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Big Blue Heaven: Mark Pope’s Quest to Give Kentucky Basketball Back to the Fans

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Big Blue Heaven: Mark Pope’s Quest to Give Kentucky Basketball Back to the Fans


Start with the hair. What little there is.

“He can grow a full head of hair,” insists Mark Pope’s wife, Lee Anne. “And there would be no gray in it.”

Yet the men’s basketball coach of the Kentucky Wildcats has shaved his blonde hair down to a short stubble for most of his adult life—your basic jarhead Marine recruit look—because it’s simply easier. His cut is so low maintenance that when his four daughters were little, they sometimes did the honors of giving dad’s dome a shave. If they messed it up, who would even notice?

At age 52, Pope isn’t much of a coiffeur. Among the many stylistic shifts accompanying the new coach at Kentucky, this is one of the most telling. Not the hair itself, but what the hair represents.

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“I don’t think there’s anyone who spends less time thinking about himself than Mark,” Lee Anne continues. “He’s the most secure human being I’ve ever been around.”

Pope and Lee Anne laugh together during a charity event in August.

Pope and Lee Anne laugh together during a charity event in August. / Matt Stone/The Louisville Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK

Some of Pope’s predecessors had the audacity to view the most enormous job in college basketball as their own vanity project. Kentucky has been a place for peacocks in the past—at least until the Peacocks of Saint Peter’s began the final defrocking of the most recent proud bird to strut the sidelines in Lexington. John Calipari and Rick Pitino brought towering egos to Big Blue Nation, and Adolph Rupp was no shrinking violet in the program’s early years. 

Big personalities for a big job. That was fine as long as they were big winners, which was the case most of the time.

Rupp’s run spanned decades, winning four national championships and becoming a cherished state icon—but even The Baron of the Bluegrass was forced out at 70 by a state age law that might have been finessed if he were still at the top of his game. For Pitino—who arrived at Kentucky with a bald spot but notably left without it—his star burned bright for eight years and then he was lured off by a massive NBA contract. For Calipari, the vanity project took a sharp turn in the wrong direction in the latter half of his 15-year tenure, necessitating his bailout move to Arkansas in April.

Enter Pope. Re-enter humility, for the first time since the Tubby Smith era. Re-enter a sense of communal ownership. We’ll see whether national championship contention makes a reappearance as well.

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“The Kentucky fans want their program back,” says John Clay, longtime columnist for the Lexington Herald-Leader. “Pope wants to give it back.”

There are generations of stories about Kentucky basketball fan ardor, which runs as deep as the coal mines in the eastern part of the state and flows as strong as the Ohio River that forms the northern border from Ashland to Paducah. Big Blue Nation packs 23,000-seat Rupp Arena. It invades opposing gyms. It takes over neutral sites. It is ubiquitous and eternal.

The deceased have been buried in the jerseys of their heroes. The living keep buying jerseys for future interment attire. Money may not be flush for the rank-and-file fandom, but the Cats get their cut in portions great and small. 

A 1987 preseason intrasquad scrimmage in the tiny town of Jeff, Ky.—squirreled away in the mountains of Appalachia, just a few winding miles from neighboring Happy—solicited a $1,450 bid for the game ball from a local tire dealer. “I ain’t got no sense when it comes to basketball,” Ted Cook said upon receipt of the ball, speaking for an entire state.

But the greatest fan flex in Kentucky basketball history came last spring, when Mark Pope was introduced as the new coach of the Wildcats. The commonwealth’s zeitgeist was fully revealed on April 14.

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By then, athletic director Mitch Barnhart was angry. Two-time national champion Dan Hurley declined interest in the job, opting to stay at Connecticut. One-time national champion Scott Drew got down the road far enough with Barnhart to have his wife and kids visit Lexington for a look around, but Drew pulled out to stay at Baylor. The program’s umpteenth daydream about hiring Billy Donovan did not go anywhere.

So Barnhart had pivoted to Pope, the BYU coach. His ties to the program ran deep—he was the captain of Kentucky’s loaded 1996 national championship team under Pitino. His NCAA tournament résumé ran shallow; he’s not won a game in the Big Dance. Should the winningest program in men’s history, owner of eight national titles, be entrusted to a coach who was just upset in the NCAA first round by Duquesne?

