The offseason is well underway, and it is now transitioning into AAU season. As coaches from across the country head to different events starting with the live period this weekend, you can find Mark Pope and the majority of his staff in Memphis for the first Nike EYBL event of the year.
South
Ex-University of Kentucky staffer asks if Hurricane Helene is act of God to punish MAGA supporters
A former University of Kentucky staffer took to social media to ask if God was unleashing death and destruction via Hurricane Helene on red states because of their support of former President Trump.
“Hurricane Helene…what if GOD is punishing MAGA populations for their hate and hypocrisy? Works for me!” Betsy Packard wrote Sunday in a post on X.
Hurricane Helene ripped across the southeast days ago, causing widespread devastation. The death toll from the storm has surpassed 100, as of Monday.
NORTH CAROLINA LAWMAKER COMPARES AFTERMATH OF HURRICANE HELENE TO A ‘WARZONE’
After receiving backlash for her remarks, Packard, who claimed to be a writer of feminist revisionist poetry, appeared to double-down.
“ALll (sic) day long, MAGAs post lies and mockng nastigrams about Democrats. So, I mocked them, I hammered on their hypocrisy,” she posted in response to users who challenged her. “Talk about toxic vengeance (sic). “They can dish it out, but they can’t take it.”
“An Act of God hammered you, and you still din’t [sic] hear Him? God is obviously mighty pissed at MAGAs. How can you not see this?” she asked one user.
The Rocky Broad River flows into Lake Lure and overflows the town with debris from Chimney Rock, North Carolina after heavy rains from Hurricane Helene on September 28, 2024, in Lake Lure, North Carolina. Approximately six feet of debris piled on the bridge from Lake Lure to Chimney Rock, blocking access. (Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)
Packard served as a teaching assistant at the university “a number of years ago,” university spokesman Jay Blanton told Fox News Digital.
“We were just made aware of this post,” he said. “We have reported it to the appropriate offices on campus that review questions around conduct. The person in question is not an employee at the University of Kentucky.”
Packard continued to post and argue with her detractors online. She eventually appeared to walk back the idea that she believed the storm was part of a divine punishment on Trump supporters.
“I need to clarify previous posts. I erred in thinking Americans could read,” she wrote. “I said WHAT IF. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Michelle Bachmann attributed disasters to divine punishment. DO I BELIEVE THIS? NO. Did I say I believed it? Nope. But some fools DO believe it.”
The university condemned Packard’s remarks, saying they were “abhorrent” and “do not reflect our values as an institution.”
Heavy rains from Hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage on September 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina. Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend on Thursday night with winds up to 140 mph and storm surges that killed at least 42 people in several states. (Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)
Georgia
Ranking the 12 best colleges in Georgia
Georgia has some of the most prestigious universities in the United State. In fact, the Peach State has three of the 50 best national universities according to U.S. News & World Report.
Our list is composed of the 12 national universities in Georgia. National liberal arts colleges (like Morehouse College) and regional universities (like Berry College) are not included.
What exactly is a national university? “Schools in the National Universities category … offer a full range of undergraduate majors, plus master’s and doctoral programs,” U.S. News said. “These colleges also are committed to producing groundbreaking research.”
Graduation rates, peer assessment, financial resources, faculty per student and more are among the top factors in the rankings. Overall, Georgia has several great universities that all offer plenty of resources for students hoping to earn a college degree. The University of Georgia is no exception. UGA is the No. 19 public university in the country and has a competitive rate of tuition.
How does U.S. News rank the top 12 national universities in Georgia?
