Kentucky Football: Return to Glory Part I -- Past and Present
As basketball news seems down to a trickle, it's time to look ahead to football season, and at where the Gridiron Felines figure to shake out in the SEC East. My intention is to make this part of an ongoing series, starting from the 50,000 foot view and drilling down to individual players.

There has been a lot of talk, and some pretty good analysis done on the SEC lately. We here at ASoB intend to join the party, and see if we are prescient enough to read the tea leaves for ourselves. As usual, I will disclaim my football analysis skills by warning you, dear reader, that I am a basketball guy. I am a casual football fan at best, and if that shows through, well, you have been warned.
Football, unlike basketball, has relatively few games, so the accuracy of any prognostication generally comes down to one or two games. Last year, most pundits figured the 'Cats to show up with 5 or 6 wins. That turned out to be a little low.
So let's take a look first at the past, and where we were last year compared to this year.

What a difference a year makes
Then
Last year about this time, the big topic around Wildcat land was whether we should fire Rich Brooks now, or wait until the end of the season. As Kyle King of Dawg Sports put it in a Q & A exchange with JL, "Do you think the Kentucky A.D. believes Coach Brooks is on the verge of making the Wildcats competitive again or is he just keeping the chair warm until a better option becomes available?"
The money quote from JL's answer went like this:
Now
You have to admit, JL's answer was excellent, and suggested that Barnhart wasn't nearly as tone-deaf as many UK football watchers assumed. Of course, talk of "Brooks is Barnhart's buddy" was everywhere, but in hindsight, quite simply, Barnhart was right and Brooks' detractors were wrong. The 'Cats went 8-5 and won the Music City Bowl.

Then
Kyle King (I'm picking on ol' Kyle today) had this to say in a Q & A exchange with Swamp Ball:
How'd that work out for ya, Kyle?
Now
David Fox of Rivals.com ranks the Kentucky Wildcats 38th in the land. Now, 38th is not exactly a team considered to contend for a BCS bowl bid, but it is light years away from 3-8 or 2-9. Many light years.
It turned out that even this cautiously optimistic assessment by Sports Illustrated wasn't optimistic enough:
Will the ranking of 38th by Rivals be this year's SI.com?

Then
Jon at Fulmer's Belly was shocked -- shocked! to find Kentucky in second place in the SEC East. So shocked, in fact, that he had to write it down more than one time:
Unfortunately, history will record that Tennessee held on to continue that streak, which hopefully will end at 22 this year.
Now
Fulmer's Belly has begun to recognize that Kentucky is no longer a slightly more distant version of Vanderbilt:
It remains to be seen if the "playahs" in the SEC east will take Kentucky seriously this year, if what we are seeing is merely rhetoric designed to ward off the overconfidence bug, or if Kentucky is actually worth taking seriously.
Make no mistake, the Gridiron Felines have been pussycats to this league for a long time, and one good season will not undo years of abject suckage. So if we see some scoffers out there about Kentucky's chances this fall, just remember -- we got that derision the old-fashioned way -- we earned it.
Now, let's earn some respect.

More NCAA backtracking on live blogging games. Sue, C-J, sue.
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6 comments
Comments
Hesitant
Now dont get me wrong. I feel like we have some great talent on the offensive side of the ball but our schedule is going to be much tougher than last season and the defense has got to prove to me that they can stop somebody. Turnover margins like last seasons dont happen every year so if the D cant step up then it will be a long season.
by davw83 on Jun 22, 2007 12:26 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Yeah ...
I don't know if it gets any easier in the SEC than that. Our OOC sched is a bit tougher than last year, but quite honestly, this team should be able to handle it. We are returning virtually 100% of our offense, some key defenders, and the last 2 years have provided a talent infusion.
I think it's time we raised our expectations a bit.
by Truzenzuzex on Jun 22, 2007 1:08 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
thus my point
I'll raise my expectations if I see two good years in a row. Hopefully three.
by davw83 on Jun 22, 2007 3:41 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Why wait?
by Truzenzuzex on Jun 22, 2007 3:43 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
we are now the "hunted" ..
Schools will not overlook us and lay down for us like they did last year.
We now have to expect each teams' best shot and their "A" games against us.
If we were in any other conference in America we would be in top half of every one of them.
Instead we play in by far the toughest conference in all of sports today: the brutal SEC.
And as good as we are we are still predicted by most football publications to finish 5th if not even 6th in the SEC East because I think Vandy has 17 starters coming back - not sure of exact number but I know it's a lot.
Unless we have another season like we did last year we are NOT going to get any respect even with our returning players in preseason all-SEC teams.
Our Kentucky Wildcats are probably the least respected football and probably now even the least respected basketball team in the nation. Many folks don't even have us in the top 25 in basketball when I know that Billy G is doing a fantastic job recruiting new players. Ramel Bradley, Joe Crawford, and Jodie Meeks are all good if not great talents and still many publications don't have us in the top 25 at all.
And for our Football team we return Andre Woodson, Raphael Little, Keenan Burton, Jacob Tamme, Dicky Lyons Jr., Wesley Woodyard, and super soph mature beyond his years Trevard Lindley who are all great leaders.
Many so-called experts say that we Kentucky fans always have a "chip on our shoulder" and that "we always feel the need to prove ourselves on a constant basis."
And you know what? That to me is actually a compliment to our wonderful and loyal True Blue Kentucky Fans.
And I wouldn't want it any other way!
by ukcatfan191 on Jun 23, 2007 1:36 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Agreed ...
Sooner or later, we are going to beat some of the traditional SEC powers if we continue on the path we are on now.
by Truzenzuzex on Jun 23, 2007 10:03 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs

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