2012–13 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team

The 2012–13 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2012–13 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The Wildcats, coached by Matthew Mitchell, are a member of the Southeastern Conference, and play their home games on campus at Memorial Coliseum—unlike UK's famous men's program, which plays off-campus at Rupp Arena in downtown Lexington.

2012–13 Kentucky Wildcats women's basketball
NCAA Women's Division I Tournament, Elite Eight
ConferenceSoutheastern Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 7
APNo. 8
Record30–6 (13–3 SEC)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
  • Matt Insell (Fifth season)
  • Shalon Pillow (Fourth season)
  • Danielle Santos (First season)
Home arenaMemorial Coliseum (Capacity: 10,000)
Seasons
2012–13 SEC women's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 10 Tennessee 14 2   .875 27 8   .771
No. 7 Kentucky 13 3   .813 30 6   .833
No. 14 Georgia 12 4   .750 28 7   .800
No. 17 South Carolina 11 5   .688 25 8   .758
No. 9 Texas A&M 11 5   .688 25 10   .714
LSU 10 6   .625 22 12   .647
Vanderbilt 9 7   .563 21 12   .636
Arkansas 6 10   .375 20 13   .606
Florida 6 10   .375 22 15   .595
Missouri 6 10   .375 17 15   .531
Auburn 5 11   .313 19 15   .559
Mississippi State 5 11   .313 13 17   .433
Alabama 2 14   .125 13 18   .419
Ole Miss 2 14   .125 9 20   .310
2013 SEC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

Pre-season outlook edit

The Wildcats returned four starters, including 2012 SEC Player of the Year A'dia Mathies and SEC Freshman of the Year Bria Goss, from a team that finished 28–7 and won their second regular-season Southeastern Conference title in school history, their first since 1981–82. Jennifer O'Neil also returned after sitting out the 2011–12 season with a knee injury, and Kentucky added DeNesha Stallworth (transfer from California), Jelleah Sidney (transfer from Chipola Junior College), and Janee Thompson (McDonald's All-American from Whitney Young High School).[1] The Wildcats were ranked 6th in the Associated Press Preseason Poll, the highest preseason ranking in school history.[2] The SEC coaches also picked Kentucky as the preseason favorite to win the 2012–13 conference title and named A'dia Mathies preseason player of the year.[3]

Recruiting edit

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight Commit date
Janee Thompson
PG
Chicago, Illinois Whitney Young HS 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m) N/A Oct 31, 2011 
Recruiting star ratings: ScoutN/A   RivalsN/A   247SportsN/A    ESPN grade: 94
Overall recruiting rankings:
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

2012–13 roster edit

From the official UK women's basketball site Archived 2013-06-01 at the Wayback Machine:

# Name Height Position Class Hometown Previous Team(s)
Scholarship Players
0 Jennifer O'Neill 5'6" G RS So. Bronx, New York Saint Michael Academy
1 A'dia Mathies 5'9" G Sr. Louisville, Kentucky Iroquois
3 Janee Thompson 5'7" G Fr. Chicago, Illinois Whitney Young
10 Bernisha Pinkett 5'7" G Jr. Washington, District of Columbia Howard D. Woodson
11 DeNesha Stallworth 6'3" C Jr. Richmond, California Pinole Valley/California
12 Jelleah Sidney 6'2" F/C Jr. Queens Village, New York Saint Michael Academy/Chipola Junior College
13 Bria Goss 5'10" G So. Indianapolis, Indiana Ben Davis
20 Maegan Conwright 5'8" G Jr. Arlington, Texas Timberview
23 Samarie Walker 6'1" F Jr. West Carrollton, Ohio Chaminade-Julienne/Connecticut
31 Samantha Drake 6'3" C Jr. Bardstown, Kentucky Nelson County
32 Kastine Evans 5'8" G Jr. Salem, Connecticut Norwich Free Academy
40 Brittany Henderson 6'2" F Sr. Pasadena, California John Muir
50 Azia Bishop 6'3" F So. Toledo, Ohio Start

