recently read about Cassidy, but somehow you feel qualified to write an opinion on this post. Do you even live in Kentucky? If ever there was a time someone should have stayed in their lane, this was it.
Bobby Scott • Mar 31, 2025 at 10:13 pm
What an idiot this coach must be. He knows nothing of Ky kids growing up in far-flung places of the state with the dream of wearing that uniform. Geez, what a greedy, me first culture we have become. College BB & FB have become like the NBA/NFL/MLB. Goodbye to amateur sports. Free agents, carpetbaggers, learning the art of GREED at a young age. Forget love and loyalty.
Undie • Mar 31, 2025 at 7:23 pm
Maybe they should take away his Coach of the Year award to someone who deserves it and understands UK basketball and loyalty…I’ve bled blue my whole life but not for UK women til he’s gone! He’s lucky she’s got class and she will do great things because of who she is and how she handled this jerk!!!!
Eric • Apr 2, 2025 at 2:03 pm
Shameful coaching choice
Mike Mccormick • Mar 31, 2025 at 5:54 pm
So if another Ky gal with the same love for the state and game replaces her.. will that dry your tears?
Jason Wilkerson • Apr 1, 2025 at 3:13 am
Such an asinine and moronic comment to be made on a heartfelt and very specific article that explains everything that was done wrong by this coach to a Blue-Blood loyal player who has faced more adversity in her short life that resolved around her passion of basketball and team sport than most people face their entire life around something they love and were passionate about!
Shame on you for your comment making this sound like your dog died and just go get another dog and get on with your life without grieving. Your exactly where the term opinions are like Assholes everybody has one because you sir are that asshole!
Angela • Apr 1, 2025 at 3:00 pm
Brooks will end up with about 7 scholarships from the massive exit of this team. He could have kept Cassidy and any other “Ky gal” wanting to play for Kentucky. Your hypothetical doesn’t wash.
Linda • Mar 31, 2025 at 5:05 pm
Up until now, Kenny Brooks has made good decisions for UK Women’s Basketball. This was a bad call and very telling.
Chip zaring • Mar 31, 2025 at 8:35 pm
I was on board with coach brooks from the start, loved him and our team, but this is shameful! Go back to VT!!!
KAM • Mar 31, 2025 at 11:13 pm
Already burned that bridge. We don’t want him back!
Hutch S • Apr 1, 2025 at 6:11 am
No thanks you can keep him.
Chris • Apr 1, 2025 at 6:16 am
As a Hokie, we don’t want him back. You can keep him!
Mike • Apr 1, 2025 at 10:26 am
The Hokies don’t want him back after the way he abandoned the Hokies Nation.
Mary • Apr 1, 2025 at 6:30 pm
No way. He isn’t welcome in Blacksburg. He’s all yours!
Randy Keeton • Mar 31, 2025 at 3:50 pm
This is wrong. I’m being negative, but I don’t care if the Lady Cats wins a game next year. Brooks doesn’t understand Ky and especially eastern Ky, so as soon as he moves on, I’m fine.
She played and cheered her heart out for 3 years and deserved better. Her future appears excellent and I wish her the best!!
Jim Woolums • Mar 31, 2025 at 2:58 pm
Great article and every word about Cassidy is true…and how BBN has the back of its own. I DO want to hear about whether her doing the Doctorate in PT was a factor at all?
Teresa Wilson • Apr 1, 2025 at 3:33 am
If her doing the Doctorate in PT was the reason she quit I understand. Her education is the most important thing. If she quit because of being forced out then she was wronged.
Bruce Sibert • Mar 31, 2025 at 2:56 pm
Well said!
J S Kerr • Mar 31, 2025 at 1:37 pm
Excellent article, you covered it completely. How could Brooks be that stupid, what the h*ll is he thinking. As bad a PR move as I have seen, since those idiots at Bud LightI wish Cassidy the best, and hope she realizes the BBN is behind her 100%
Jeff Walker • Mar 31, 2025 at 3:08 pm
Give her a walk on spot!!
Bill Carstensen • Mar 31, 2025 at 8:46 pm
As a VT Fan and season ticket holder for many years, I feel your irritation with CKB (as our boards used to call him). He left all of us without a word of thanks or even a polite goodbye. So sorry for Cassidy.
While a talented coach a recruiter, CKB is just not very good at moving on with class and respect.