Kentucky
How did NKY boys fare at 2026 swimming and diving state championships?
The 2026 Kentucky high school swimming and diving state championships got underway on Friday, Feb. 20, as the boys took to the pool.
While the Louisville St. Xavier Tigers claimed their 38th straight team title, Simon Kenton’s Isaiah Reinhart and Ryle’s Chase Knopf were among the top local performers.
Here are the biggest storylines from day one. The girls will finish the season on Saturday afternoon and evening.
Complete results can be found here.
Isaiah Reinhart leads 3 Northern Kentucky divers to the podium
In 2025, Northern Kentucky placed three divers on the state podium. This year, three more were in the top eight. The only constant between the two seasons? Simon Kenton’s Isaiah Reinhart.
Last year, he was narrowly in third place after the first round and stayed in that spot, finishing with 469.55 points. This season, after winning his second straight regional title, he planted himself in second place after his second dive score of 58.5 and stayed there until the end, finishing with 570 points.
“It felt great. I was putting everything I had into those dives. I feel great about the outcome, too,” Reinhart said.
He was especially proud of his back 1.5 somersault 1.5 twist, the third and ninth dives of his program. He scored 55 points and 57.5 points on those respective dives.
After graduating this year, Reinhart hopes to continue diving. He has been looking at the University of Louisville, University of Kentucky and University of Cincinnati.
On the other end of the age spectrum was Dixie Heights freshman Austin Maley, making his second appearance at state after taking ninth place in 2025. As the last diver in the lineup, he put extra effort into his forward 1.5 somersault twist, which he attempted in the sixth and 12th rotations and helped him take fourth place with 535.7 points.
“I put my best into that dive,” Maley said.
Simon Kenton coach Austin Hall, who also coaches Maley, believes he will hang a banner or two at Dixie Heights before he graduates.
Ryle’s Wes Hampel finished in seventh place with 439.45 points. The Raiders also placed Carter Young and Eli Evans in the top 16.
Hall, one of four diving coaches in Northern Kentucky, was named the Kentucky boys diving coach of the year.
“I haven’t been on a board or coaching diving for quite a while,” Hall said. “When the opportunity came up to get back into diving in a coaching capacity, I jumped at it.”
Hall dove at Riverside High School in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and broke his neck before he competed at state as a senior. He is especially grateful for Covington Catholic coach Emma Lehmkuhl, Highlands coach Kristina Jenny and Ryle coach Jeff Floyd for bringing him into the fold.
“I didn’t grow up here. Obviously Beaver County, Pennsylvania, I’m a little bit away from home, but they welcomed me with open arms. I was basically handed a laptop and said, ‘Good luck. You’re running all the meets.’” Hall said. “But I’m never leaving Kenton County.”
Chase Knopf makes history with distance freestyle wins
When Knopf, a Ryle senior and Louisville signee, touched the wall to win the 200-yard freestyle in 1:37.76, he became the first Raider to win an individual state title since Cory Chitwood won the 100-yard backstroke and 200-yard individual medley in 2007.
“I’ve been chasing these state titles since I was in seventh grade. I remember the first time I was here, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is insane.’ I’ve gotten unlucky every time and to see everything line up for the first time and work out, it feels really good,” Knopf said.
He got out in a hurry, swimming a 22.83-second first length of the pool, and gradually increased his lead until he built a two-second margin of victory over St. Xavier’s Carter Rankin.
The final individual swim of his high school career was just as dominant as he won the 500-yard freestyle in 4:24.97, a five-second margin of victory over Beechwood’s Cono Presti.
The two are club teammates on the Northern Kentucky Clippers and push each other every day in practice. On the high school circuit, they’ve built a friendly rivalry as the season’s progressed.
“It’s every day,” Presti said.
Knopf took third place in the 200-yard freestyle and was the 500-yard freestyle runner-up in 2025 and thought about these titles every day between the two state meets. Seeing Rankin in lane three and Trinity’s Hampton Stuecker in lane five only added motivation for Knopf and Presti.
“It’s always been people that we always get beat by, and it’s nice to see a change. I respect those guys. They trained just as hard as us. I think we pushed a little harder and we finally got where we wanted to be,” Knopf said.
Covington Catholic freshman Andrew Kruger took seventh place in the 500-yard freestyle in 4:38.3. Knopf said Kruger is a name to watch in the future.
“It’s a good name to look out for,” Knopf said.
Ryle takes third in team race
Powered by Knopf’s wins, a third-place relay finish and two podiums from Nash Parsons, the Raiders scored 175 points to take the third-place trophy for the fourth year in a row. They finished six points behind Louisville Eastern, which recorded its highest team finish in school history.
“Four straight years in the top three is the best we’ve ever done, guys or girls. But to do it four years in a row is pretty awesome,” Ryle coach Jeff Floyd said.
Floyd is in his 10th year as the head coach and remembers when Ryle finished ninth at the regional meet.
“Now we’re bringing home state trophies consistently and that’s a great thing. The administration has supported us. My wife, my assistants, the kids, the families, they’ve all bought into the program,” Floyd said.
Highlands took fourth place with 139.5 points, setting up what should be a tight race for the combined team state title. The Raiders’ edge came from the 25 points they scored on the diving board.
Covington Catholic was the only other Northern Kentucky team to finish in the top 10, scoring 87 points to take ninth.
