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FINAL: Kentucky's impressive 2nd half fuels 'Cats past St. John's 78-66 in Jayden Quaintance's debut

Zack Geogheganby: Zack Geoghegan12/20/25ZGeogheganKSR

It was a tale of two halves for Kentucky down in Atlanta. The second half, led by a future lottery pick, was a fairytale that the Big Blue Nation will hope doesn’t end anytime soon.

On Saturday afternoon in State Farm Arena, the Wildcats (8-4) picked up their first ranked win of the season, beating No. 22 St. John’s (7-4) by a final score of 78-66 in the CBS Sports Classic. Head coach Mark Pope can thank sophomore big man Jayden Quaintance for leading the second-half charge. In his long-awaited season debut for the ‘Cats, Quaintance went for 10 points (5-7 FG), eight rebounds, and a pair of blocks, most of his production coming after halftime. After trailing 32-25 at the break, UK won the second by 19 points.

Quaintance was special, particularly on the defensive end, but he had plenty of help along the way. Otega Oweh led all scorers with 20 points and five rebounds, while Jaland Lowe, who went down early in this game, fought through pain to finish with 13 points and three assists. Kam Williams had his best game of the season, too, playing his usual stout defense to go along with 11 points (2-5 3PT) before fouling out down the stretch.

The first half from Kentucky was an ugly one offensively — no way around it. But the second-half performance will have a ton of fans buying back into this group. Kentucky shot 54.5 percent from the field and 14-16 from the free-throw line after halftime. St. John’s shot just 33.3 percent for the entire game.

Kentucky’s defense set the tone early. Three quick blocks, two from Malachi Moreno and one from Mo Dioubate, kept St. John’s from finding easy points. But the Wildcat offense struggled out of the gate with three immediate turnovers. Lowe was one of the first off the bench, but after just seven seconds of game time, he re-aggravated his hurt shoulder and ran straight back to the locker room. He would not return for the rest of the half.

Luckily, Quaintance soon made his season debut to bring back some of the juice lost after Lowe’s injury — and the sophomore big man made a real impact from the jump. His first two-minute stint saw him add two points and a block. Offense was still a major issue for Kentucky, but excellent play on the defensive end of the floor allowed the ‘Cats some wiggle room. It was a 10-8 UK lead at the second media timeout with St. John’s shooting just 2-15 from the field.

But Kentucky’s scoring struggles would soon catch up with them. St. John’s was regularly getting to the free-throw line and eventually chipped in a handful of field goals. The Red Storm jumped out to a 26-16 lead with five minutes until the intermission. Kentucky managed to trim its deficit down to five, but St. John’s took a 32-25 lead at the break. Despite averaging just 9.7 turnovers per game this season, UK had 11 miscues (which St. John’s turned into 16 points) through the first 20 minutes of this one.

It took Kentucky a couple of minutes to hit a groove out of the locker room, but Oweh helped make it happen with a steal and two timely buckets, the latter an and-one, to make it 41-38 in favor of the Johnnies by the first media timeout. Lowe also returned during this stint. Once Quaintance checked back in, the momentum shifted towards the ‘Cats. UK had made seven of its last eight field goals while playing great defense to make it just a 43-42 game with 13:28 on the clock as Pitino was forced to call a timeout.

As it turns out, having a fully healthy roster playing together helps. Kentucky’s run extended to 9-0 with Quaintance and Lowe leading the charge. Williams knocked down a transition triple to give UK a 47-43 lead at the second media timeout of the half. It didn’t stop there. Lowe hit a floater, followed by another Williams three, sending State Farm Arena into a frenzy as the Kentucky run reached 14-0 before St. John’s stopped the bleeding at the free throw line. Even still, the Red Storm went nearly nine minutes without a made field goal.

The flip had completely switched at this point. St. John’s had no luck getting around Kentucky’s defense, while the UK offense was doing enough to continue growing the lead. At the under-8 timeout, the ‘Cats were up by double-digits for the first time all afternoon, 59-49. Back-to-back dunks a few minutes later for Quaintance put Kentucky up by a dozen as time was running out on the Johnnies. A Lowe three would build a 15-point edge for UK, the largest of the game.

With a sizable lead in hand, Kentucky was able to run out the clock from there, coasting to the biggest win of the season. That one sure felt good.

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2026-01-06