2012–13 schedule edit

Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
Exhibition
November 5*
6:00 pm
No. 6 Bellarmine University W 113–33 
Memorial Coliseum (2,202)
Lexington, KY
Non-conference regular season
November 10*
1:00 pm
No. 6 at Delaware State W 90–50  1–0
Memorial Coliseum (4,637)
Lexington, KY
November 13*
6:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 6 at No. 1 Baylor L 51–85  1–1
Ferrell Center (8,538)
Waco, TX
November 17*
1:00 pm
No. 6 High Point W 80–46  2–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,169)
Lexington, KY
November 23*
4:00 pm
No. 9 Morehead State W 73–37  3–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,421)
Lexington, KY
November 25*
1:00 pm, UK IMG/FSN
No. 9 USC Upstate W 100–34  4–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,223)
Lexington, KY
November 28*
11:00 am
No. 9 Miami (Ohio) W 92–53  5–1
Memorial Coliseum (6,476)
Lexington, KY
December 2*
6:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 9 at No. 6 Louisville
The Battle For The Bluegrass
W 48–47  6–1
KFC Yum! Center (15,453)
Louisville, KY
December 7*
7:00 pm, UK IMG/FSN
No. 7 DePaul W 96–64  7–1
Rupp Arena (18,488)
Lexington, KY
December 9*
1:00 pm, UK IMG/FSN
No. 7 Middle Tennessee State W 68–46  8–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,935)
Lexington, KY
December 18*
10:00 pm
No. 7 at Pepperdine W 80–62  9–1
Firestone Fieldhouse (413)
Malibu, CA
December 21*
6:00 pm
No. 7 at UC Santa Barbara W 66–38  10–1
The Thunderdome (853)
Santa Barbara, CA
December 28*
7:00 pm
No. 7 Alcorn State W 90–23  11–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,831)
Lexington, KY
December 30*
1:00 pm, UK IMG/FSN
No. 7 Marist W 78–56  12–1
Memorial Coliseum (4,919)
Lexington, KY
January 3
7:00 pm, FSSO
No. 6 Florida W 76–69  13–1 (1–0)
Memorial Coliseum (4,862)
Lexington, KY
January 6
3:00 pm
No. 6 at Alabama W 87–70  14–1 (2–0)
Foster Auditorium (1,342)
Tuscaloosa, AL
January 10
7:00 pm, UK IMG/FSN
No. 6 No. 20 Texas A&M W 65–62  15–1 (3–0)
Memorial Coliseum (5,246)
Lexington, KY
January 13
1:30 pm, ESPNU
No. 6 at Missouri W 69–43  16–1 (4–0)
Mizzou Arena (2,176)
Columbia, MO
January 17
7:00 pm
No. 5 Mississippi State W 100–47  17–1 (5–0)
Memorial Coliseum (4,631)
Lexington, KY
January 20
2:00 pm, SECN
No. 5 Auburn W 97–53  18–1 (6–0)
Memorial Coliseum (5,372)
Lexington, KY
January 24
7:00 pm, SPSO
No. 5 at No. 18 South Carolina L 50–55  18–2 (6–1)
Colonial Life Arena (3,149)
Columbia, SC
January 27
3:00 pm, SPSO
No. 5 LSU W 73–60  19–2 (7–1)
Memorial Coliseum (6,428)
Lexington, KY
February 3
2:00 pm, SECN
No. 8 No. 13 Georgia L 71–75  19–3 (7–2)
Memorial Coliseum (7,016)
Lexington, Kentucky
February 7
8:00 pm
No. 10 at Arkansas W 80–74 yes 20–3 (8–2)
Bud Walton Arena (1,935)
Fayetteville, AR
February 10
4:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 10 at Vanderbilt W 75–53  21–3 (9–2)
Memorial Gymnasium (5,233)
Nashville, TN
February 14
7:00 pm
No. 9 No. 14 South Carolina W 78–74  22–3 (10–2)
Memorial Coliseum (5,828)
Lexington, KY
February 18
7:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 8 at No. 10 Texas A&M W 70–66  23–3 (11–2)
Reed Arena (6,814)
College Station, TX
February 24
3:00 pm
No. 8 at LSU L 72–77  23–4 (11–3)
Pete Maravich Assembly Center (6,773)
Baton Rouge, LA
February 28
8:00 pm
No. 10 at Ole Miss W 90–65  24–4 (12–3)
Tad Smith Coliseum (637)
Oxford, MS
March 3
3:30 pm, ESPNU
No. 10 No. 8 Tennessee
Rivalry
W 78–65  25–4 (13–3)
Memorial Coliseum (7,965)
Lexington, KY
SEC tournament
March 8
6:00 pm, SPSO
No. 7 vs. Vanderbilt
Quarterfinals
W 76–65  26–4
Arena at Gwinnett Center (N/A)
Duluth, GA
March 9
6:00 pm, ESPNU
No. 7 vs. No. 12 Georgia
Semifinals
W 60–38  27–4
Arena at Gwinnett Center (6,630)
Duluth, GA
March 10
6:00 pm, ESPN2
No. 7 vs. No. 19 Texas A&M
Championship
L 67–75  27–5
The Arena at Gwinnett Center (5,076)
Duluth, GA
2013 NCAA tournament
March 24*
12:05 pm, ESPNU
No. (2) vs. No. (15) Navy
First Round
W 61–41  28–5
Carnesecca Arena (N/A)
Queens, New York
March 26*
7:00 pm, ESPN2
No. (2) vs. No. (7) Dayton
Second Round
W 84–70  29–5
Carnesecca Arena (1,144)
Queens, NY
March 30*
12:04 pm, ESPN
No. (2) vs. No. (6) Delaware
Sweet Sixteen
W 69–62  30–5
Webster Bank Arena (N/A)
Bridgewater, CT
April 1
7:30 pm, ESPN
No. 8 (2) vs. No. 1 (1) Connecticut
Elite Eight
L 53–83  30–6
Webster Bank Arena (8,594)
Bridgeport, CT
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Eastern Time.

