There was one bright spot in Kentucky’s latest unthinkable loss. And he went uncelebrated.

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With Kentucky’s shocking loss to Oakland now more than a week in the past, the conversation since has been dominated by John Calipari’s job status, which of the Wildcats’ underclassmen might return next season, and the overall direction of the UK basketball program.

Lost once again in all the talk — overlooked one last time — has been Antonio Reeves.

The unassuming, 6-foot-6 senior guard from Chicago played his 156th and final college basketball game last Thursday night in Pittsburgh. Like most of the games before it during this transformative season, he played it very well.

It could have been a redemption story. A year earlier, Reeves had the worst game of his basketball life on the biggest stage of his career. In that 75-69 loss to Kansas State in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, he missed his first 14 shots — nine of them 3-pointers — feeling the burden of needing to score for a banged-up UK team that didn’t have much perimeter punch by the time March arrived.

His final line — 1-for-15 — lingered as a disappointing end to a largely disappointing season.

Reeves was down in the moment but — shooter’s mentality and all — turned the page on that terrible night. He said at the beginning of this season that he didn’t want to dwell on that game, though he looked forward to getting another shot at the NCAA Tournament in his final college season. Along the way, he transformed from a quiet, complementary scorer to a bonafide star, even if he remained under-appreciated for much of Kentucky’s 2023-24 run.

UK’s freshmen — Reed Sheppard, Rob Dillingham and others — got most of the attention inside the state and nationally, but Reeves kept plugging along, a steady and efficient scorer who was seemingly always there when the Wildcats needed a bucket.

As the season progressed, Reeves hit 2,000 points for his college career. He then became one of the few 1,000-point scorers in Calipari’s 15-year tenure with the program, whose stars have mostly been one-and-done players over that time, not sticking around long enough to hit that mark. The program launched an All-American campaign in his honor.

Reeves finished the regular season with seven consecutive games of 20 points or more, the first UK player since Jamal Murray, who played for the Cats eight years ago, to achieve such a run. Kentucky went 6-1 in those games — a buzzer-beater loss at LSU the only defeat — and big wins over Auburn, Alabama and Tennessee appeared to show these Wildcats were peaking at the right time, with Reeves leading the way.

As if anyone needed a reminder of his importance to this young UK team, the SEC Tournament provided one. Reeves was mired in foul trouble, played a season-low 18 minutes as a result, saw his 20-plus-point scoring spree stopped, and the Cats went home early with a loss to Texas A&M in the quarterfinals.

“We need him,” Calipari acknowledged after that one.

Kentucky guard Antonio Reeves scores against Oakland in the NCAA Tournament last week. He scored 27 points in his final game for the Wildcats. Silas Walker/swalker@herald-leader.com
Kentucky guard Antonio Reeves scores against Oakland in the NCAA Tournament last week. He scored 27 points in his final game for the Wildcats. Silas Walker/swalker@herald-leader.com

Reeves’ teammates and coaches spent the last few weeks of the season celebrating his accomplishments and lauding his improvement, the transition from uncomfortable first-year transfer to supremely confident second-year Wildcat now complete.

If there were any doubters by the time March rolled around, they hadn’t been paying attention. The only thing left was to get the bad taste of “1-for-15” out of his mouth.

The day before Kentucky’s 80-76 loss to 14-seeded Oakland in Pittsburgh, two UK players who grew up there — Tre Mitchell and Adou Thiero — sat next to Reeves for the pregame press conference, the first day of interviews in what they thought would be a sustained run through March. They were asked to explain why Reeves didn’t get more attention for his great season.

Mitchell was a first-year Wildcat — a transfer from West Virginia — but he was also the only other scholarship upperclassmen on the team, joining Reeves as a “big brother” to the younger players.

“He’s humble. He’s a humble beast,” Mitchell said. “He’s not a guy that’s going to come out here and brag or seek attention. But on top of that it could be just because we have had some young guys with really big names, and some people are focused on that. But at the end of the day when you look at it, this kid gives us production night in and night out. He gives us leadership, and, you know, he does it with the same look on his face the whole time.

