Kentucky–Louisville rivalry

Sports rivalry between the Universities of Kentucky and Louisville From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kentucky–Louisville rivalry refers to the rivalry between the University of Kentucky Wildcats (Kentucky) and the University of Louisville Cardinals (Louisville). It is considered one of the most intense and passionate rivalries in the NCAA, especially in men's college basketball. The intensity of the rivalry is heightened by the proximity of the two schools and the commonwealth of Kentucky's interest in college sports.

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Kentucky–Louisville rivalry
Sportbasketball, football, others
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60km
37miles
Louisville
Kentucky
Locations of Kentucky and Louisville
More information Louisville, Founded ...
College Comparison
Kentucky Louisville
Founded 18651798
Type PublicPublic
Location LexingtonLouisville
Conference SECACC
Students 32,95524,123
School colors       
Nickname WildcatsCardinals
Stadium Kroger FieldL&N Federal Credit Union Stadium
Arena Rupp ArenaKFC Yum! Center
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Men's basketball

Quick facts Sport, First meeting ...
Kentucky–Louisville men's basketball rivalry
Kentucky Wildcats
Louisville Cardinals
SportBasketball
First meetingFebruary 15, 1913
Kentucky 34, Louisville 10
Latest meetingNovember 11, 2025
Louisville 96, Kentucky 88
Next meetingDecember 12, 2026
Statistics
Meetings total58
All-time seriesKentucky leads, 40–18
Largest victoryKentucky: 34 points (1948)
Louisville: 22 points (1988)
Current win streakLouisville, 1 (2025–present)
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The Kentucky–Louisville rivalry has been ranked the 2nd best rivalry in college basketball by Bleacher Report and 3rd best rivalry in all of college sports by Basketball Hall of Fame contributor Dick Vitale.[1] Kentucky and Louisville first played against each other in 1913 but stopped playing each other in the 1920s, playing only twelve times between 1913 and 1983. The rivalry went dormant after UK coach Adolf Rupp wanted to stop playing Louisville. Louisville tried numerous times to revive the rivalry to no avail. It wasn't until they were forced to meet in the NCAA Tournament in 1983 dubbed "The Dream Game" which Louisville won that the series was revived. 1983 NCAA tournament. Since then, the two teams have met each year in late December or early January. 2025 will mark the first time that the rivalry game will be the season opener for both teams.

Much like the Iron Bowl, the Kentucky–Louisville rivalry is all the more intense because the two schools have consistently been among the nation's elite men's basketball teams for most of the last 50 years. Both schools are also two of the most victorious programs in NCAA men's basketball history; Kentucky is #1 on the list of all-time winningest programs in Division I Men's Basketball with 127 seasons played and Louisville #30 with 111 seasons played. Kentucky has eight national championships and Louisville three, one having been vacated by the NCAA. Both schools also sit in the top ten of men's basketball teams that have had athletes to be picked in the first round of the NBA draft. Kentucky has had 46 players selected in the first round, while Louisville has had 24.

Two more aspects of the rivalry add even more fuel. Unlike conference rivalries such as Duke–North Carolina, UK and U of L only play once each season. Also, the two schools did not play in the regular season for more than 60 years. According to local Louisville journalist Rick Bozich,[2]

Unlike the Tobacco Road series, one of these programs (Kentucky) once had to be strong-armed into playing the other. I'm not sure how you measure bile but competitive animosity between U of L and UK ranks at the top of the charts — no matter how many times ESPN rolls its Tyler Hansbrough video. Any stories you have heard about folks in the U of L athletic department annually counting the column inches devoted to the U of L and UK football and basketball programs every week in The Courier Journal are absolutely true. So are the stories about folks at Kentucky asking why several Louisville TV stations chose red, not blue, as the color for their official station winter jackets.

