ESPN knew what it was doing when it paired Louisville basketball with Arkansas for the 2025 ACC/SEC Challenge.
There will be no shortage of storylines when Pat Kelsey's Cardinals face John Calipari's Razorbacks on Wednesday (7 p.m., ESPN) at Bud Walton Arena. So many, in fact, that it's easy to overlook that UofL hasn't won a road game against an SEC member since beating archrival Kentucky on Jan. 5, 2008, at Rupp Arena.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementLouisville is 4-4 all time against the Hogs. The programs last met Nov. 21, 2022, at the Maui Invitational. It was Game 4 of the Kenny Payne era and ended in an ugly 80-54 loss. Payne, of course, resumed his post as Calipari's right-hand man after being fired from his alma mater with an overall record of 12-52.
Will Calipari and Payne get the last laugh Wednesday, or will Kelsey & Co. notch a much-needed win for the ACC on its quest to reestablish itself as the preeminent basketball conference? Here's a primer on all the threads that will be crossed when the Cards battle the Razorbacks:
John Calipari's dominance vs. Louisville
No Kentucky coach has enjoyed more success in the Battle of the Bluegrass than Calipari, who went 13-3 against Louisville across his 15 seasons with the Wildcats.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementFor his career, the Hall of Famer is 19-8 vs. the Cards — he went 2-0 at UMass (1994-96) and 4-5 at Memphis (2000-05). You know there's nothing he would love more than to make it an even 20 with a victory in Year 2 at Arkansas, which went 22-14 and reached the NCAA Tournament's Sweet 16 in 2024-25.
UofL has beaten Calipari on his home court only twice across 27 meetings. Both wins came during the 2004-05 season, when Rick Pitino's eventual Final Four team took down a Memphis squad bound for a second-round March Madness exit at FedExForum (53-44 on Feb. 26, 2005, and 75-74 on March 12, 2005, in the Conference USA Tournament championship).
Calipari arrived in Lexington four years later and proceeded to post an 11.8-point margin of victory in his 13 wins over Louisville, two of which were season-ending — the 2012 Final Four and the 2014 Sweet 16. Suffice to say, Kelsey snapping a three-game losing streak to UK and a two-game skid to Calipari in less than a month would go a long way with fans in the 502. He is 0-1 vs. the Hall of Famer. His 2018-19 Winthrop team suffered an 87-74 loss to Kentucky on Nov. 21, 2018, at Rupp Arena.
Kenny Payne faces Louisville less than 2 years after firing
A lot has been said about the historic lows to which Louisville sank during Payne's two seasons at the helm.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementWe'll leave it at this: The Cards had never suffered through 20 or more losses in back-to-back campaigns before his arrival. Per ESPN, his .188 winning percentage was the worst among all high-major programs from 2022-24. Average scanned ticket attendance plummeted to 6,504 at the 22,090-seat KFC Yum! Center. And he's getting monthly severance payments of $201,388.88 from his alma mater until March 2027.
Payne has not said much publicly about his departure. Here's how he described it during a June 2024 interview with Hogs+, while recounting what led to teaming up with Calipari in Fayetteville:
"We decided to part ways — they decided to part ways — so you question yourself as a coach," Payne said. "And then, when it's over, the conversations that happen around the country: numerous NBA teams, numerous college teams and programs (saying), 'Kenny, we want you to be a part of what we're doing. We know exactly what happened.' And then you realize you really (were) on the right page. So for me, making sure that I went to a place that was a fit was probably the biggest thing. And John Calipari and I are close friends. I love working for him; I love working with him. I love taking care of kids. I have a dear friend in John Tyson who lives here. So it was a fit."
Kelsey mentioned Payne by name during his introductory news conference at UofL, saying the member of its 1986 national championship team is "a major, major part of Card Nation" and "welcome back here just like everybody else." It's unclear if they've spoken since. Let's see if they exchange pleasantries Wednesday.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementEx-Louisville targets: D.J. Wagner, Karter Knox, Billy Richmond III
There was a time when national recruiting pundits believed D.J. Wagner, the grandson of former Louisville great Milt Wagner, would headline Payne's 2023 class.
