Kentucky
How Calipari’s departure led to Kentucky, Arkansas and BYU in the Sweet 16
Almost exactly one year ago to the day, Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart and then-head coach John Calipari sat down for a joint interview on a local television station after the team’s second first-round exit from the NCAA tournament in three years.
Barnhart had already announced Calipari would return for another season but reports of a frigid bond between them remained.
“He’s been married 40-plus years. I’ve been married for 40-plus years,” Barnhart said during the March 29, 2024 interview. “We know how to manage relationships. And I think we’ve been together for 15 years, so we’re sort of, like, semi-married.”
But nine days later, the two sides had divorced.
Calipari’s surprising departure for Arkansas set off a domino effect that rivals anything college basketball has seen over the past decade.
For the Razorbacks, Calipari was a big fish — a name brand with a national title — but he also hadn’t been to the Final Four in a decade.
Meanwhile, coaches with noted legacies such as Dan Hurley and Billy Donovan were floated as potential successors at Kentucky, which is why Wildcats fans threatened to revolt when they signed Mark Pope from BYU. Then BYU turned to an NBA assistant with minimal collegiate coaching experience, Kevin Young, to replace Pope.
At the outset, supporters of all three programs wondered what would happen next. Now they know: With Arkansas, Kentucky and BYU all headed to the Sweet 16, this was a rare chain reaction in the coaching carousel that has seemingly benefited everyone involved.
Despite dealing with injuries early in the season and an 0-5 start to SEC play, the Razorbacks finally hit their stride late. Upsets over 7-seed Kansas and 2-seed St. John’s on opening weekend of the NCAA tournament have given the impression that Calipari is, in fact, back. His replacement in Lexington, Pope, snagged eight wins over top-15 teams during the regular season and erased the bad taste from the program’s recent run of early NCAA tournament exits with this trip to the second weekend. And his successor, Young — who earned a commitment from the No. 1 recruit of the 2025 class, A.J. Dybantsa, shortly after he was hired — seems ahead of schedule with a Cougars squad that has made the Sweet 16 for the first time since Jimmer Fredette led them in 2011.
Let’s take a look at how each of these dominoes has fallen over the course of this season.
To see Calipari in his Arkansas red blazer at last April’s introductory news conference after switching schools — but staying in the same conference — was akin to seeing Roger Clemens in a Yankees uniform, Jerry Rice with the Raiders or John Cena turning heel.
But it was well known Calipari needed a fresh start. Losses to Saint Peter’s (2022) and Oakland (2024) in the first round of the NCAA tournament had robbed him of the edge he once enjoyed as the king of the one-and-done era. But Calipari kept his charm. And he would need it at Arkansas.
The Razorbacks had been to the mountaintop and won a national championship in 1994, but a return to the title game a year later was the last time they had been within reach of another ring. That’s why Arkansas swiped right on an elite coach searching for redemption.
“[When] you talk about some of the best jobs in the country,” Calipari said then, “in basketball, this is one of them.”
How he would restore the program to its former glory still remained a question.
With an NIL coffer full of cash thanks to his billionaire friends, Calipari started to answer by signing promising talent: D.J. Wagner had once been the top recruit in America. Johnell Davis had been a star for a Florida Atlantic team that reached the Final Four in 2023. And Boogie Fland, a five-star recruit and top NBA prospect, decommitted from Kentucky to follow Calipari to Arkansas.
But preseason injuries made it difficult for Calipari to even hold practice. Then Fland and Adou Thiero, the team’s top scorers, sustained major injuries. That’s why it took four months — and a few recoveries — before the team found its rhythm, following the 0-5 start to SEC play with a respectable 9-6 stretch to close the regular season (including a win over his former team and Pope). They bonded, Calipari said, through the adversity to eventually make this run to the second weekend of the NCAA tournament.
“To be where we are, still playing and still fighting and having fun,” Calipari said after his team’s second-round win over St. John’s. “I’m enjoying it. Like I said, I’m not going to let anything faze me in this.”
Though Arkansas got the biggest piece of this coaching puzzle with Calipari choosing to leave Kentucky, his former school did not — at least initially — feel as fortunate.