History

The rivalry was fueled when Rick Pitino was hired as Louisville's head men's basketball coach in 2001. He served in that same role with Kentucky from 1989 to 1997.[3] In the time that Rick Pitino was the head coach at Louisville from 2001 to 2017, Kentucky has won 12 of its contests and Louisville has won 6 of its contests.[4] Kentucky leads the all-time series with Louisville 37–17, and Kentucky leads the modern series 28–14.[5] In six tournament meetings as of 2014, Kentucky leads the series four games to two with their most recent win coming in the 2014 sweet sixteen 74–69. The teams met in the 2012 Final Four, and Kentucky defeated Louisville with a score of 69–61 en route to the national title. This was the deepest ever tournament meeting between the two schools and their first tournament meeting since 1984.

Results

Rankings are from the AP Poll (1936–present)

Kentucky victoriesLouisville victoriesTie gamesVacated wins[n 1]
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Notes

  1. Louisville has vacated all of its victories from the 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, 2014–15 seasons. These 123 wins are not included in Louisville's all-time record, nor are the victories against Kentucky during this span counted in the series record between the two teams.[6]

A 1948 USA Olympic Trial Game
B 1951 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
C 1959 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
D 1983 NCAA Elite Eight
E 1984 NCAA Sweet Sixteen
F 2012 NCAA Final Four
G 2014 NCAA Sweet Sixteen

Wins by location

More information Category, Louisville ...
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Game MVP

NOTE: The 2010 game was the inaugural year for the award. The Bluegrass Sports Commission (BSC) names the Most Valuable Player of the men's basketball game between the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville.

More information Date, Player ...
Date Player Team Position Statistics
 12-31-2010 Josh Harrellson KentuckyC23 Points, 14 Rebounds [7]
 12-31-2011 Michael Kidd-Gilchrist KentuckyF24 Points, 19 Rebounds[8]
 12-29-2012 Russ Smith LouisvilleG21 Points, 7 Rebounds
 12-28-2013 James Young KentuckyF18 Points, 10 Rebounds[9]
 12-27-2014 Tyler Ulis KentuckyG14 Points, 2 Assists[10]
 12-26-2015 Tyler Ulis KentuckyG21 Points, 8 Assists[11]
 12-21-2016 Quentin Snider LouisvilleG22 Points, 6 Rebounds, 5 Assists[12]
 12-29-2017 Shai Gilgeous-Alexander KentuckyG24 Points, 5 Rebounds, 4 Assists, 3 Steals[13]
 12-29-2018 Tyler Herro KentuckyG24 Points, 5 Rebounds, 2 Steals[14]
 12-28-2019 Tyrese Maxey KentuckyG27 Points, 7 Rebounds[15]
 12-26-2020 Carlik Jones & David Johnson LouisvilleJones: G
Johnson: G
Jones: 20 Points, 5 Rebounds
Johnson: 17 Points, 7 Rebounds[16]
 12-31-2022 Jacob Toppin KentuckyF24 Points, 7 Rebounds, 2 Assists[17]
 12-21-2023 Antonio Reeves KentuckyG30 Points, 2 Assists, 2 Steals[18]
 12-14-2024 Lamont Butler KentuckyG33 Points, 3 Rebounds, 6 Assists[19]
 11-11-2025 Mikel Brown Jr. LouisvilleG29 Points, 2 Rebounds, 5 Assists[20]
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Broadcast history

