Kentucky
Archie Goodwin seeks redemption at Kentucky with La Familia in TBT
Archie Goodwin has four years of The Basketball Tournament (TBT) experience, helping perennial power Eberlein Drive reach the semifinals last summer; however, this year, he jumped at the chance to join La Familia for a second shot at Kentucky Basketball glory.
Goodwin played for Eberlein Drive, one of the two remaining teams from the inaugural TBT, since 2021. Last summer, he was one of the stars of Eberlein Drive’s run to the semifinals, where they lost to Forever Coogs, Houston’s alumni team. Goodwin’s season at Kentucky didn’t go as he’d hoped — after Nerlens Noel went down, the Cats failed to make the NCAA Tournament — but he is eager to reunite with Big Blue Nation and maybe get some redemption.
“It means a lot to me. I think when I was here in 2012, we had an up-and-down year. And I think that the way that season ended left a lot of the fanbase looking at that team in a certain way, in a certain light. And so for me to be a part of that team, and then being able to come back to this, if we could win or get close to winning, it could be a way of them being able to see, like, okay, hey, these guys, maybe they didn’t [win big], they weren’t ready then, but they got the opportunity to come back and make it right, and do something as well.
“It’s not the NCAA [Tournament], but it is something that’s competitive in that it means something. You’re playing against other pros and you want to win. So there’s still a competitive edge there, and it’s still something that we can win under the name of Kentucky that will mean something to the program.”
Goodwin is confident that had Noel not torn his ACL in the Florida game in February 2013 that Kentucky would have made the tournament — in fact, he thinks the Cats’ resume was good enough to make it regardless; however, he understands fans’ frustration that the squad only made the NIT, one season after winning the national championship.
“I take it for what it was,” Goodwin said of his time at Kentucky. “I think we had some highs, and we did have some lows. I think that everybody pretty much knows that if Nerlens [Noel] doesn’t get hurt, we have a different season because of what he meant to our team, but I also understand, like, hey, it did happen, and we did have the team that we did once he went down.”
“So I kind of see both, but I try to think of it in a positive light, because I understand the frustration of a fanbase and of a crowd, knowing that they want to win certain games, and we just weren’t able to, because we’re missing certain players.”
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BBN’s support: “Man, it’s amazing; don’t find it nowhere else.”
Goodwin could face his former squad if La Familia and Eberlein Drive both make it to the Lexington Regional championship Tuesday night. As a TBT vet, he likes La Familia’s chances and is going to focus on playing a supporting, not starring, role.
“I was one of the top players last year. I really just helped the team with just fitting in and doing the little things. Like, I didn’t have any crazy games like that. I had moments, but I think that it’s about just doing the little things to help the team win that’ll stand out and help us.
“We have so many guys that it could be anybody tonight on any given day. So with me knowing that, it’s just about me coming in, being a good defender, making the right plays, being a leader, vocal, and making sure we’re doing the things that we need to do to help us win, staying connected with each other. And as long as we do that, we’ll be fine.”
Of course, home-court advantage could play a huge role. Goodwin is counting on Big Blue Nation to bring it at Memorial Coliseum this weekend.
“I expect them to come out and be strong and be supportive as they always are. I think that we have a great group. I think that we’ll come out and play hard and try to win over the fans, as we always do, so we’re just looking for their support, and I know they’ll give it, because they always give it.”
Since going to the pros in 2013, Goodwin has made the rounds in the NBA, G League, and overseas. He most recently played for the Jiangsu Dragons in the Chinese Basketball Association. At almost every stop, he’s encountered Kentucky fans, proof of the fanbase’s unique reach.
“I think the difference is how passionate the fans are,” Goodwin said of Kentucky fans compared to others. “I think you don’t have too many fanbases like this in college. Maybe Duke is the only one I can compare close to the fanbase that we have here. But there aren’t many fanbases where you can go — I was in Italy one year, and there were Kentucky fans that recognized me there. You know what I mean? It doesn’t happen like that. I’ve been in Germany, and I’ve had Kentucky fans recognize me.
“So, you don’t have that everywhere, where they’re really worldwide. It’s just a different impact that Kentucky basketball has had. And a large part of that, I think, is due to Coach Cal’s era, from getting John Wall and those guys and starting that whole way that he did. I think a lot of the fanbase came from that era, and they’re everywhere. Man, it’s amazing. Don’t find it nowhere else.”
DeAndre Liggins, who has played professionally for 14 years all across the world, agrees.
“It’s a great fanbase. You’ve got other fanbases out there, like North Carolina, Duke, but it’s nothing like Kentucky. Because you hear Kentucky, it’s like, even players who never played here, they know about the tradition, and they never experienced it. They just, I tell them Kentucky, they’d be like, ‘Wow,’ so it’s just a big deal.”
Both Goodwin and Liggins are also enjoying being back in their own stomping grounds — even if it’s sometimes hard to recognize due to all the upgrades to Kentucky’s campus. Although they’re among some of the older players on the team, they’re enjoying getting to know their younger counterparts and swapping stories.
