Mark Pope calls coaching in the SEC in 2024-25 the greatest experience of his career
Last season’s success from the SEC in men’s basketball is well documented. Widely considered the greatest league in the sport’s history, Kentucky‘s Mark Pope was a huge part of the story. Pope took over for John Calipari, completely remade the roster, and turned UK into one of Big Blue Nation’s favorite teams of late.
Pope recently reflected on his experience from last year, his first in the conference as a head coach. He says it was the “greatest experience” of his coaching career thus far. Just the amount of quality inside the SEC, from top to bottom, really stood out to him.
It was the greatest experience of my basketball coaching career, by far,” Pope said. “Last year, I was really blessed to coach in the Big 12, BYU‘s first year in the Big 12. And that was an incredible experience and it was a great league. I don’t think college basketball has ever seen a league like we saw last year in the SEC. Not just 14 teams in but seven teams in the Sweet Sixteen.
I used to brag about my ’96 team that the league was so good, we had four teams in the Sweet Sixteen and two in the Final Four. We had double that, almost… It’s what you live for, as a competitor, to be in a league like that. Hopefully, we run it back bigger and better next year, as a league.”
Kentucky did get knocked out of the NCAA Tournament by an SEC team, as Pope noted. Tennessee was on the winning end of a Sweet 16 matchup, sending Rick Barnes to another Elite Eight. Had it not been for Houston, the Vols would have been team No. 3 from the SEC to make the Final Four.