As Kentucky searched for a head coach for the first time in 15 years, highly coveted targets declined. Baylor’s Scott Drew and Alabama’s Nate Oats released statements that they wouldn’t leave their schools while other big names (see: Donovan) never moved past the rumor stage.
That’s when the school turned to a familiar face: Pope, a captain on the Wildcats’ 1996 national championship team. But the backlash was real.
A prominent booster called Barnhart after he announced the hiring of Pope, who hadn’t led BYU past the first round of the NCAA tournament, and threatened to never write another check to the program.
“Give me his number,” Pope told Barnhart. “I’ll call him.”
Pope converted that booster and so many others by acknowledging the skeptics and asking them to give him a chance. Plus, Pope wasn’t just a coach — his connection to Kentucky’s legacy helped lure thousands to Rupp Arena for his introductory news conference, which also featured dozens of former players.
“The expectations at Kentucky are higher than anywhere else,” Pope told ESPN. “That’s the standard and that’s the history of Kentucky. If you don’t hang a banner, then you haven’t had a successful season. And I love that.”
To reach his goal, Pope plucked players from the transfer portal who had experience but wanted a chance to win big for a storied program. Former San Diego State standout Lamont Butler had gone to the Final Four in 2023. Andrew Carr (Delaware then Wake Forest), Amari Williams (Drexel) and Koby Brea (Dayton) all had first- or second-round NCAA tournament experience. And Otega Oweh had been a high level player at Oklahoma.
That collective ambition and experience led to immediate results.
On Nov. 12, Pope led this crew to a 77-72 victory over Cooper Flagg and now-championship favorite Duke in the Champions Classic, uprooting any lingering concerns about the hire. Now with the program’s first run to the Sweet 16 in six years, it’s clear that a new era has dawned for Kentucky.
But while all of this was happening in Lexington, Pope’s replacement in Provo was charged with selling his vision to a room full of boosters.
Kevin Durant, Devin Booker, Chris Paul and other NBA stars had high praise for Young, who was an assistant for the Phoenix Suns when BYU hired him but lacked the same street credibility at the college level. But that might have ultimately helped him in a landscape that is determined by NIL deals and financial transactions.
“I honestly don’t even think twice about it,” he told ESPN about the impact of NIL on the sport. “It is what it is. It’s always been there for me [in the NBA], so I think, again, that’s a major advantage for me. I don’t get caught up in any of that.
“I’m like, ‘All right. Yeah. Cool. What’s the number? What are we working with?’”
For Dybantsa, the top recruit in America, that number was reportedly $8.5 million. Though the dollar figure captured all the headlines, Young’s ability to lure an elite prospect was the byproduct of the trust he had earned from the flagship school of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and his genuine connection with the program’s top supporters.
The latter group meets with Young regularly. They attend practice and mingle at private dinners before home games. They feel attached to Young in a way that has helped him attract top recruits such as NBA prospect Egor Demin — a 6-foot-9 point guard from Europe — and top-100 recruit Kanon Catchings a year before Dybanta’s arrival.
But all of this didn’t immediately translate on the court. Young looked like a first-year head coach in the first three months of the season, as the Cougars started 15-8 and 6-6 in the Big 12. But once he began to adjust to the college game, especially the Big 12’s physicality, the Cougars soared. Since Feb. 12, they have been the best offensive team in the country — better than 1-seeds Florida, Duke and Auburn.
Though the Dybantsa signing made BYU look like a powerhouse in the making, this run to the program’s first Sweet 16 appearance in 14 years signaled an equally important consideration: BYU, it appeared, hired the right guy.
No matter what happens next, those connected to Arkansas, Kentucky and BYU should leave the NCAA tournament with optimism. Because all three programs — for different reasons — are building foundations for fruitful tenures under new leadership.
But it’s also not out of the realm that each of these teams could advance to the Elite Eight and turn good stories into great ones.