“I only played with the Doron, but everybody’s still a family; we all bleed blue and white,” Liggins said. “Every year, my family has a family reunion, like my blood family. These guys are not my blood, but we bleed blue, so to come back here and be around these guys, I haven’t seen their faces for so long. We’re all overseas playing, but come back and reunite, that’s a great feeling. Bringing up old stories from when we were here. Just a great feeling.”
“Honestly, I’m just happy to be around the environment,” Goodwin said. “The environment was what’s most important to me. Being here, being around some of the old guys, and seeing some of the old people who were here when I was here. That’s what I was looking forward to, and I got to see some people today. That’s what I want to see. And I want to see the young guys, I want to see new groups. I want to see how they are, be able to meet those guys, talk to them, interact with them, and see what their mindset is.”
La Familia opens TBT play Friday night vs. Stroh’s Squad at Memorial Coliseum (9 p.m. ET, FS1). If they win, they’ll play the winner of War Ready, the Auburn alumni Team, and X-Rayted on Sunday (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX). The winner of that game will advance to the Lexington Regional championship on Tuesday night (6 p.m., FS2).
The winner of the Lexington Regional will play the winner of the Louisville Regional in the quarterfinals on Monday, July 28, at 6 p.m. on FS1. The semifinals and $1 million winner-take-all championship game will be July 31 and Aug. 3.
Kentucky
Glendale, KY, residents mourn death of solider killed in Iran conflict
Gen. Caine honors Sgt. Benjamin Pennington
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine spoke to reporters about the seventh soldier killed in the Iran war, Sgt. Benjamin Pennington.
GLENDALE, Ky. – The text message arrived on Mike Bell’s phone early on March 1. It was brief: Benjamin Pennington, the son of Bell’s close friend Tim Pennington, had been seriously injured in an attack at a U.S. air base in Saudi Arabia.
Bell hadn’t seen Benjamin Pennington in a while, but the executive minister and retired pastor of Glendale Christian Church clearly remembered the bright, ambitious boy who attended church every Sunday with his parents before enlisting in the U.S. Army.
Bell asked the Sunday school students gathered before him to pray for the 26-year-old Glendale native. Over the following week, he and Tim talked or texted daily, praying and hoping for the best.
There were signs of hope on March 5. Pennington asked the medical staff for a Pepsi, which his family saw as a positive sign. But by March 7, Pennington’s condition had worsened.
That night, after calling a basketball game at Central Hardin High School, Bell received a call from Tim. Benjamin had died from his injuries.
Bell said Benjamin was about to be moved from Saudi Arabia to Germany when his blood pressure dropped.
Bell ached thinking about Pennington’s family not being able to be with Benjamin in his final moments.
“Their hurt is so real and so powerful. I can’t fathom the loss of their son,” Bell said. “That distance made a real difference.”
As the conflict between the U.S., Israel and Iran enters its second week, Glendale and the larger Hardin County community are now mourning one of their own. According to those who knew him best, Pennington was a well-liked, confident young man who made friends easily.
An Eagle Scout and high school athlete, Pennington was enrolled in an automotive technology career pathway at his alma mater, Central Hardin High School. However, he changed his career plans and joined the Army in 2017 right after graduating.
At the time of his death, Pennington was a sergeant assigned to the 1st Space Brigade at Fort Carson, Colorado. The U.S. Army said in a news release that Pennington will be posthumously promoted to staff sergeant.
Glendale is a typical small town — a Mayberry of today, as Bell likes to say. It’s quiet, with plenty of antique shops and family-owned restaurants lining its historic boulevard. Residents here take pride in how long they’ve lived here, and many have never dreamed of leaving the community they’ve built.
“I moved here 20 years ago, and I’m considered a young-in,” said Sherry Creek, owner of The Mercantile, a home goods store on East Main Street.
Some, like Eddie Best, trace their roots back to the 1800s. On March 10, Best was inside The Whistle Stop, a southern-style family restaurant that has only changed hands twice in its 50-year history. It was a Tuesday, which meant he was picking up his family’s regular order of two open-faced roast beef sandwiches, a side of greens and baked apples.
“Family, that’s why I stayed all these years,” said Best, 45.
The ties that bind this close-knit community make Pennington’s death even more impactful for the town of about 2,000 residents, located about an hour south of Louisville. In the few days since the news broke, Bell said his and others’ phones have been ringing nonstop.
“The people are wanting to know what to do, how to do,” Bell said. “Everybody is struggling in darkness, trying to figure out how to bring a little light to the Pennington family in their struggle and transition.”
The Penningtons, by all accounts, are active and involved community members. Tim Pennington has been a long-standing member of the town’s Lions Club and coaches cross country and track at Central Hardin High School.
Pennington was on the team while his father was the coach. Contrary to what some might expect, Pennington showed at least no outward annoyance at his dad being coach, said Jonathan Ratliff, who was also on the school’s team. If anything, he put twice as much effort into his sport, showing he wasn’t going to get favorable treatment, Ratliff said.
Ratliff, who was a few years ahead of Pennington at Central Hardin, said Pennington was friendly and funny, someone who quickly made friends with teammates and even athletes on different teams.