Unlike trying to convince those more accomplished coaches to come to Lexington, his interview went in reverse. Barnhart got the hard sell from Pope for why he should get the job. He is a geyser of positive energy, a slightly goofy 6′ 10″ presence with Labrador retriever enthusiasm and a med school brain. Pope’s pitch started with his vision for the introductory news conference.

“You can hire somebody that’s going to go up there and you’re going to hand them a jersey and they’re going to do a photo shoot and throw [the jersey] in the corner,” Pope told Barnhart. “But when we do this press conference, I’m going to bring my own jersey, and it’s got blood and sweat and tears on it from the national championship season. And that’s the difference between me and anybody else for this job.”

Pope, with his actual game jersey, poses with Barnhart during his introduction in April.

Pope, with his actual game jersey, poses with Barnhart during his introduction in April. / Sam Upshaw Jr./Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK

Barnhart was sold, and the deal came together quickly, with word leaking out late on April 11. But the backlash from a fan base expecting to land a coach with championship rings was fast and furious—hence Barnhart’s anger. 

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At 6 a.m. on April 12—4 a.m. in Provo, Utah, where Pope was—Barnhart called his new coach and told him, “I’m pissed. We’re taking this press conference to Rupp.”

Pope had misgivings. What if an unenthused fan base opted not to come? What if it’s friends and family and thousands of empty seats in a cavernous building?

But after a day of venting about who didn’t take the job, Kentucky fans came around to having one of their own in the job. They got behind the hire.

“The battleship flipped,” Barnhart says. “I’ve never seen momentum change like that.”

The news conference was not ideally timed to draw a crowd—it was a Sunday afternoon during the final round of The Masters. But when Pope and UK officials got to Rupp, lines were already forming to get in hours ahead of time.

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Meanwhile, Kentucky concocted a clever callback introduction. Pope and his family would enter Rupp on a bus, the same way he and the 1996 team did after winning the national championship the night before in New Jersey. But Pope added one last touch.

Before the appearance, UK had arranged a meet-and-greet for Pope with other former players. During that session Pope came up with an idea—let’s put all these former players on the bus, too. And so they did, with generations of Wildcats both famous and obscure walking off to resounding applause.

The 1996 team came off last, with Pope the final one to appear, holding the national championship trophy skyward. What greeted him was a stunning sight—roughly 19,000 people showed up for a news conference.

The very fact that this became a 1990s Kentucky love-in was a departure from the Calipari era. Cal gave nods to the program’s gilded history, but the Pitino era was not celebrated during his 15 years anywhere near the way it was when Pope and his teammates got off the bus.

Pope exits the bus with the national championship trophy as he enters Rupp Arena in April.

Pope exits the bus with the national championship trophy as he enters Rupp Arena in April. / Clare Grant/Courier Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK

“I walked out of that bus into that arena and I don’t know why, but I felt emboldened and determined and couldn’t wait to state our case about who we are,” Pope says. “For some reason, in that moment, none of the worries and fears and doubts that should be crushing you at that time are there.”

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The fan turnout was a sign of how eager Kentucky was to turn the page from the Calipari era. He won a lot—410 games, six Southeastern Conference titles, four Final Fours, one national title—but the Cal experience had gotten old, frustrating and increasingly bitter with first-round flameouts against No. 15 seeds Saint Peter’s and Oakland.

Cal sold Kentucky to recruits as a quick-stop NBA way station, and he expected the fans to embrace that approach as well. He talked generational wealth, they talked program loyalty. He was energetic in terms of community outreach in times of trouble, but his connection to the public felt largely transactional. As the program slid after 2015, Cal’s condescension, equivocation and excuse-making became more infuriating.

“It was Cal’s program,” Clay says. “It wasn’t really Kentucky’s program anymore.”

Pitino, who championed the hiring of Pope, echoes that sentiment without mentioning Cal.

“I just think Kentucky needed a breath of fresh air, and someone who is going to represent the name on the front of the jersey,” he says. “The people don’t care about what players do after they leave. They care about what they do at Kentucky.”

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Calipari left Kentucky in April after a 15-year run that had turned sour.

Calipari left Kentucky in April after a 15-year run that had turned sour. / Matt Stone, Louisville Courier Journal

With that as the backdrop, Pope hit every note the fans wanted to hear in his introduction. He was the anti-Cal, putting program first and individual star power and earning power second.

