To celebrate SLAM’s 30th anniversary, we’re spotlighting the 30 most influential men’s college teams from our past 30 years. Stats, records and chips aren’t the main factor here, it’s all about their contribution to the game’s cultural fabric.

For the next 30 days—Monday through Friday— we’ll be unveiling the full list here. We’ve also got an exclusive retro collegiate collection, out now, that pays homage to each squad’s threads. Shop here.


Think of any great college team. Usually, it’s only two to three guys carrying that IT factor. On rare occasions, the whole starting five possesses unyielding star power. Now try 10. Yeah, ten future NBA players on one single college roster. The 1995-96 Kentucky Wildcats weren’t just stacked; they were nearly insurmountable. 

Antoine Walker, Tony Delk, Derek Anderson, Ron Mercer, Walter McCarty, Mark Pope. Six high school All-Americans. Out of 36 contests, they’d only drop two under the direction of Rick Pitino. In the land where hoops are equivalent to religion, the Wildcats returned to Lexington with the program’s sixth NCAA championship in tow. 

And they did it all in denim. Bold. Bizarre. But man, did they turn heads. The white kits favored a more reserved approach, with the royal blue textile incorporated into the piping of the jerseys and shorts. Away contests served as the runway with a pseudo-denim base sparking debate and controversy across the country.  

Enacting a 27-game win streak, the Wildcats roared through the SEC and NCAA tournament, burying their first four opponents by 20-plus points. They were a blend of collective brilliance on both ends of the floor, leading the nation in points, assists and steals per game. Cycling between a 10-man rotation, Pitino could look to the pine at any point for an instant boost. Simply put, the Cats would put up NUMBERS. Long before reaching the 90s and 100s in the scorebook became a norm, the Wildcats dropped 100 points per game on nine occasions. Just ask LSU, who got a whopping 86 put up on em in the first half. 

The term “Untouchable” rumbled throughout the basketball ecosystem. From the first week of the season to the first day of April, the Wildcats simply were that. Untouchable. 


Photos via Getty Images.



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