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Advancing Kentucky: Alum brings her passion for sports back to the community she calls home

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Advancing Kentucky: Alum brings her passion for sports back to the community she calls home


LEXINGTON, Ky. (May 10, 2024) — Emily Fields was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, but she will tell you she bled blue her whole life, just like her mom. She has family in Kentucky and she grew up loving University of Kentucky sports. As an avid gymnast and cheerleader in high school, she was passionate about being an athlete. However, after a significant knee injury and multiple surgeries, her career as an athlete was put to an end, but she never lost her passion for sports.

Once Fields arrived on the UK campus in 2016, she set a new dream into motion.

“I always said if I can’t be an athlete anymore, how do I stay involved with what I’ve wanted to do practically my whole life,” Fields said. “When I decided to come to UK, I chose to major in integrated strategic communication (ISC). It was so unique in the sense I was learning about public relations, marketing, digital media, advertising and so much more. There were so many different avenues I could take.”

A game changer for Fields was having the good fortune to find a public relations internship in the UK Athletics Department. She said her experience there helped mold her degree and it kept her in the game.

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“I worked with our men’s football, men’s basketball and gymnastics program very closely for about four years,” Fields said. “This experience shaped my future career in ways I would’ve never imagined, and I am fortunate to have made so many relationships that still hold strong to this day. I’ve got multiple mentors in UK Athletics whom I still talk to often.”

In 2019, Fields earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in ISC with a focus in public relations from the UK College of Communication and Information with a minor in community and leadership development from the Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment. The next chapter of her education played out on the University of Florida campus where she earned a Master of Science degree in sports management in 2022. Additionally, Fields became a certified athlete development specialist, providing her the pathway to become an advocate for so many athletes in her journey within the sports industry.

After leaving Florida, Fields went straight into positions with several sports organizations, serving five years in the National Football League (NFL), that took her to several states and as far away as Seattle, Washington, where she worked in communications for the Seattle Seahawks. Soon after, she received a phone call with a job offer that would take her back to Central Kentucky, where she truly calls “home.”

“For me, it was a no-brainer and I jumped at the opportunity to get back to the place I love and call home,” she said. “I was brought to the Lexington Sporting Club (LSC) to help create market and establish a true brand for our club, helping to show the Lexington community that we’re here and ready to get involved in the community.”

Fields is currently working as the marketing, communication and community engagement coordinator for LSC, a professional soccer organization now in its second year in Lexington. Their men’s professional USL League One team is the second tier of the USL for men, and the women’s USL Super League team is the same level as the National Women’s Soccer League (NSWL) and the highest level in women’s soccer. Additionally, LSC has youth programs that work with kids and teens to develop their soccer skills from the ground up.

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 “It’s not every day, especially at my age, I’m only 25-years-old, to be able to work with and help create so many marketing, media and community opportunities for a professional sports organization that is just getting started,” Fields said. “It’s a unique opportunity to write a story for the Lexington community and be a part in establishing LSC’s legacy as ‘A Club to Call Your Own.’”

Many people consider sports administration, much like sports in general, a male-dominated industry. Fields says that being a woman in sports administration is only a challenge if you let it and it’s all about the way you present yourself. Fields has two strong female mentors who have shaped her career.

“Susan Lax, director of athletics communications and public relations (football), was one of my biggest mentors at UK,” she said. “She taught me pretty much everything I know from a sports communication’s standpoint, and to this day is someone I can call upon for advice. She held herself with this confidence and determination that I always admired and took with me when I ventured out on my own.”

Fields describes her other mentor, Julie Barber, director of media service operations for the Seattle Seahawks, as a powerful woman in sports who walks into a room with confidence, and at the same time is nurturing and forthcoming with her desire to teach and develop others in the industry.

“Both women have shaped my career,” Fields said. “Instilling in me that, while this industry can get very intense and stressful at times, if I stay true to who I am, be authentic, be confident in what I do, my work will speak for itself.”

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Fields will tell you that her favorite part of her job is the same thing that motivates her in her career, and that is creating a beautiful narrative to tell the stories of the talented athletes that represent LSC.

“I love sitting down with my players and listening to their stories, why they do what they do, and then turn that around and show the world how great these athletes truly are,” said Fields. “With players from so many different backgrounds, each and every person has a different passion behind what they do and why they play. I’m incredibly lucky to learn from each of them, and I am honored to be able to share their beautiful stories with the world.

“There are so many ways you can tell a story and I think that’s the unique thing about what we do,” she said. “It’s no longer just writing; it is social media, it’s television, it’s everywhere. I can write a feature story on an athlete or write a press release on why an athlete is coming to the team, or it can be something as simple as a photograph or video to visually showcase their personality even more on social media.”

Storytelling and player development is the heart and soul of what Fields does every day. She says that making a difference in an athlete’s life through her work is the reason she loves her work.