1. Emory University
National ranking: No. 24
Tuition and fees: $68,056
Enrollment: 7,406 (fall 2024)
Location: Atlanta
2. Georgia Institute of Technology
National ranking: No. 32
Tuition and fees: $35,092 (out of state), $12,008 (in-state)
Enrollment: 20,592 (fall 2024)
Location: Atlanta
3. University of Georgia
National ranking: No. 46 (tied)
Tuition and fees: $32,336 (out of state), $11,492 (in-state)
Enrollment: 32,399 (fall 2024)
Location: Athens
4. Mercer University
National ranking: No. 169
Tuition and fees: $43,570 (private)
Enrollment: 4,690 (fall 2024)
Location: Macon
5. Georgia State University
National ranking: No. 198 (tied)
Tuition and fees: $31,320 (out-of-state), $10,500 (in-state)
Enrollment: 27,4338 (fall 2024)
Location: Atlanta
6. Augusta University
National ranking: No. 273
Tuition and fees: $25,202 (out-of-state), $8,414 (in-state)
Enrollment: 6,078 (fall 2024)
Location: Augusta
7. Clark Atlanta University
National ranking: No. 329
Tuition and fees: $30,270 (private)
Enrollment: 3,618 (fall 2024)
Location: Atlanta
8. Georgia Southern University
National ranking: No. 343
Tuition and fees: $21,784 (out-of-state), $7,144 (in-state)
Enrollment: 23,618 (fall 2024)
Location: Statesboro
9. (tied) University of West Georgia
National ranking: No. 373 (tied)
Tuition and fees: $21,850 (out-of-state), $7,210 (in-state)
Enrollment: 9,157 (fall 2024)
Location: Carrollton
9. (tied) Kennesaw State University
National ranking: No. 373
Tuition and fees: $22,278 (out-of-state), $6,948 (in-state)
Enrollment: 42,840 (fall 2024)
Location: Kennesaw
11. (tied) Valdosta State University
National ranking: No. 395-434
Tuition and fees: $17,863 (out-of-state), $6,124 (in-state)
Enrollment: 7,206 (fall 2024)
Location: Valdosta
11. (tied) Brenau University
National ranking: No. 395-434
Tuition and fees: $35,520 (private)
Enrollment: 1,273 (fall 2023)
Location: Gainesville
Kentucky
Kentucky Wildcats News: UK on the recruiting trail
Featuring plenty of the class of 2027 and 2028’s top prospects, Coach Pope, Mo Williams, and Cody Fueger are trying to get some closer looks at the players they should focus on heading into another high school recruiting cycle.
Players that the staff watched on Friday include:
- ‘27 forward, CJ Rosser
- ‘27 guard, King Gibson
- ‘27 forward, Marcus Spears Jr.
- ‘27 guard, Ryan Hampton
- 27 guard, Beckham Black
- ‘27 wing Gabe Nesmith
- ‘27 guard, Chase Lumpkin
- ‘27 center, Paul Osaruyi
Plenty of names to keep up with as more names will likely emerge as the summer rolls on. Should be interesting to watch how the staff approaches this year’s recruiting cycle compared to the last.
This would have been fun.
A look at some of Kentucky’s newest football offers.
A familiar face heads to South Carolina.
Oweh continues to dominate.
Kerr will try to turn the Warriors back around.
Not a ton of rookie QB’s will get looks this season it seems.
It will be a low-scoring tourney in Philly.
Louisiana
Republican Louisiana senator in tough primary after Trump backs opponent
The power of Donald Trump’s endorsement will be put to its latest test on Saturday, when Louisiana holds primary elections in which the US senator Bill Cassidy, who voted to impeach the president following the January 6 insurrection, then tried to make amends by casting the pivotal vote to confirm Robert F Kennedy Jr as health secretary, stands a chance of losing his party’s nomination.
An incumbent Republican running for a third term representing a deeply Republican state, Cassidy would normally be a shoo-in for re-election. But in January, Trump abruptly said that the US representative Julia Letlow should run against Cassidy and offered his endorsement, underscoring his continued willingness to seek revenge against anyone in the Republican party who has crossed him.
The president’s campaign to oust a senator of his own party – the sort of thing that was unheard of in previous administrations, but not under Trump – may have achieved the desired effect. Letlow promptly jumped into the Republican Senate primary, as did state treasurer and former representative John Fleming. An Emerson College poll released last month showed Cassidy in third place among likely Republican voters, with Fleming and Letlow neck and neck for the lead.