“Entitlement leads to sorrow and depression,” Pope said that day. “And gratitude leads to joy. What all of the future players will learn really quick, O.K., is that they are not doing those jerseys a favor by letting the jerseys clothe them. It will be one of the great honors of their life to put that jersey on.”

It was just a news conference. But it was a catharsis on a massive scale. 

“It was a revival of a lot of emotions for people,” Barnhart says. “You felt like you’d gone to church.”

The roars in Rupp eventually stopped, and everyone else went home. Mark Pope went to work, having a staffer get him into his new office in Memorial Coliseum. That’s when reality hit him.

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“It was so quiet,” Pope says in that office last month. “There’s the thing of having 19,000 people at a press conference in an arena, which has never happened before, and that’s what everyone sees. What they don’t see is two hours later sitting down in that chair and me understanding that in 11 months, I have to hang a banner. And you’re just alone.”

Pope filled that alone time by doing what comes naturally to him—working insatiably. One of the reasons the Washington transfer became a captain on a super-talented team under Pitino was that they shared a maniacal zeal for the game. Nobody pushed players harder than Pitino, and Pope was fine with the pushing.

“Work was always my separator,” Pope says. “I found confidence out of work. I outworked you yesterday. I’m going to outwork you today. I’ll outwork you tomorrow. But I came here to Kentucky and I couldn’t do any extra work. I didn’t actually have the capacity for the first time in my life. But we were speaking the same language. Just leave it all there and crawl out of the gym.”

Or, in a crisis, leave it in your jersey. Former Pope teammates tell the story of one particularly brutal Pitino workout that pushed the center to the point of nausea. Rather than let Pitino see him break down and throw up, Pope vomited in his jersey and kept practicing.

The 1996 championship team had nine players eventually play in the NBA. Pope was the last of four Wildcats taken in that draft, going in the second round with the 52nd pick. Pope has referred to that Wildcats team as “eleven prima donnas and [walk-on point guard] Anthony Epps,” but Pitino disputes that characterization.

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“Mark was the glue who held a lot of egos together,” Pitino says. “It was a tough team to manage to keep everyone happy, and whether he started or didn’t start never mattered to him. It was a bloodbath every day in practice, and he was the hardest worker.”

Pitino coached Pope at Kentucky in the mid-1990s.

Pitino coached Pope at Kentucky in the mid-1990s. / Chris Day/The Commercial Appeal / USA TODAY NETWORK

Pope’s practice intensity was such that future lottery pick Antoine Walker would become annoyed, asking Pitino to put someone else on him during scrimmages. That relentless ethic helped Pope hang around the NBA for six seasons before being cut by the Denver Nuggets.

At that point, Pope took a road very much less traveled by former NBA players. He applied to medical schools and was accepted by Columbia. A Rhodes Scholar candidate while at Kentucky, he had the brainpower to go to an Ivy League med school with the intention of becoming a neurosurgeon.

During his pro career, Pope was set up (sort of) with Lee Anne, who is the daughter of the late Lynn Archibald, a former college coach. She was working as a talent booker for David Letterman and Pope was traveling the country playing ball, so there wasn’t a lot of time for the two to date. Their initial courtship was largely via email.

The 1999 NBA lockout afforded them more time to deepen their relationship. Marriage and daughters followed, and the career plan was set for Pope to become a doctor. But the burning passion he had for basketball didn’t carry over to medicine.

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Mark Fox’s first coaching job was a graduate assistant and then a full-time coach at Washington while Pope was a freshman and sophomore there. The two lived in the gym after practices—Pope getting up extra shots, Fox shagging rebounds or occasionally playing one-on-one against him. During a successful head-coaching stint at Nevada, Fox started getting inquiries from Pope about joining his staff.

Absolutely not, Fox said. Do not quit Columbia med school to get into this racket.

Fox moved to Georgia in 2009, and Pope insisted he was ready to get into the profession. “If you have to have surgery, you do not want me holding the knife,” Pope said to Fox. 

Fox relented, telling Pope on a Friday that if he’s serious about it, show up for a kids camp ready to work by Sunday. Pope talked to Lee Anne, who encouraged him to go for it in spite of how crazy it might have seemed. Pope drove down the Atlantic seaboard in time for the camp, and a career was launched.

His approach was, as always, full tilt. Fox remembers telling Pope that he wanted to put on a nice tailgate spread for a recruiting weekend during the 2009 football season. Orders were followed. “I show up and we’ve got everything,” Fox recalls. “It’s incredible.”