Player stats edit

Player Games Played Minutes Field Goals Three Pointers Free Throws Rebounds Assists Blocks Steals Points

Regular season notes edit

  • Bernisha Pinkett finished with career highs of 21 points, 10 rebounds and 5 assists against Miami (OH) on November 28.[4]
  • UK set new single-game attendance record of 18,488 vs. DePaul on December 7 in Rupp Arena. The previous record was 14,508 on December 8, 2011, vs. Duke.[5]
  • DeNesha Stallworth was named SEC Player of the Week on December 10.[6]
  • Kentucky defeated Mississippi State, 100–47, on January 17. The 53-point margin of victory is the largest against an SEC opponent in school history.[7]
  • DeNesha Stallworth scored a career-high 25 points in 24 minutes against Mississippi State [7]
  • A'dia Mathies was named SEC Player of the Week on January 21.[8]
  • Kentucky won a school record 17 straight games from November 17 to January 24.[9]
  • Kentucky set a school record with a 34-game home winning streak.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ "UK Hoops Ranks in Top 10 of Preseason Magazines" (Press release). ukathletics.com. October 4, 2012. Archived from the original on July 5, 2013. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  2. ^ "UK Hoops Ranked No. 6 in Preseason AP Poll" (Press release). ukathletics.com. October 27, 2012. Archived from the original on November 1, 2012. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  3. ^ "SEC Coaches Select UK Hoops to Win League Crown" (Press release). ukathletics.com. November 6, 2012. Archived from the original on November 19, 2012. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  4. ^ "Pinkett's Career Day Leads Hoops Past Miami" (Press release). ukathletics.com. November 28, 2012. Archived from the original on December 3, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  5. ^ "Kentucky-DePaul Postgame Notes" (Press release). ukathletics.com. December 7, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  6. ^ "Stallworth Tabbed SEC Player of the Week" (Press release). ukathletics.com. December 10, 2012. Archived from the original on July 10, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  7. ^ a b "Kentucky-Mississippi State Postgame Notes" (Press release). ukathletics.com. January 17, 2013. Archived from the original on July 10, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  8. ^ "Mathies Named SEC Player of the Week" (Press release). ukathletics.com. January 21, 2013. Archived from the original on July 10, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  9. ^ "UK Hoops Takes Winning Streak on the Road to South Carolina" (Press release). ukathletics.com. January 23, 2013. Archived from the original on January 28, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  10. ^ "No. 8/7 UK Hoops Meets No. 13/14 Georgia Sunday in Memorial" (Press release). ukathletics.com. February 1, 2013. Archived from the original on February 6, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.