As Kentucky football fans gather around kitchen tables, there will be many gridiron accomplishments and feats to be thankful for. One is that the Louisville Cardinals are absolutely terrible.

Yes, Kentucky is 8-3, yes the Wildcats are in the top 20. But Kentucky has backed into the end of a memorable season, with the past three games being a pain of ugly losses and an underwhelming victory over Middle Tennessee. The Wildcats have a regular-season finale to be thankful for, and here are 10 bold predictions about the Governor’s Cup.

1. Louisville will play Puma Pass

The Cardinals suspended Pass for the first quarter of interim coach Lorenzo Ward’s first game, and went with running QB Malik Cunningham. But Ward can see the video of the plays Jarrett Guarantano and Brent Stockstill made against Kentucky in the past two weeks, so he’ll deploy the passing QB this week.

2. Watch for a Louisville special teams play

The Cardinals know they’re outmatched, but special teams is one area where they could make a play. Punt returner Rodjay Burns averages just over 15 yards per return, and Kentucky has been vulnerable in the kicking game in recent weeks. If not a return, perhaps a block. Kentucky gave up a blocked field goal two weeks ago and narrowly missed a punt block on a 20 yard shank last week.

3. Louisville will throw the kitchen sink at Kentucky

The Wildcats would do well to remember that while Louisville is awful, it has some solid athletes who will go for broke in an effort to catch Kentucky off guard. The UK defense has been fairly solid against trickeration, but they’ll definitely see some Saturday.

4. No pregame fight

What, that seems bold? Don’t forget this …

5. All in for Josh

Josh Allen might end up as the SEC’s Defensive Player of the Year. He leads the SEC in sacks and tackles for loss, and now faces a Louisville offense that has allowed a whopping 85 tackles for loss and 41 sacks. The bold part? We’re saying Josh finds the end zone. Senior Mike Edwards had a pick-6 last week, and Josh Allen needs that season-capping moment of glory.

6. Jordan Jones completes season of redemption

A year ago, linebacker Jordan Jones was throwing around trash cans and having temper tantrums against Louisville. It was so bad that rumors circulated that Jones was not welcome back for 2018. Fortunately, the rumors were wrong, and the senior linebacker’s 64 tackles, 4 tackles for loss, and 4 pass breaks-ups all attest to his senior leadership. Jones will be very much in his element n Saturday, and will likely have another double figure tackle game to close the circle on his story of redemption.

7. Century for Dorian

Fifth-year senior Dorian Baker has 99 career catches for Kentucky. Baker, who starred as a sophomore, has missed most of 2016 and all of 2017 with injuries, but he’ll join Kentucky’s roster of 100-catch receivers with a grab against Louisville, although it probably won’t be as impressive as his crazy TD there in 2016.

8. A record for Benny

Snell enters the week 205 yards shy of Sonny Collins’ Kentucky career rushing record of 3,835 yards. He’ll get it Saturday. Snell’s previous career-high came against a much better Louisville squad last season (211 yards). His last regular-season game in Kentucky will be one to remember.

9. Another 100-yard rusher

Louisville’s run defense isn’t bad, it’s awful. Georgia Tech went 1 for 2 passing for 10 yards, but put up 66 points. Kentucky will have another 100-yard back besides Snell, either Terry Wilson on some QB runs or more likely, backup A.J. Rose, who has had a decent season backing up Snell.

10. Kentucky doesn’t do blowouts, but they come pretty close

Kentucky is constitutionally unable to blow out teams, but they don’t often play teams this bad. A score prediction?

How’s this? A year ago, Lamar Jackson came into Lexington and avenged Kentucky’s 2016 upset of the Cardinals with a 44-17 whipping. Kentucky returns the favor this year, by the same exact score. That would be a statement.