Wrong — Wagner chose Kentucky and Calipari, who coached his father, Dajuan Wagner, at Memphis. But Payne's wish was granted in the end, getting the opportunity to work with the five-star combo guard at Arkansas. Wagner averaged 11.2 points on 40.1% shooting (30.4% from 3-point range), 3.6 assists against 2.2 turnovers, and 2.7 rebounds across 34.6 minutes per game with the Razorbacks in 2024-25.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementKarter Knox is another Calipari legacy recruit whom Payne tried to lure to Louisville — playing up his bond with the five-star wing's oldest brother, Kevin Knox Jr., from their time at Kentucky and with the New York Knicks.
Two days after one of the most embarrassing losses of Payne's stint with the Cards (75-63 to Arkansas State), Knox announced he would take an official visit to UofL for its next game. Speaking with reporters after his plans were made public, he said the trip was not scheduled at the last minute but declined to comment when asked if he would still consider the program if there was a coaching change.
You know how the story goes: Payne was fired, then Knox chose the Cats but followed Calipari to the Hogs. As a freshman in 2024-25, he averaged 8.3 points on 46.2% shooting (35% from 3), 3.3 rebounds and 1.02 assists against 1.1 turnovers across 23.9 minutes per game.
Billy Richmond III was a year behind Wagner at Camden High School. He played on the Nike EYBL circuit with Payne's lone commit in the Class of 2024, TJ Robinson, and took an unofficial visit to Louisville for a Feb. 4, 2023, loss to Florida State.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThe Cards didn't get much further than that in Richmond's recruitment. The five-star wing picked UK but followed Calipari, who coached his father at Memphis, to Arkansas — where he averaged 5.7 points on 52.3% shooting (12.5% from 3), three rebounds and 1.4 assists against 1.3 turnovers across 17.5 minutes per game as a freshman in 2024-25.
Can the ACC get off the mat vs. the SEC?
Louisville's 86-63 loss to Ole Miss in its ACC/SEC Challenge debut was one of 14 the ACC suffered in last year's event.
The lopsided result was a sign of things to come: The SEC had 14 teams in the NCAA Tournament, while half of the ACC finished outside of the top 100 in the NET and posted the worst winning percentage in nonconference Quad 1 and Quad 2 games among high-major leagues (.272) — per The Athletic's Jim Root.
AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementCan the ACC punch back in 2025? Here's the full schedule for this year's ACC/SEC Challenge, including tipoff times and TV assignments:
Tuesday, Dec. 2
Tennessee at Syracuse, 7 p.m., ESPN2
Texas A&M at Pitt, 7 p.m., ESPNU
Oklahoma at Wake Forest, 7 p.m., ACC Network
Virginia Tech at South Carolina, 7 p.m., SEC Network
Florida at Duke, 7:30 p.m., ESPN
Missouri at Notre Dame, 9 p.m., ESPNU
Georgia at Florida State, 9 p.m., ACC Network
Miami at Ole Miss, 9 p.m., SEC Network
North Carolina at Kentucky, 9:30 p.m., ESPN
Wednesday, Dec. 3
Louisville at Arkansas, 7 p.m., ESPN
Clemson at Alabama, 7 p.m., ESPNU
LSU at Boston College, 7 p.m., ACC Network
N.C. State at Auburn, 9 p.m., ESPN
Virginia at Texas, 9 p.m., ESPNU
Mississippi State at Georgia Tech, 9 p.m., ACC Network
SMU at Vanderbilt, 9 p.m., SEC Network
Reach Louisville men's basketball reporter Brooks Holton at [email protected] and follow him on X at @brooksHolton.
This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Louisville vs Arkansas, John Calipari, Pat Kelsey, Kenny Payne
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