More information Date, Network ...
Date Network Play-by-play Analyst(s)
March 26, 1983 CBS Gary Bender Billy Packer
November 26, 1983 WTBS Skip Caray Joe Dean
March 22, 1984 NCAA Productions/ESPN Tom Hammond Larry Conley
December 15, 1984 Lorimar Sports Network Tom Hammond Irv Brown
December 28, 1985 CBS Brent Musburger Billy Packer
December 27, 1986 CBS Brent Musburger Billy Packer
December 22, 1987 CBS Brent Musburger Billy Packer
December 31, 1988 CBS Tim Brant Billy Packer
January 2, 2001 ESPN Bob Carpenter Larry Conley
December 29, 2001 CBS Jim Nantz Billy Packer
December 28, 2002 ESPN Dan Shulman Dick Vitale
December 27, 2003 CBS Gus Johnson Billy Packer
December 18, 2004 ESPN Dan Shulman Dick Vitale
December 17, 2005 CBS Verne Lundquist Billy Packer
December 16, 2006 CBS Verne Lundquist Billy Packer
January 5, 2008 CBS Verne Lundquist Billy Packer
January 4, 2009 CBS Kevin Harlan Clark Kellogg
January 3, 2010 CBS Verne Lundquist Clark Kellogg
December 31, 2010 CBS Gus Johnson Clark Kellogg
December 31, 2011 CBS Ian Eagle Clark Kellogg
March 31, 2012 CBS Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg
Steve Kerr
December 29, 2012 CBS Tim Brando Greg Anthony
Clark Kellogg
December 28, 2013 CBS Jim Nantz Greg Anthony
March 28, 2014 CBS Jim Nantz Greg Anthony
December 27, 2014 ESPN2 Dan Shulman Jay Bilas
December 26, 2015 CBS Tom McCarthy Bill Raftery
December 21, 2016 ESPN Dan Shulman Jay Bilas
December 29, 2017 CBS Spero Dedes Bill Raftery
December 29, 2018 ESPN2 Dan Shulman Jay Bilas
December 28, 2019 CBS Brad Nessler Bill Raftery
December 26, 2020 ESPN Dan Shulman Dick Vitale
December 31, 2022 CBS Tom McCarthy Bill Raftery
December 21, 2023 ESPN Wes Durham Jimmy Dykes
December 14, 2024 ESPN Dan Shulman Jay Bilas
November 11, 2025 ESPN Dan Shulman Jay Bilas
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Football

The football rivalry between Kentucky and Louisville started one year earlier than the basketball rivalry but also had a long dormant period. Kentucky and Louisville first played each other in football in 1912 – which was also Louisville's inaugural football season –. Kentucky dominated six meetings between the teams from 1912 until 1924, holding Louisville scoreless in all six games, after which the teams stopped playing. Despite Louisville's persistent efforts to revive the series, Kentucky showed little interest, according to The Courier-Journal. In 1994, under former Kentucky player Howard Schnellenberger, Louisville revived the series after a 70-year hiatus. Kentucky agreed to resume the rivalry only on the condition that the first four games be played in Lexington – a stipulation UofL accepted.[21] Kentucky leads the series currently 19–17 but Louisville leads the Governor's Cup series 17–13.

From 1994 to 2006 the annual matchup was the first game of the season for Kentucky and was the first game for all but two of those years for Louisville. In 2007 Kentucky moved the game to the third game of the season when played in Lexington but remained the first game when played in Louisville. Starting in 2014, which marked Louisville's inaugural season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Governor's Cup became the last game of the regular season for both teams to coincide with several other ACC-SEC same-state rivalries.[22]

Other sports

  • Women's basketball: Kentucky leads the series 36–24 as of the 2025–26 season. The series dates back to the 1911–12 season, long before Kentucky and Louisville's programs became varsity in 1974–75, from which the series has been continuously active.[23] Kentucky's program was halted by University Senate because it was viewed as a sport that was "too strenuous for girls". It wouldn't return to the University of Kentucky until 1974.[24]
  • Women's volleyball: Kentucky leads the series 37–29 as of 2025 in a series that initially was played every year from 1977 to 2005 except in 1981 and resumed in 2009 after a hiatus.[25][26]
  • Men's soccer: The two men's soccer programs have met 37 times. Kentucky leads 18–17–5 as of 2025.[27] On February 21, 2020, it was announced that the two teams would play an exhibition game in the new Lynn Family Stadium. This is the new soccer stadium for Louisville City FC. The match was supposed to be played on April 18, the day of Thunder Over Louisville, however, it was cancelled due to growing concerns of COVID-19.[28]
  • Baseball: Kentucky baseball was founded on 1896, with Louisville baseball starting its first season in 1909. As of 2025, Kentucky leads the series 66–50–1 in a series dating back to 1925.[29][30] In 2017, Louisville won the season series 3–1, including a sweep of Kentucky in the NCAA tournament Louisville Super Regional.[30] Louisville and Kentucky have both found recent success with each team making the College World Series, Louisville having 6 all-time appearances and Kentucky having 1.

See also

References

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