“Every day that I get up for work, I’m not necessarily doing it for me. I’m telling someone else’s little piece of history, and the fact that I get to make an impact on the athletes and provide them with the spotlight, is something that is really important to me. Especially from working in college athletics, I’ve seen the impact it can make, and it may be small changes but it still matters. I get to watch them go off and progress in their career and become successful.”

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Fields says the LSC currently has two indoor facilities and a host of outdoor fields that are open to the public, but plans are underway to build a stadium on Athens Boonesboro Road in Lexington that will hold about 7,500 people when it is complete.

“We are very proud to be in Lexington and that’s why our owner Bill Shively put us here. We love this community, and the biggest thing right now is we want to give back to it as much as possible,” Fields said. “Something I believe is so unique, is that we are ‘One Crest, One Club.’ Meaning from our youth programs all the way to our professional teams, we all wear the same crest on our body. No matter what, we are all in this together, creating something really special right here in Central Kentucky.”

For now, Fields is looking forward to the start of the USL League One men’s 2024 season which runs through October. She describes this year’s team of players as “phenomenal” and hopes people will want to come out and fall in love with the players and the sport of soccer.

“There’s just something about the Lexington community and the way people are here that always draws me back,” she said. “I always say that Atlanta raised me, but Kentucky made me who I am. I wouldn’t be in this profession, and I wouldn’t have had the experiences I’ve had if I didn’t go to UK, if I didn’t take the internship in UK Athletics, and if I didn’t have the people and mentors that I have had here. The feeling of home that I get here and the encouragement and empowerment that you get from the people who represent home to me even when I was across the country is something I would not trade for the world.”

Learn more about the Lexington Sporting Club at https://www.lexsporting.com or sign up for their e-newsletter here. 

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What you may not know about Emily Fields

Fields is a huge music fan and has been to over 100 concerts in her life. Concerts were an activity she shared with her mother as early as the age of six or seven. At some point growing up, she stopped asking for gifts and asked for concert tickets instead because she says nothing beats having the experience that live music brings.

“I love the feelings and emotions you get from music,” she said. “I love the storytelling aspect in every part of my life and music tells a beautiful story and people can take from it the positive or the negative.”



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The Indiana game is a must-win for Kentucky, even in December

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The Indiana game is a must-win for Kentucky, even in December


One week ago, I wrote that Kentucky needed to show us something against Gonzaga. Unfortunately, it did, in a bad way. The Cats’ 35-point loss to the Bulldogs was their fourth to a ranked team this year. It was a performance so abysmal that the team got booed off the floor at halftime. Ever since, BBN has been in a tailspin, uncertainty about the program’s short-and long-term future hanging over the Bluegrass like a thick fog.

Kentucky has already gotten back in the win column, beating NC Central by 36 on Tuesday night; however, the true test of whether or not the Cats have reached rock bottom is Saturday vs. Indiana. The Hoosiers are 8-2, losing to Minnesota and Louisville last week. They rebounded from the 87-78 loss to the No. 6 Cards by routing Penn State 113-72 on Tuesday, thanks in large part to 44 points from Lamar Wilkerson, who picked Indiana over Kentucky out of the transfer portal this past April.

Both Kentucky and Indiana fell out of the AP and Coaches Polls this week, hovering near each other in the group of “others receiving votes.” KenPom ranks Kentucky No. 20 and Indiana No. 21. It gives the Cats a 4-point edge in Saturday’s game, while BetMGM goes a half-point higher at 4.5.

Thank goodness this one’s at Rupp because it’s a must-win, in more ways than one.

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Resume

Let’s start with the most basic: the schedule. It may feel premature to start worrying about the NCAA Tournament, but we’re 10 games in, one-third of the way through the regular season, and Kentucky still doesn’t have a good win, going 0-4 in said opportunities. The highest-ranked team the Cats have beaten so far is Valparaiso, which ranks No. 191 in the NET rankings. All of Kentucky’s wins are in Quad 4, all of its losses in Quad 1. Quad 1 losses don’t hurt you a ton, but at some point, you have to pick up some meaningful wins to offset them.

The Cats have two more chances to pick up a Quad 1 win before SEC play begins: vs. Indiana and St. John’s. Over half of Kentucky’s conference games are in Quad 1; before starting that gauntlet, we need to see that the Cats are capable of winning one. Of the two coming up, beating Indiana in Rupp feels more manageable than Mark Pope taking down his old coach, Rick Pitino, and St. John’s next weekend in Atlanta.

Lamar Wilkerson

Much has been said about Kentucky’s struggles with recruiting this week. Most of that conversation has centered around high school recruiting, not the transfer portal, but Lamar Wilkerson is one of the biggest portal targets Mark Pope missed on this past offseason. Kentucky felt so good about landing him that Mark Pope took him to the winner’s circle at Keeneland. Instead, Wilkerson went to Indiana, the Hoosiers sweetening the pot at the last minute.

On Tuesday, Wilkerson set an Indiana record with 10 three-pointers in the win over Penn State. He is averaging 18.8 points and 3.5 made threes per game this season. There were other whiffs for Pope and his staff during the offseason, but Wilkerson will take center stage at Rupp tomorrow night, at a time when Kentucky’s $22 million team is the laughing stock of college basketball.

