Mark Pope falls in love with 'Catlanta' after smashmouth win over Rick Pitino

Mark Pope was unaware, he isn't anymore.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: DEC 20 CBS Sports Classic St. John's vs Kentucky
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: DEC 20 CBS Sports Classic St. John's vs Kentucky | Icon Sportswire/GettyImages

Mark Pope has been part of a lot of Kentucky environments, but even he had something new to learn this week.

Catlanta.

“I was in the hotel yesterday and I did not even know what Catlanta was,” Pope admitted after the win. “It definitely looked like Catlanta out there today. It felt like a home game.”

That is exactly what it was. State Farm Arena looked like Rupp South, a sea of blue swallowing up a neutral site game and turning it into a December statement. On a day where Kentucky had to grind, that crowd mattered.

Mark Pope downplays Rick Pitino storyline but embraces the smashmouth win

Pope called the first half “dysfunctional” offensively, and that might have been kind. Kentucky turned the ball over, couldn't make a shot and could not get into any rhythm. What kept them in it was the identity he keeps hammering into this roster.

Smashmouth.

This was not pretty. It was physical. It was rugged. It was the kind of game you have to win if you want to be taken seriously again on the national stage.

Of course, the cameras and promos tried to make it all about pupil versus teacher. Rick Pitino on one sideline, the captain from his 1996 title team on the other. That storyline writes itself, but Pope tried all week to push it to the background.

“The only thing I care about is our team growing,” Pope said. “I love coach. I am just happy for our guys, I am happy for BBN.”

He did give everyone a little peek behind the curtain on what it means to beat a Pitino team.

“Very few people know him better than me in the sense of how tough he is and how he gets his team to play hard,” Pope said. “For our guys to stand up to that, it was great for us.”

It was not just about the moment either. Pope used the platform to lift up another program that has set the standard for Kentucky toughness this year.

“Give a shout out to our volleyball team who is about to go win a national championship,” he said. “We are trying to follow in their footsteps, man, of how competitive and resilient and refuse to lose they are.”

That is the through line now. Catlanta showing up like a postseason site. Kentucky embracing a smashmouth identity. A head coach who is not ducking the standard, but chasing it.

The offense will come and go. Shots will fall some nights and brick on others. But if this version of Kentucky keeps defending like that, keeps leaning into the fight, and keeps packing arenas away from home with that kind of noise, Catlanta will not be a one time thing.

It will become a warning label for every team left on the schedule

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