“This is a primary that is mostly about Trump,” said Robert Hogan, a Louisiana State University political science professor, adding that the president’s spurning of Cassidy was probably the “death knell” for his time in the Senate.
Should he indeed lose re-election this year, Cassidy would join a growing list of Republicans whose political careers have ended at Trump’s hands. Earlier this month, five of the seven Republican Indiana state senators who halted a Trump-backed effort to gerrymander the state in Republicans’ favor lost their primaries. In North Carolina, Republicans are in a high-stakes battle to keep hold of one of their Senate seats because Thom Tillis has opted to retire, after breaking with Trump last year over his top domestic policy bill.
A gastroenterologist who co-founded a clinic serving uninsured patients in Baton Rouge, Cassidy served in the House of Representatives before beating the Democratic senator Mary Landrieu in 2014. During Trump’s first term, he was an architect of the failed Republican effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
His relationship with the president soured following the assault on the Capitol by the president’s supporters, after which Cassidy and six other Republicans voted to convict Trump in the Senate, but the effort came up short. Cassidy later supported a fruitless attempt to establish an independent commission investigating the insurrection, and called on Trump to end his 2024 re-election bid after his indictment for allegedly possessing classified material.
Louisiana’s Republican party censured Cassidy in 2021 for his vote in Trump’s trial, and the senator’s political peril intensified when Trump returned to the White House last year.
Cassidy cast the deciding vote to advance vaccine skeptic Kennedy’s nomination to lead the Department of Health and Human Services out of the Senate health committee, which he chairs. The decision flew in the face of the senator’s training as a physician and his stated support for immunizations, and was widely seen as an attempt to smooth things over with the president.
Trump’s endorsement of Letlow made clear the senator’s effort was insufficient. Cassidy has meanwhile criticized some of Kennedy’s policies as secretary, and opposed Trump’s attempt to have the wellness influencer Casey Means confirmed as US surgeon general, leading Trump to blame the senator for having to withdraw her nomination.
In Louisiana, changes to the primary system probably worsened the prospects for Cassidy’s political career. In 2024, the Republican governor, Jeff Landry, a prominent Trump supporter, worked with the legislature to change the rules of the state’s US Senate primaries so that candidates are nominated only by party members and unaffiliated voters. Ron Faucheux, a veteran political strategist in Louisiana, said he suspected the changes were intended to ensure that Republicans like Cassidy who fall out of favor with Trump have no avenue to remain in office.
“The new primary system is geared to help staunch, conservative, pro-Trump candidates get elected, because it’s geared to nominate them on the Republican side and putting them in the runoffs against Democrats, [who] nobody thinks can win,” he said.
Cassidy’s campaign has acknowledged the difficulty of this year’s re-election campaign, and said their goal is for the senator to finish in the top two of the primary, and advance to a runoff election scheduled for next month.
“The mission is pretty simple. It’s to go out, get as many votes as we can on Saturday and position ourselves well for the runoff election to come in June,” campaign consultant Mark Harris told reporters this week.
Both of Cassidy’s challengers have sought to convince voters they are the president’s choice, with Letlow noting her endorsements from both Trump and Landry, and Fleming’s campaign distributing photos of him posing with the president.
Cassidy has meanwhile focused on criticizing Letlow, saying that the race was hers to lose. Dubbing her “Lib Letlow”, his campaign has seized on comments she made in support of campus diversity programs while interviewing to lead the University of Louisiana at Monroe. Letlow has since publicly repudiated those initiatives.
If there’s a saving grace for Cassidy, it could be unaffiliated voters, whose views have not been captured in polls, Faucheux said. But even if Cassidy makes it to a runoff, the president’s opposition will present a significant headwind.
“My guess is that a runoff would be tough for Cassidy, because even though there’s a lot of personal animosity between Letlow and Fleming in the campaign, I think a lot of their voters would tend to be pretty strongly pro-Trump voters,” he said.
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