Kentucky
Sunday Headlines: Big week ahead for Kentucky Basketball
The Kentucky Wildcats have some momentum, which seems like a crazy thing to say after where this team was to begin conference play.
The Cats have been playing well, and actually are tied for second in the league following a wild day of SEC basketball yesterday.
However, the Cats will face a pair of big tests this week. The Cats go on the road Tuesday to take on Vanderbilt, who ended their three-game losing skid yesterday by demolishing Mississippi State in Starkville by a score of 88-56. The Commodores were once 16-0 and ranked in the top 10 nationally. They average 90 points per game, so Tuesday night’s showdown in Nashville will be a tall task for the Cats.
Then Kentucky travels to Fayetteville for a matchup with John Calipari’s Arkansas Razorbacks next Saturday. The game won’t have quite the same emotion as Calipari’s return to Rupp Arena last year, but it still holds some extra meaning, at least to the fanbase.
The Hogs have one of the best freshmen in the country in Darius Acuff, who averages nearly 20 points and 6 assists per game. Acuff scored 31 in yesterday’s win at LSU.
In a perfect world, Kentucky wins both of these matchups, but they’ll most likely enter as underdogs in both. If they somehow manage to win both, it would be a major boost for this team and open up conversations about what this team’s ceiling actually is.
If Kentucky could manage to split these two games, I think it would be considered a success considering the level these teams have played at and both being on the road.
How are you feeling heading into this week?
All of us jumped out of our seats when he made that shot!
Still a really good crowd at Rupp despite the incoming weather.
Maybe we’ll see them back on the bench soon.
That stretch when he came in was a difference-maker.
There was the airball, and he never really got going.
A big milestone for Rick.
The AFC North will have 3 new coaches next season.
It seems like KAT and the Knicks are heading toward a split.
He’s about to earn a big payday.
One of the wildest things I’ve seen.
Kentucky
Kentucky vs. Oklahoma Injury Report: Same 3 names appear
The Kentucky Wildcats return to Rupp Arena tomorrow night as they welcome the Oklahoma Sooners to town. Posting the worst record in the SEC at the moment, Porter Moser and his squad will be coming into Lexington looking for a signature win.
With some momentum rolling for the Cats after winning in Fayetteville, Mark Pope and his team will once again have the same roster available. In tonight’s injury report, Kentucky once again has listed Kam Williams, Jaland Lowe, and Jayden Quaintance as out.
For the Sooners, they will have their full roster available.
As the season starts to wrap up, it feels like the rope for a JQ return is getting shorter and shorter. Making the big question: Will we see Kam Williams return to the court this season? That is a long shot, but it would be a huge addition if he does return.
Time to get another win in the SEC.
Kentucky vs. Oklahoma Injury Report
Kentucky
Kentucky tweaked their pregame routine before Arkansas game
The Kentucky Wildcats bounced back in a huge way on Saturday when they picked up a signature win over No. 15 Arkansas on the road. It came after a game that, once again, saw the Wildcats come out very slow, leading them fall behind quickly as they never were able to come close to making the comeback. But, Saturday’s game was different.
Mark Pope has been searching over the last week to change up Kentucky’s pregame routine. After the win over Arkansas, Pope confirmed that they did in fact change up their normal routine in practice leading up to the game.
“They changed some of our routine. In practice, the last two days, we had a huge emphasis on the first four, six minutes of a scrimmage each day,” Pope said on Saturday following Kentucky’s eight-point win against Arkansas. “And the guys really worked. It’s hard in practice to simulate the intensity of game, but these guys really tried to do that. It really came from our team and our staff of figuring out a better way to approach this. And it doesn’t guarantee that we’re not gonna have slow starts, but it certainly was credit to our guys for being ready to go from the tip tonight, I thought they were terrific.”
On Monday night, Pope went much more in-depth about what exactly the Wildcats changed up in their usual routine before games, specifically for road games. Kentucky’s pregame routine was altered and it paid off.
“We actually changed up our pregame (routine). We rolled into town and we always go quote-unquote smell the gym the night before. We didn’t do that just to simplify the schedule,” Pope said on his radio show Monday night. “We shortened our hour-long pregame on-court prep and consolidated that where we went from, you know, really coming back in the locker room for two minutes to one. What kind of bearing that had on the way our guys started, I’m not sure if it’s too small a sample size to know, but, you know, we’ll take the outcome for sure.”
Pope says you have to be cautious with change, but with the situation Kentucky has been in, this type of change may be an exception, because it seemed to work for his team on Saturday.
“I think you have to be cautious with change, certainly, because you don’t want change to become the norm, right? You want to have routine, like routine actually helps athletes perform at a higher level. But I do think sometimes change for the sake of change in the right way can add focus and help you be more intentional about the the the issues you’re trying to address. And so somewhere in there, certainly our guys found a way that to come out, you know, with all the folks in the world, because, because their focus and their physicality in the first five minutes of this game was elite on the road in a really, really hostile environment.”
“I’m proud of, proud of how the guys responded. We do have a group that seems to when their backs are to the wall, either because of situation or because of their own missteps,” Pope went on to say about his team. “They sure have responded in a brilliant way for most of the season.”
More Kentucky basketball news
Kentucky
Another data center project is coming to Kentucky. What to know
A long-idle Century Aluminum smelter in Hancock County will be redeveloped into a data center campus, the company said Feb. 2, announcing the sale of more than 700 acres of industrial land along the Ohio River.
Century halted production at the smelter in 2022, citing “skyrocketing energy costs,” and originally said the curtailment would last only nine to 12 months. More than 600 people worked at the plant, and many received notices of temporary layoff at the time. Century continues to operate a smelter in Henderson County, near Sebree.
Century will receive $200 million and retain a small equity stake in the company developing the data center project, according to federal filings. The aluminum company had hinted at its search for a buyer for the Hancock County property in previous earnings calls, pointing to the site’s preexisting access to utilities and infrastructure.
“We are very pleased to see the Hawesville site transition to productive use that will benefit Hawesville and the entire Commonwealth of Kentucky,” said Jesse Gary, president and CEO of Century Aluminum. “Our agreement allows us to remain connected to the project and supportive of the community as the site is redeveloped.”
Maryland-based TeraWulf will develop the site, according to Century, building “a digital infrastructure campus supporting high-performance computing and artificial intelligence workloads.”
The project “is expected to create substantial new jobs, both construction and permanent skilled positions, and generate long-term economic activity for the region,” the company added.
Data center projects across Kentucky have faced steep public opposition, in part due to their relatively small employment levels compared to projects for manufacturing and other industries. Opponents have also cited concerns about energy use, infrastructure strain, tax breaks and environmental impacts.
Lane Boldman, executive director of the Kentucky Conservation Committee, said she’d spoken with local residents and officials last year who were still holding out hope that Century would restart the smelter.
The land sale and redevelopment plans come just days after Century announced plans to invest in a new, multibillion-dollar smelter in Oklahoma, rather than build out a project in Kentucky, as the company had previously floated. Gov. Andy Beshear and other proponents of the project, including Boldman, expressed disappointment that Kentucky was passed over for that investment, which would have brought 1,000 permanent jobs to the state.
This is a developing story and may be updated.
Connor Giffin is an environmental reporter at The Courier Journal. Reach him directly at cgiffin@courier-journal.com or on X @byconnorgiffin.
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