BYU has lost only one game since Feb. 8, and the Cougars have the offensive juice to play a first-team-to-100 style against Alabama on Thursday. Kentucky swept its Sweet 16 opponent, Tennessee, during the regular season (though it’s worth noting injured star Jaxson Robinson scored 17 points in the first meeting). And Arkansas? The Razorbacks have already sent a pair of higher seeds in Kansas and St. John’s home — and both the Jayhawks and Red Storm were better defensive teams than Texas Tech, which Arkansas faces Thursday.
It rarely works out this way in the coaching carousel. Usually, some school is disappointed. But in this scenario, there is no bitterness because this trio of Sweet 16 appearances doubles as proof that you can part ways with a coach and all parties can end up better for it in the end.
During that TV interview with his former athletic director before he left Kentucky, Calipari said he wanted to exit the program knowing he’d left it in good condition.
“Make it future-proof,” he said a year ago. “That everything is in order. Come in and coach and recruit. You’ve got what you need here.”
In this scenario, all three schools should feel that way right now.
Kentucky
Liberty Trees planted throughout Kentucky
CAMPBELL COUNTY, Ky. (WXIX) – Liberty Trees are being planted across Kentucky in celebration og America 250.
FOX19 NOW’s Philip Krinsky went down to Campbell County, where a Liberty Tree dedication took place.
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Kentucky
2026 Kentucky Derby: The Sporting Event Expanded Its Partnerships
LOUISVILLE, KY.—Jockey Jose Ortiz rallied long shot Golden Tempo from way back in the pack to claim the 152nd Kentucky Derby on May 2, beating his older brother Irad Ortiz Jr. by a neck and making Cherie DeVaux the first woman to train a Derby winner.
Held at Churchill Downs Racetrack in Louisville, Ky., this year’s race averaged 19.6 million viewers on NBC and Peacock, making it the most-viewed Run for the Roses on record since Nielsen began tracking average audiences in 1988.
In the week leading up to the first Saturday in May, Churchill Downs hosted a full roster of events, including 502’sDay, Winsday, Thurby, and the Kentucky Oaks (when fans watch 3-year-old fillies compete), which, for the first time, was contested in primetime and on network television.
As part of the racetrack’s ongoing renovations, the sixth-floor space, 10,000-square-foot ultra-VIP space known as The Mansion opened its private doors, revealing a $30-million refurbishment. There were improved amenities in the Finish Line Suites this year as well.
But that wasn’t the only newness happening. This year introduced several firsts, including the Derby’s first-ever beauty partnership with L’Oréal, an MLB activation where fans were able to put their pitching skills to the test, and a limited-edition Graeter’s ice cream flavor, Bourbon Backstretch Cherry.
Returning partners also evolved their experiences for 2026, including Old Forester serving up a new signature cocktail with a fruity twist called the Perfecta and Red Bull expanding its lounge area in the Infield, which included a custom Ford F150 DJ booth with custom Red Bull cocktails.
This updated partnership strategy is part of the racetrack’s efforts to attract younger fans and the Gen Z demo. “Reaching new and younger audiences is how the brand stays relevant after 152 years,” said Casey Ramage, senior marketing and partnerships consultant for Churchill Downs Racetrack.
“Churchill Downs does this by offering onsite fans brand experiences such as beautiful photo moments around our iconic Twin Spires and partner collaborations and merchandise brands that are relevant to this audience such as vineyard vines, lululemon, and Aviator Nation,” she said.
For the fans at home, the Churchill Downs team also turned more to social media to educate the viewing audience. This year, the Derby’s social media accounts saw a 59% increase during Derby Week, Ramage added.
As for the L’Oréal partnership, Ramage said it just made sense. “With fashion being one of the first things you think about for the Kentucky Derby experience, Churchill Downs has always wanted to partner with a beauty brand, and L’Oréal Paris is the perfect fit,” she explained.
The brand was the presenting partner of the Derby’s Green Room, where celebrities and VIPs were able to touch up their makeup and hair before walking the red carpet. L’Oréal also produced activations in the Woodford Reserve Paddock Plaza fan zone with product giveaways and surprise-and-delight makeup moments in the ladies’ restrooms.
Keep scrolling to see more from the 2026 Kentucky Derby and the brand activations and parties surrounding the historic event…
L’Oréal produced activations in the Woodford Reserve Paddock Plaza fan zone with product giveaways as well as surprise-and-delight makeup moments in the ladies’ restrooms. Photo: Courtesy of Churchill Downs Racetrack