Please don’t let him get hot.

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Fan fatigue

You don’t need me to tell you BBN is unhappy. The boos in Nashville were ugly proof of the unrest in the fanbase now. Concerns about recruiting and the school’s partnership with JMI, as outlined by Jacob Polacheck and Jack Pilgrim earlier this week, aren’t helping. Mark Pope struck a different tone on Tuesday night, using his bench to send messages to Kam Williams, Jaland Lowe, and Brandon Garrison, and biting back anger afterward as he talked about how his team continues to fall short of the standard. On the player side, Otega Oweh seemed to step up as a leader, scoring a season-high 21 points and insisting all is well in the locker room during interviews, one of which took place with his teammates surrounding him.

On Saturday, we get to see if those baby steps of progress are enough to avoid a fifth loss. Kentucky has already lost one home game this season, last week vs. North Carolina. Given all that’s happened since, there might be boos if the Cats pick up a second tomorrow night.

Fear of becoming Indiana

Indiana used to be one of Kentucky’s biggest rivals; for fans of a certain age, the Hoosiers may still be. Over the past 20 or so years, Indiana has faded to irrelevance. The Hoosiers haven’t gone to a Final Four since 2002. There’s a reason they put Christian Watford’s buzzer-beater vs. Kentucky in 2011 on a popcorn box; they haven’t had much else to celebrate.

As Kentucky fans, we’ve made our fair share of jokes about Indiana, but it’s not quite as funny now that the Cats haven’t gone to the Final Four in a decade, won an SEC regular-season championship since 2019-20, or an SEC Tournament title since 2017-18. For all our hopes that Mark Pope would be the one to turn it around, Kentucky still hasn’t won a big game this season. As Mark Story outlined in the Herald-Leader, Kentucky could be on the path to becoming the next Indiana, which makes Saturday’s game even bigger. With this being the first game in a four-year series, it could be an annual reminder if things keep trending in this direction.

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So, please, Kentucky, win this basketball game. You can make it my early Christmas gift.



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Kentucky lawmaker introduces federal bill to fight pharmacy benefit managers

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Kentucky lawmaker introduces federal bill to fight pharmacy benefit managers


WASHINGTON, D.C. — A Kentucky lawmaker is taking the fight for pharmacists to Washington.

Representative James Comer introduced the Pharmacists Fight Back Act on Thursday.

Kentucky already has a similar law in place that WKYT Investigates’ Kristen Kennedy has been following as the state works to get the law enforced.

Kentucky pharmacists may now get help on the federal level.

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“Rarely does a day go by without hearing from my constituents in Kentucky who are struggling under the weight of soaring prescription drug costs,” Comer said. “The questions I’m consistently asked are, ‘why? Who is benefiting from the system? Why isn’t it patients?’ My response is the same each time. It’s the PBMs.”

Federal bill targets pharmacy benefit managers

Comer says pharmacy benefit managers have outgrown their role in healthcare. State legislators agreed when they passed Senate Bill 188 last year. The law was supposed to increase reimbursement rates for pharmacies and keep PBMs from steering patients to affiliated pharmacies.

The regulations are similar to what Comer wants to do on a federal level.

“Our oversight investigation, which culminated in a report last year with our findings and recommendations, found PBMs have largely operated in the dark,” Comer said. “PBMs have abused their positions as middlemen to line their own pockets by retaining rebates and fees, undermine our community pharmacists and pass along costs to patients at the pharmacy counter. It’s unacceptable, and Congress has a responsibility to act.”

If the act becomes law, it would affect pharmacies across the U.S.

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Pharmacists in Kentucky are already seeing some advantages with the regulations placed on pharmacy benefit managers, but their biggest complaint is that the law isn’t being enforced.

That could change if the federal government gets involved. The Kentucky Pharmacists Association thinks Frankfort has a responsibility to act on the PBM law that passed in the state. They’re still asking the governor to make sure the Department of Insurance is enforcing the law in place.

Stay informed on investigations like this by checking out our WKYT Investigates page at wkyt.com/investigates.



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Several people hurt in Western Kentucky Parkway multi-car accident, officials say

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Several people hurt in Western Kentucky Parkway multi-car accident, officials say


MUHLENBERG, Ky. (WFIE) – Kentucky officials says there are multiple people injured in a three-car accident on Western Kentucky Parkway.

According to a post made by the Central City Fire Department, three vehicles were involved in a crash between the 64 and 65 mile markers eastbound of the parkway.

They say both the eastbound and westbound lanes are closed at this time. The closure should last around 3 hours.

Two people were extricated from a vehicle. Four adults and three juveniles are being taken to the hospital. No update has been given on their conditions.

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They say a mass casualty incident was declared, and Ohio County Fire and EMS were called to the scene due to the number of patients.

We will update you when we learn more.

Several people hurt in Western Kentucky Parkway multi-car accident, officials say(Central City Fire Department)



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