Fresh off an impressive win over fellow top-10 team Florida in its Southeastern Conference opener, No. 6 Kentucky hits the road for the first time in league play on Tuesday when it travels to Athens to take on Georgia.The Wildcats (12-2, 1-0 SEC) topped the Gators 106-100 at home on Saturday, increasing their scoring mark to 90.2 points per game, second nationally only to No. 5 Alabama’s 91.1. Winner in five of its last six games, Kentucky will look to earn its first victory at Georgia since January 2020.If there was any question about how first-year head coach Mark Pope would fare following John Calipari’s tenure in Lexington, doubts have been put to bed so far.The Wildcats’ win over then-No. 6 Florida was their third against a top-seven team, after prior victories over No. 6 Duke in Atlanta and No. 7 Gonzaga in Seattle. There was no shortage of excitement Saturday, as the Wildcats shot 57.8 percent from the field and 48.3 percent (14-for-29) on 3-pointers — including Koby Brea’s 23 points and seven triples.”If you guys didn’t have fun (Saturday), then you should quit now and find a new job,” Pope told reporters. “That was just an elite-level game. Physically, it was a bloodbath. Just an incredible game. … How fun is this league going to be?”Without a single contributing player from last year’s roster, a brand-new Kentucky team already has shown the Wildcats won’t shy away from big games.”The players love the opportunity to compete,” Pope said. “I don’t think they’re scared. I don’t think they spend a ton of time stressing or fretting about the outcome. They’re doing a terrific job of staying in the moment and competing for every possession.”Otega Oweh’s 15.9 points per game lead the team, followed by Lamont Butler’s 13.8 and Brea’s 12.7. A year after Brea led the country with a 49.8 percent 3-point shooting mark at Dayton, the sharpshooter again is atop the Division I leaderboard at 52.3 percent.