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Months later, the Georgia basketball office got a bill from the university for a satellite dish that was bought without approval. Pope had bought one for the tailgate. The staff found it in a closet, wrapped in cable.

“No job was too small for him to do all the way,” Fox says. “He did the big jobs, he did the small jobs, he did scouting, he’d handle equipment. He did all of it.”

Fox gave Pope his first coaching job and now is on the staff at Kentucky.

Fox gave Pope his first coaching job and now is on the staff at Kentucky. / Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Pope moved on to Wake Forest and BYU as an assistant before getting his first head-coaching job at Utah Valley in 2015. He stayed four years, winning 48 games in the final two and setting himself up for a return to BYU as the successor to Dave Rose when he retired.

At BYU, Pope’s free-flowing, three-shooting offensive philosophy thrived. The Cougars were 110–52 in his time there, making the NCAA tournament twice (a third bid was lost to the pandemic in 2020). A Mormon, BYU was a great fit—but then Kentucky came calling, and for the second time in his basketball life, he removed himself from a comfortable situation to chase a bigger dream.

“I cannot live this life without seeing if I can go do it,” Pope says of his mindset when transferring from Washington to Kentucky. “For this one [the coaching decision], it’s a lot deeper. There’s some of that sentiment, Jack London, ‘I’d rather be ashes than dust.’  

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“I don’t think we’ve been given this life to be dust—that has no interest to me. But also I have the relationship with this place where it changed my life forever. It was formative for me. I got kicked out of here at the end of my tenure as a different human being.”

Pope returns to a warm embrace. But it’s the offseason. Fans that love a coach today will fall out of love when losses arrive. Coaches change, but championship expectations never do at Kentucky.

“I understand the assignment,” Pope said at his introduction, a line he has repeated often since.

Nobody knows how good his first Kentucky team will be, but his staff features a trusted right-hand man: Fox. During the spring, when Pope was sitting in that empty office, one of his first calls went to his old boss, who had taken an administrative job at Georgetown. While waiting to hear about the job, Fox called Pope one day while he was driving through Cincinnati—he was either turning right to head north to see family in Milwaukee, or left to go south to Lexington.

“Turn left,” Pope told him. 

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“When I first knew Mark, I was the youngest guy in the staff room,” Fox says. “Now I’m the oldest guy in the room. Hopefully I can see around the corner a little bit and let him know what could be coming. But this place to him, it’s sacred ground. He treats it that way daily.”

In terms of players, Calipari left nothing behind but a couple of walk-ons, so the roster rebuild was massive and hasty. Transfers have arrived from nine schools, including one of Pope’s former players from BYU and a freshman recruit who had committed to the Cougars. How it all comes together in what should be a murderously difficult SEC is pure guesswork.

Future recruiting—the one area where Kentucky fans may grow wistful for the old Calipari monster classes—is off to a fast start. Pope has a pair of national top-30 commitments for 2025, according to Rivals.com, and plenty of other irons in the fire.

Every game matters at Kentucky—something else Calipari never really grasped, given some of his early-season losses. But one will matter more than the others: Feb. 1, when Arkansas comes to Rupp.

Win or lose, the current coach of the Wildcats will understand that game isn’t about him. The visiting coach might not get that.

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“I know this is about something bigger than me,” Pope says. “If I win 10 national championships in a row, it will always be so much bigger than me. I am just blessed to have this little window of time, like I did as a player, where I get to offer my best to this thing. And that’s this place, man. That’s what this place is. That’s why I love this place so much.”



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Final gargoyle returned to its perch atop rehabbed Kentucky cathedral modeled after Notre Dame

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Final gargoyle returned to its perch atop rehabbed Kentucky cathedral modeled after Notre Dame


COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) — The last stone gargoyle has been returned to its perch as part of a two-year restoration of a Kentucky cathedral with a facade modeled after Notre Dame in Paris.

The rehab project at the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption was sorely needed to repair deteriorated stone, metal and glass that adorns the limestone exterior. The project included 32 recreated gargoyles along with repairs of deteriorated finials, arches and balustrades.

The 125-year-old church, in Covington just across the Ohio River from Cincinnati, offers the experience of a European gothic cathedral in the Midwest, said the Very Rev. Ryan Maher, the cathedral’s rector. The cathedral has an “intimate connection to what is really the most popular and most well-known cathedral outside of Rome itself,” he said.