Because of Churchill Downs’ strong partnership with NBC, the racetrack also highlighted the network’s new relationships with both the MLB and WNBA. The MLB hosted an interactive pitch activation, where fans were challenged to test their fastball and track their throwing speed in real time. Photo: Courtesy of Churchill Downs Racetrack

Attendees posed inside a WNBA bespoke photo moment. Photo: Courtesy of Churchill Downs Racetrack

The WNBA logo was made out of red and white roses, as a nod to the Derby race. Photo: Courtesy of Churchill Downs Racetrack
Apparel brand vineyard vines marked its 16th year as the Official Derby Style with on-site activations, including a fully branded stage in the Infield, featuring live entertainment and giveaways such as its fan-favorite whale hats, sunglasses, and more. Photo: Courtesy of vineyard vines
Fully wrapped F-150s and Broncos in a vineyard vines print were located at the track’s “First Turn.” Photo: Courtesy of vineyard vines

Sports Illustrated Resorts’ Club SI hosted guests across both Oaks and Derby Day at Churchill Downs. The exclusive hospitality suite offers a view of the paddock and paddock runway. SI Swim model Camille Kostek hosted Oaks Day, while commentator Nate Burleson led Derby Day. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

Guests received custom caricature illustrations in the hospitality suite. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

Sports Illustrated, in partnership with J Wagner Group, closed out Derby weekend with its third annual late-night celebration, Revel at the Races presented by DraftKings, which was headlined by Tiësto and held at Ice House. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

As the official apparel partner, Ted Baker presented a branded photo moment. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

Verizon served as the exclusive wireless partner, offering expedited entry via a dedicated fast lane and ticket access through Verizon Access. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

As the official bourbon partner, Maker’s Mark served up premium cocktails. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

HydroJug provided on-site custom engraving, delivering a personalized takeaway for guests. Photo: Courtesy of Authentic Live, a Division of Authentic Brands Group

The Derby experience starts long before the bugle sounds at Churchill Downs, so Delta turned the journey to the Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport into a spirited ride. On May 1 and 2, in partnership with Brown-Forman, Delta offered travelers in the Atlanta and JFK Delta Sky Clubs a bespoke Mint Julep syrup. Once onboard their flights, passengers could pair it with Woodford Reserve bourbon to craft a cocktail. Photo: Courtesy of Delta

The airline also surprised travelers with arrival and departure goody bags on April 30 and May 3 at the Louisville airport. Photo: Courtesy of Delta
Crew members donned fascinators to close out the weekend. Photo: Courtesy of Delta

Herradura returned with its official cocktail, the Horseshoe Margarita. The brand also collaborated with Q Mixers on a new track-wide cocktail featuring Herradura Reposado called the Paddock Paloma. Photo: Courtesy of Herradura
Kentucky
2026 Kentucky Wildcats football position preview: Safety
As we continue to go position group by position group and project what each unit will look like for the 2026 Kentucky Wildcats, we will now look at the safety room. This position is led by two of the most experienced safeties in the conference with Ty Bryant and Florida transfer Jordan Castell. The safety position is heavily relied upon in defensive coordinator Jay Bateman’s scheme. Having experience is paramount for this group, as Coach Bateman will call creative looks for disguised coverages which will create plenty of safety rotations pre-snap and post-snap.
Starters
I think it is safe to assume that the new staff made it a priority to retain Ty Bryant and Willie Rodriguez more than any other returning players on the roster. Bryant was voted second team All-SEC by coaches last season and is one of the best safeties in the conference. He was the team’s leading tackler a year ago with 76 total and led the SEC with four interceptions. Bryant is a do-it-all safety that has a nose for the football and is expected to be the leader of the defense this fall.
Jordan Castell transferred over from the Florida Gators, where he started over 30 games in his career. Castell is a long, rangy safety that knows what it takes to play at an SEC level. He started as a true freshman at Florida and earned freshman All-SEC honors in 2023. Over his three seasons with the Gators, Castell has totaled 169 tackles, 13 pass breakups and three interceptions.
If things go as planned, these two will rarely come off the field this season. Bryant has natural playmaking ability on the back end as a ball hawking safety and is coming off the best season of his career. Castell has ideal length for the position and has shown the ability to make big time plays in this conference. Bryant and Castell form one of the best safety tandems in the SEC and will be a key to the defensive success in 2026.
Backups
- Dyllon Williams
- Jesse Anderson
Dyllon Williams is a 6’2, 191-pound redshirt freshman that got his feet wet last season in limited snaps. Williams only saw action against Eastern Michigan, Florida and Vanderbilt a year ago. Ideally, I don’t expect him to see much of an increase in playing time this season but it will be interesting to see how he progresses when he does get on the field. Coach Bateman does like to throw three safety looks at opposing offenses, but that will likely be manned by the slot corner position group.
Jesse Anderson is a transfer from Pitt that brings some experience to the depth of this room. In three seasons at Pitt, he has received snaps in 23 games as a rotational safety. I wouldn’t expect his role to change, he will be a rotational guy in this group as well and brings much needed experience in a backup role. Anderson is on the smaller side at 6’0, 186-pounds.
Like I previously mentioned, Coach Bateman likes to keep offenses off balance with three safety looks in coverage. However, I expect the slot corners to be heavily involved in those formations, which will be Aaron Gates and Jaden Smith. We will group the slot corners in with the cornerbacks when we preview that position group. Overall, this safety room is a strength of the team although it is hinged on the experienced duo of Bryant and Castell.
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