“You never know what’s going through his mind, but you know what you’re going to get from him. So it’s just like he deserves all the recognition that there is. I mean, we’re in… the best basketball program to exist in college basketball. He’s performing. His name should be up there with some of the best of them.”

Thiero was one of only two other UK scholarship players who was around last season, putting him in the unique position of seeing Reeves shed the label of “just a shooter” to become a consistently dangerous three-level scorer who greatly improved his defense and rebounding, emerging as an all-around force in year two with the Wildcats.

“You know, his consistency, even if other teams are trying to take away his scoring ability, he’s able to do the little things, whether it’s get a rebound, go back up for a putback, play defense, all that,” Thiero said. “Like, he’s able to do everything. …

“So I feel like, because we have Reed, Rob, D.J. (Wagner), Justin (Edwards), all the other freshmen, like all the freshmen — I’d say all our freshmen are good players. So they’re getting more to shine and kind of overlooking Antonio. But at the end of the day, you look at the stats. Stats don’t lie.”

When the ball was tipped the following night, Reeves did everything he could to keep Kentucky playing. He missed his first 3-pointer but then scored six points at the hoop in the early going. In the final seven-plus minutes of the game — with Oakland trying to inch away to victory — Reeves nailed three 3-pointers, each one of them turning a five-point deficit into a two-point margin. He also set up Sheppard for a 3-pointer — the freshman’s only points of the game — during that stretch.

Reeves’ final make — the last three points of his UK career — came on a stepback 3-pointer with 1:45 left that cut Oakland’s lead to 73-71.

“What a shot!” exclaimed CBS analyst Steve Lappas.

Reeves’ final line: 11-for-18 from the floor, 5-for-9 from deep, and 27 points. He sat just 4 minutes and 43 seconds of the game, and Kentucky was outscored by eight points while he was on the bench. Of the six Wildcats who played more than 15 minutes, he was the only one with a plus-minus rating on the positive side.

Those 27 points pushed Reeves to 20.2 points per game for the season — the highest average of any player in Calipari’s 15 seasons with the school and the most since Jodie Meeks tallied 23.7 per game the year before he came to town.

“I mean, Antonio was unbelievable this year,” Calipari said on his radio show Monday night. “And he was steady. Here’s a kid that came here not really known by anybody — he’s gonna be drafted now. That’s why you come here. And he played to win every moment he was out there. He fought.”

A year after Reeves sat in his locker at Greensboro Coliseum, wearing a stunned expression, trying to make sense of the 1-for-15 shooting night that had just transpired, there should have been plenty to celebrate this time around. But there obviously wasn’t. Instead of that look of shock, there was simply despair.

The 23-year-old leaned up against a wall in the hallway outside UK’s locker room in Pittsburgh, hands clasped in front of him, staring off into the distance, knowing his college career was finished.

When it was his turn to talk, he spoke about how special the season had been, putting the focus on his young teammates and the last several months they’d spent together.

“These bonds are going to last a lifetime, and it’s going to be one of those things where, you know, I could just pick up the phone, I could call one of them, you know, those type of deals,” Reeves said. “So it’s definitely devastating, but you just gotta keep your head up.”

A few moments later, Reeves and Mitchell stood up from their chairs to exit the stage. Calipari thanked Mitchell. Then he held his hand out. Reeves shook it.

“Good job, kid,” Calipari told him.

Kentucky forward Tre Mitchell sits next to Antonio Reeves in the hallway outside the Wildcats’ locker room after an 80-76 loss to Oakland in the NCAA Tournament. Silas Walker/swalker@herald-leader.com
Kentucky forward Tre Mitchell sits next to Antonio Reeves in the hallway outside the Wildcats’ locker room after an 80-76 loss to Oakland in the NCAA Tournament. Silas Walker/swalker@herald-leader.com

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