“As soon as I joined the team, it felt like I had been with him forever,” Ratliff, a part-time actor in the Glendale community, said. “It didn’t matter if you knew Ben for a minute or two years. He just had a positive energy to be around. Very fun guy, great teammate to have.”
Pennington’s death marks a second blow to Glendale in recent months. In December, Ford and the South Korean company SK On dissolved their partnership to manufacture electric vehicle batteries at a plant just outside of the town. Although Ford plans to retool the factory and hire 2,100 workers for its second phase, the immediate impact resulted in termination notices to 1,500 people.
“Nobody was indifferent on it,” Bell said of the plant. “And then you have this, and everybody hurts. … It’s a family.”
Pennington is the seventh U.S. service member to die in the conflict that began Feb. 28. The other six soldiers died in an Iranian missile strike at a civilian port in Kuwait one day after the war began. Military officials are investigating the circumstances of the March 1 attack at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia.
Pennington received the Army Commendation Medal three times and the Army Good Conduct Medal twice during his military career, according to the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command. He also received the Army Achievement Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Overseas Service Ribbon, Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, Korea Defense Service Medal and the Army Service Ribbon.
On March 9, Pennington’s body was returned to U.S. soil. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Peter Hegseth attended the dignified transfer ceremony at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, a military tradition.
It’s unclear when Pennington’s remains will return to Glendale, but the community is ready to welcome him home.
Hardin County Judge Executive Keith Taul has ordered all flags at Hardin County government buildings to be lowered from March 9 to sunset March 11 in honor of Pennington.
The Glendale community “will get through this, together,” Taul said. “They will. They’ll reach out and put their arms around the Pennington family for sure.”
Monroe Trombly covers public safety. He can be reached at mtrombly@gannett.com.
Kentucky
Trump takes his war against Thomas Massie straight to his home Kentucky district
WASHINGTON — President Trump will use his stop in Kentucky on Wednesday to try to get his congressional nemesis out of office.
His target is Rep. Thomas Massie, a seven-term congressman who the White House has named the “Democrats’ favorite member.”
Trump endorsed Massie’s primary opponent, Ed Gallrein, who will be at the event in Hebron, Ky., per his campaign. The president will also be making a stop in Ohio.
Hebron is located in Boone County, Ky., just south of Cincinnati.
The White House made its feelings on Massie clear.
“You can have differences, but you have to be constructive. He is not constructive. In fact, he’s the Democrats’ favorite member,” a senior administration official told The Post.
Massie has outraged the White House on multiple occasions: he refused to support Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill,” which was the president’s signature domestic policy agenda; he criticized Trump’s foreign policy and accused him of executive overreach on the attacks on drug boats and Iran; and he led the charge on demanding the Justice Department release all its files in the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Now Trump is going to Massie’s district along the Ohio River to campaign against him, with the primary election just a little more than two months away, on May 19th.
Massie won’t be there.

“Congressman Massie will not be attending as he has a previously scheduled official event,” his campaign told The Post.
Trump has railed against Massie as “the worst Republican.”
He took a swipe at his biggest naysayer when he spoke to House Republicans at their retreat at Trump Doral on Monday.
“The Republican Party has fantastic spirit, the level I don’t think has been seen before,” Trump said. “We have to get a couple of people on board, which at least one case is virtually impossible. I wonder who that might be, sick person.”
It’s believed he was talking about Massie, who was not seen in the audience.
In contrast, Gallrein, a former Navy SEAL, has praised Trump, his policies and his handling of the war in Iran.
For his part, Massie has been posting Trump’s videos and comments attacking him, hoping to turn the criticism from the president into support from voters.
The May primary will be a test of Trump’s power with Republican voters. It’ll also be seen as a barometer of Trump’s messaging on the economy.
The White House has argued the cost of living is down but rising gas prices – from the attack on Iran – have dominated the news. Still, the president will tout his work on the issue.
“President Trump will visit the great states of Ohio and Kentucky on Wednesday to tout his economic victories and detail his administration’s aggressive, ongoing efforts to lower prices and make America more affordable,” White House spokesperson Liz Huston told The Post.
Kentucky
Northern Kentucky Norsemen claim Kentucky state hockey championship
Northern Kentucky brought home the Kentucky High School Hockey league state championship once again.
The Northern Kentucky Norsemen defeated Owensboro in dominant 5-0 fashion on March 8 to hoist the trophy. The Norsemen, comprised of players from schools across Northern Kentucky, earned their fourth state title since 2017. The Norsemen previously won in 2017, 2019 and 2023.
After entering the tournament as the top-seeded team, two wins brought the Norsemen to a 27-12-2 final record.
The Norsemen’s defense was in peak performance in the finals. Despite Owensboro getting off over 30 shots, senior goalkeeper Chase Bender kept a clean sheet.
On offense, junior Trevor Bauwens led the Norse, finishing the season with 35 goals and 12 assists. Other key offensive performers were seniors Mitchell Kirby and Samuel Mouser. Kirby ended the year with 19 goals and 22 assists, while Mouser had 16 goals and a team-best 30 assists.
Northern Kentucky is now set to represent the state in the USA Hockey High School National Championships. The tournament be held March 18-22 in Plymouth, Minnesota.
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