< PreviousUK Retired Jerseys and UK Hall of Fame 44 John “Shipwreck” Kelly HB 1929-31 66 Raloh Kercheval P 1931-33 13 Bob Davis HB 1935-37 Bernie A. Shively AD 1938-67 Coach 1945 35 Ermal Allen QB/HB 1939-41 Asst. Coach 1948-61 8 Clyde Johnson T 1940-42 45 Jay Rhodemyre C 1942, 1946-47 48 Washington Serini T 1944-47 16 George Blanda QB/P/K 1945-48 27 Wallace “Wah Wah” Jones E 1945-48 Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach 1946-53 Jerry Claiborne DB/E 1946, 1948-49 Coach 1982-89 50 Harry Ulinski C/LB 1946-49 70 Bob Gain T 1947-50 87 Charlie McClendon DE 1949-50 10 Babe Parilli QB 1949-51 51 Doug Moseley C 1949-51 65 Ray Correll G 1951-53 80 Steve Meilinger E/HB/DB/LB 1951-53 84 Howard Schnellenberger E 1952-55 Blanton Collier Coach 1954-61 79 Lou Michaels T/K/P 1955-57 21 Calvin Byrd HB 1958-60 55 Irvin “Irv” Goode C 1959-61 80 Tom Hutchinson E 1960-62 70 Herschel Turner T 1961-63 80 Rick Kestner E 1963-65 11 Rick Norton QB 1963-65 73 Sam Ball OT 1963-65 21 Rodger Byrd HB 1963-65 32 Larry Seiple HB 1964-66 24 Dicky Lyons Sr. RB 1966-68 88 Jeff Van Note DE 1966-68 74 Dave Roller DL 1968-70 59 Joe Federspiel LB 1969-71 40 Sonny Collins HB 1972-75 52 Rick Nuzum OL 1972-74 69 Warren Bryant OT 1974-76 50 Jim Kovach LB 1974-76, 1978 97 Art Still DE 1974-77 12 Derrick Ramsey QB 1975-77 33 George Adams RB 1981-84 57 Dermontti Dawson C/OG 1984-87 22 Mark Higgs TB 1984-87 2 Tim Couch QB 1996-98 Football players who have been named to the UK Athletics Hall of Fame but have not had jerseys retired: 3 André Woodson QB 2004-07 12 Derrick Abney WR 2000-03 79 Oliver Barnett DE 1986-89 85 Al Bruno WR 1948-50 44 Wilbur Hackett LB 1968-70 22 Jared Lorenzen QB 2000-03 45 Marty Moore LB 1990-93 23 Nate Northington DB 1966-67 82 Greg Page DE 1966-67 9 Bill Ransdell QB 1983-86 10 Moe Williams RB 1993-95 3 Craig Yeast WR 1995-98 Paul “Bear” Bryant Tim Couch 58 @UKFootballAfter seven months since their last team competition and just two months after the death of their teammate and friend, Cul- lan Brown, the Kentucky men’s golf team had something to celebrate during its first tournament of the 2020-21 season. De- spite some ups and downs on the final day of competition, sophomore Alex Goff, who carried Brown’s bag in his honor, captured his first collegiate victory at 6-under par at the Blessings Collegiate Invitational in Fay- etteville, Arkansas. The win marked the first collegiate trophy for Goff who set career bests in every catego- ry. He had a career-low round of 65 during the second day of action. His total combined score of 210 was four shots better than his pre- vious low and the win was a career-best finish. The Kings Mountain, North Caroli- na, native began the day at 10-under par thanks to a 65 during the second round. He played even through his first nine holes and moved to 2-under with birdies at the 11th and 12th. He picked up a bogey at the 13th but approached the 17th with a six-shot ad- vantage over the field. That’s when things got interesting. After an errant tee shot at the par-three 17th, Goff opted to take the penalty and used a drop. He finished with a double-bogey at the hole and approached the 18th with a comfortable four-shot advantage. Because of the COVDI-19 pandemic all five UK players played in the same group all three rounds and on the 18th they all found a left bunker on the fairway. Goff was the first to play his shot and laid up short of the green. “I briefly glanced at the ball and thought it was mine, so I didn’t think twice about it,” Goff said in an interview with the Washing- ton Post. “I hit it, and I started walking down the fairway, and 30 seconds later, our assis- tant coach is like, ‘Alex, come back here,’ and that’s when my heart just dropped. I had hit a good shot, and I was just going to walk up the last hole and soak it in. It was going to be a stress-free last few minutes, and in- stead it was the exact opposite of that.” Goff had played the wrong ball. “Coach (Brian) Craig walked with me and just told me to get this up and down and I’ll win,” Goff said as he described what was going through his mind mentally after the mistake. “He said, ‘You’ve played too good of golf all week to let one bad decision ruin it.’ So, I just tried to hang in there and I knew that Cullan was watching down on me and he was with me every moment.” Goff played his correct shot, took the two-stroke penalty and eventually made a seven on the hole. He had to sweat it out a bit. With GOLF Channel, airing live cover- age of the tournament all week, along with the field following along with live scoring, all parties thought that when Tennessee’s Hunter Wolcott approached the 18th green he had a chance to tie after birdying 17. Fate, in more ways than one, intervened and Wolcott’s par putt lipped out before he made bogey on the hole. Perhaps Brown allowed his revered sense of humor to shine through once again. Be- cause not only did Wolcott’s putt lip out, it was discovered when he turned in his score- card in that one of the tournament’s officials had inadvertently entered a wrong score along the way. “I do not want to let Cullan down over something so stupid like that,” Goff de- scribed what he was thinking as he waited for Wolcott to finish. “I was so frustrated with myself. My parents were there and my teammates: it was the biggest stage I’d ever been on, and to potentially have a mistake like that cost me the win, I just couldn’t wrap my head around it.” Goff didn’t let Brown down. In a week where he was honored to carry Brown’s bag – a subtle way for the team to play tribute to their friend and teammate – Goff played mas- terfully and earned his first individual victory. “I truly believe that he was the reason I won,” Goff said about his Brown. “I can also say that if he was still here, I probably would have come in second.” Goff Survives Error on 18 to Win in Honor of Cullan Brown By Deb Moore UK Athletics Communications and Public Relations @UKSportsNetwork 59 Alex GoffPLAYER DEVELOPMENT Kentucky football introduced #4for40 in 2018, an initiative which guides players during their four years on campus, and their 40 years after. UK also instilled programs to help prepare players for changes in life and to better connect with every player while at the same time bringing former players back who can offer career advice.COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT Many Kentucky players choose to take part in serving the community in a variety of projects, including mentoring, hospital visits, speaking engagements and food drives. In 2019, along with other UK engineering students and a team of Toyota Manufacturing engineers, senior offensive guard Luke Fortner worked for months to help design, test and manufacture a specially-built push cart vehicle through a project called “Lift Them Up.” The push cart vehicle provides a Kentucky Children’s Hospital patient the chance to both accompany the Wildcats on the Cat Walk and attend a game at Kroger Field. PERFORMANCE Every college football program puts a premium on developing student-athletes, but the Performance program is unique to Kentucky. From strength and conditioning, led by director of performance Corey Edmond and director of performance/head strength coach Mark Hill, to nutrition led by registered dietitian Monica Fowler, to the latest in athlete-tracking technology spearheaded by director of applied science Chris Morris, the Performance program brings all aspects of performance under one umbrella.KENTUCKY • A record 31,057 students enrolled in Fall 2020 • Record retention and graduation rates and bold goals for continued growth in our strategic plan • More than 7,000 degrees awarded in the last academic year • Diverse, inclusive campus community with students from all 120 Kentucky counties, all 50 states, and more than 100 countries • Top public institution for students who are National Merit, National Achievement, and National Hispanic Finalists • More than $2.7 billion in campus transformation, much of it financed in collaboration with private and public partners, focused on student living and learning communities, modern research laboratories, innovative teaching and learning space, and one of the fastest growing academic medical centers in the country • More than $6.2 billion spent with Kentucky companies since 2011 • $65 million provided by UK Athletics toward the construction of the Jacobs Science Building • One of eight institutions in the country with the full range of undergraduate, professional, health care, and medical colleges and programs on a contiguous campus • One of 20 institutions in the country with the trifecta of research designations for excellence in cancer, aging, and translational science • $429.2 million in external grants and contracts supporting UK research • Nearly 100 national rankings for excellence in teaching, Research, and service • UK HealthCare and UK Chandler Medical Center is one of the nation’s finest academic medical centers with its state-of-the-art patient care facility and emergency rooms, advanced research space, and network of affiliate health care agencies to serve the Commonwealth and region THE UNIVERSITY OFNext >