With Kentucky football’s (5-7, 2-6 SEC) 41-0 loss against in-state rival Louisville (8-4, 4-4 ACC), the Wildcats have fallen short of bowl contention and dropped the Governor’s Cup in back-to-back seasons.
Kentucky has been far from an annual national title contender for most of its history. So, Kentucky fans have had to set a few arbitrary markers that indicate the success of any given season.
For many, a bowl game appearance, a positive record and Governor’s Cup win indicate a great season. Two of the three happening makes for a pretty good season. Just one of three happening is a solid season. None of the three occurring means the Cats had a flat-out bad season.
For the first time in 10 years, Kentucky has fallen short on all three of these marks in back-to-back seasons. Giving many reasons to believe that Kentucky football is a program in decline.
Mark Stoops was hired as Kentucky Head Coach in 2013, inheriting a roster that went 2-10 the season before.
Stoops went 2-10 in year one, before showing signs of turnaround with a record of 5-7 in years two and three.
In year four, after having time to fill a roster with players he recruited and developed, Stoops led the Cats to a 7-5 record in 2016.
This was Kentucky’s first season with a positive win/loss record in six seasons. The Cats ended a five season streak without a bowl appearance as well.
Kentucky also ended Louisville’s five game win streak in the Governor’s Cup with a 41-38 victory, which was the longest streak in the Governor’s Cup era.
Under Stoops guidance, Kentucky had completed the trifecta for the first time in six seasons. This provided hope that the Kentucky football program was back on track.
In 2017, Stoops led the Wildcats to a positive record and a bowl appearance, resulting in a pretty good season despite a loss to Louisville.
In the Covid-shortened 2020 season, the Governors Cup was not held and Kentucky finished below .500. Considering they didn’t play Louisville, the absence of a win cant be held against them. A shortened schedule removing out of conference games, which typically provided easy wins, could be to blame for the negative record. Kentucky still made a bowl game which meant the season wasn’t a complete failure.
Stoops and the Cats would go on to check all three boxes indicating a great season in 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022 and 2023.
Kentucky finished 4-8 in 2024, a negative record that rendered the Cats ineligible for a bowl after an eight season streak. Kentucky was also dismantled by Louisville 41-14 in Lexington.
This was the first outright bad season, considering the three markers, since 2015.
Then came 2025, 10 seasons since Stoops gave the Kentucky football program a fresh spark. The Wildcats moved to 5-7 with a 41-0 demolition at the hands of Louisville in the Governor’s Cup, making them ineligible for a bowl for the second straight season.
This made two seasons in-a-row that Stoops and the Wildcats failed to reach any of the three indicators of a good season, resulting in two objectively bad seasons.
In his first three seasons Stoops had the benefit of the doubt, a few seasons of grace to put together his roster and acclimate to the SEC. In those seasons he gave plenty of reason for hope, eventually rewarding the patience given to him.
However, that same grace cannot be afforded in his 13th season at the helm. There’s no excuses for inheriting a poor roster or needing to establish a culture. There’s no excuse for not knowing what it takes to win games in the SEC. That hope that was given in the years of Stoops’ early struggles has turned to dread and worry.
Stoops brought Kentucky’s football program to a level it had previously never been at consistently. As the longest tenured coach in program history and all-time wins leader, Stoops positive influence on Kentucky football cannot be denied.
However, the program has taken considerable steps in the wrong direction over the past two seasons. With Stoops being primarily to blame for most all of them.
Both things can be true, it’s possible to appreciate the good Stoops has done without using it as an excuse to allow him to run the program into the ground.
Kentucky has fallen from the standards that Stoops himself set, without much reason to believe that things will change for the better.
With two consecutive bad seasons, the Wildcats football program under Stoops is not showing growth or improvement, instead the program is in a state of decay under his guidance.





























































































































































Greg • Nov 29, 2025 at 6:42 pm
The coaches are horrible and we can’t recruit. The JUCO patchwork approach is a joke. No continuity in the program and a boring brand of play
Gordon McIntosh • Nov 29, 2025 at 6:41 pm
Time for a change!!!! Stoops has outlived his ability to recruit, coach, and put a quality product on the field. Take the AD with you when you go Mark!!!
Joe • Nov 29, 2025 at 5:36 pm
Very well summarized in the editorial. No reason UK should not be competing at the top of SEC. The buck stops with Coach Stoops. Poor selection of coaching staff. This then led to poor use of the portal with no real development of multi-year athletes for the team. The AD needs to either make changes or maybe he also needs to be replaced. Either way hopefully, 2025 is a significant emotional event and drive change at every level with or without Coach Stoops.
Linda A Powell • Nov 29, 2025 at 5:05 pm
The SEC is tough, but every year? KY fans deserve better.
Penny Compton Black • Nov 29, 2025 at 4:33 pm
Kentucky needs a new head coach. Please, please, please!!!!
CC • Nov 29, 2025 at 3:24 pm
I will always root for UK football but my feelings weren’t hurt that they lost and lost embarrassingly to UL today. Hopefully that takes them one step closer to getting rid of Stoops. But I’m not holding my breath, considering the hole the school got themselves into with his undeserving contract.
Nttam • Nov 30, 2025 at 3:42 pm
Agreed. However the underserrving contract issue is a false issue because where there is a will, there should be a way.
David • Nov 29, 2025 at 2:47 pm
UK football is poorly coached. Stoops is behind by 3 and 4 touchdowns and is still running the ball up the middle. There is no imagination on offense. The defense plays whenever they feel like it. It is on the entire staff but Stoops is the leader