“I think it’s very special and very unique,” said Maher, who watched from the sidewalk as the last gargoyle was raised to top of the facade on Monday.

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The renovation price tag was nearly $8 million, and most came from donations, Maher said.

Brian Walter, CEO of Trisco Systems, the contractor, said the final gargoyle going in was “a symbol of the accomplishment of all our facade work.”

“That’s a big, monumental occasion for not only people here, but for us. That kind of symbolized the last stone we’re putting in,” Walter said.

Restoration plans grew out of Maher’s discovery in 2018 of a large piece of stone that fell from the exterior.

“We realized at that time that we needed to investigate not only the source of that one piece of stone that had fallen, but to take a look at the overall facade of the cathedral,” Maher said.

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Workers will continue with smaller tasks around the facade, including the installation of chimeras that sit on the roofline, but the heavy lifting has been completed, Walter said.

“This is kind of a once or twice in a lifetime project,” Walter said.



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Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear criticizes Gaza ‘genocide’ discourse | The Jerusalem Post

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Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear criticizes Gaza ‘genocide’ discourse | The Jerusalem Post


Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear declined to label Israel’s actions in Gaza as “genocide” in an interview with Politico published Sunday, instead critiquing the question as a litmus test among Democrats.

“That’s becoming one of those new litmus tests that we said we would never do as a party again,” Beshear told Politico’s Dasha Burns after being asked if he agreed with the label. “It’s trying to throw out a word and, ‘Are you going to raise your hand or are you not going to?’”

Beshear is the Democratic governor of a solidly red state and a potential 2028 presidential contender. His remarks come as Democratic candidates increasingly grapple with their stances on Israel amid record-low support for Israel among their base.

While several lawmakers, including Vermont’s Jewish Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent, have called Israel’s actions in Gaza a “genocide,” the label has not gained mainstream support in the Democratic Party. Last October, former Vice President Kamala Harris declined to use the “genocide” label, which Israel had long rejected, but said, “We should all step back and ask this question and be honest about it.”

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Some Democrats have embraced the question, with a New York congressional candidate telling the leftist streamer Hasan Piker this week that she is “100%” comfortable with the issue serving as a litmus test in her party.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear visits ”The Sunday Briefing” with Peter Doocy at FOX News D.C. Bureau on February 21, 2026 in Washington, DC. (credit: PAUL MORIGI/GETTY IMAGES)

Others have acted as though the litmus test is already in place. In January, for example, California congressional candidate Scott Wiener announced that he believes Israel’s actions in Gaza constitute a genocide after drawing scrutiny for declining to answer the question during a debate.

Beshear critiques Trump, Netanyahu

While Beshear told Burns that Israel “has the right to exist as a democratic country, as a Jewish country,” he added that his feelings about President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conduct during the war in Gaza and ongoing war in Iran were “a different thing.”

“I believe the United States needs a strong Israel, but not one with decisions being made in the way that Netanyahu is making them,” Beshear said.

Beshear also critiqued President Donald Trump’s response to the crisis in Gaza.

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“I believe that it could have been done without a lot of the suffering, but I put a lot of that blame also on Donald Trump,” he said. “If he’d said we are coming in and we are bringing food and aid and you are going to make sure that we’re safe, it would’ve happened.”

Last week, a spokesperson for Beshear told Politico that “AIPAC has never contributed to Governor Beshear and they’re never going to – ever,” a response that dovetailed with a host of other potential Democratic presidential candidates, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who are increasingly distancing themselves from the pro-Israel lobby.

“I think that’s up to each and every Democrat,” Beshear answered when asked whether he thought his fellow Democrats should take money from AIPAC.

“In the end, I think people need to be clear about their stance on these issues,” Beshear said. “And for me, it’s one where I believe that we need a future with an ally in Israel. But we need decision makers there that are not acting the way that Netanyahu is, and we need a president that will push when we are seeing humanitarian crises to actually do something about it.”





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Kentucky Wildcats News: McDonald’s All-American Gameday

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Kentucky Wildcats News: McDonald’s All-American Gameday


HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL: MAR 27 McDonald’s All American

GLENDALE, AZ – MARCH 27: McDonalds High School All American forward Tyran Stokes (4) poses for a photo on portrait day for the 2026 McDonalds High School All American Games on March 27, 2026, at Renaissance Hotel at Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Icon Sportswire via Getty Images



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