Which Northern Kentucky boys swimmers finished on the 2026 state podium?
1-meter dive: 2. Isaiah Reinhart, Simon Kenton; 4. Austin Maley, Dixie Heights; 7. Wes Hampel, Ryle
200-yard medley relay: 5. Highlands (Luke Deegan, Noah Gracey, Reed Spaulding, Ryan Schaber); 6. Covington Catholic (Andrew Boh, Will Dusing, Peyton Knollman, Sam Hartig)
200-yard freestyle: 1. Chase Knopf, Ryle; 4. Nash Parsons, Ryle
200-yard individual medley: 8. Charlie Herfel, Highlands
100-yard freestyle: 5. Nash Parsons, Ryle
500-yard freestyle: 1. Chase Knopf, Ryle; 2. Cono Presti, Beechwood; 7. Andrew Kruger, Covington Catholic
200-yard freestyle relay: 3. Ryle (Nash Parsons, Tyler Rice, Addison Coughenour, Chase Knopf); 4. Highlands (Chanith Abeysinghe, Noah Gracey, Charlie Herfel, Ryan Schaber)
100-yard breaststroke: 4. Noah Gracey, Highlands; 5. Tyler Rice, Ryle; 6. Andrew Boh, Covington Catholic
400-yard freestyle relay: 4. Highlands (Charlie Herfel, Charlie Golden, Ryan Schaber, Chanith Abeysinghe)
Kentucky
Data centers, election changes and other bills moving in Kentucky
Facts About the Kentucky General Assembly
Discover key facts about the Kentucky General Assembly, including its history, structure, and state government functions.
FRANKFORT, Ky. — If the current legislative session was the Kentucky Derby, we’d be coming around the final turn and entering the stretch.
Feb. 9 marks the 42nd day of the 2026 Kentucky General Assembly, with 18 to go. Lawmakers will continue to meet daily for the next three weeks until the veto period begins in early April, with two more days at the Capitol after that for legislators to vote on overriding potential vetoes.
The filing deadlines for new bills were last week, and many pieces of legislation are moving quickly in Frankfort. Here’s a quick look at bills that advanced last week that will be worth watching:
SB 8 — A reworked PSC
Senate Bill 8 would change the member requirements for the Kentucky Public Service Commission — which regulates more than 1,100 utilities operating statewide — and add two new members who would be appointed by the state auditor, effectively diluting the governor’s power or oversight of PSC membership.
Under the bill, the chair of the commission would be elected amongst the commissioners, not appointed by the governor. The chair’s salary? Also determined by the commissioners.
Sen. Brandon Smith, R-Hazard, the bill’s sponsor, said the legislation will help support Kentuckians in reviewing utility rate cases and hopefully hasten the process.
Critics of the bill raised concerns about a section that would make the attorney general the sole representative for customers, requiring advocacy groups to prove a “special and unique” interest in the case — likely cutting advocacy groups out of the picture and preventing them from intervening in cases.
While on the floor, Smith introduced an amendment removing that section and creating a framework to allow advocates and organizations with legitimate interests to intervene.
Although the bill has passed the Senate, it will likely receive pushback from the governor’s office. In a Team Kentucky press conference, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear criticized the bill and the Republican-led legislature’s attempts at moving power from the governor’s office to the state auditor.
“They’ve done these shenanigans for six straight years,” Beshear said. “This is my sixth session as a governor, four as attorney general and a couple of special sessions. I’ve never seen them try to move something from a Republican officeholder to a Democratic officeholder, but I’ve seen them try to move a whole lot in the other direction.”
The bill passed 30-5 through the Senate on March 6. It now heads to the House.
SB 199 — Pesticide warnings
Senate Bill 199, sponsored by Sen. Jason Howell, R-Murray, would make any pesticide registered with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture or the Environmental Protection Agency that has an EPA-approved label automatically fit Kentucky’s warning label requirements. If passed, that would make it much more difficult for Kentuckians to sue pesticide manufacturers for adverse health risks later on.
Although it might not seem controversial at first glance, the bill united both hardline Republicans and Democrats on the Senate floor, with many raising concerns about the health risks of pesticide use. Several Republicans, including Sen. Lindsey Tichenor, R-Smithfield, Sen. Philip Wheeler, R-Pikeville, and Sen. Shelly Funke Frommeyer, R-Alexandria, spoke against the bill and questioned the lobbying power of chemical companies that manufacture pesticides.
Wheeler brought up previous chemical agents that were found to be major causes of cancer, including DDT and Agent Orange, as well as the $7.25 billion proposed settlement from Bayer to resolve thousands of lawsuit that claim its weedkilling product Roundup caused cancer.
“If we give immunity in these cases, we’re essentially saying, if these claims are later proven to be true, and some of them are in pending litigation, we’re basically saying that these Kentuckians don’t matter, these Kentuckians don’t deserve to collect,” Wheeler said.
The bill passed through the Senate on March 5 with a 23-13 vote and will head to the House.
HB 534 — Elections omnibus
House Bill 534, from Rep. DJ Johnson, R-Owensboro, drew significant scrutiny before passing through the House. The elections legislation with several notable changes to current law moved to the Senate on a 53-40 vote on March 5, with several Republicans joining Democrats in opposition.
Some of the bill’s notable provisions include:
● Monthly reviews of noncitizens on Kentucky voter rolls, with a requirement to remove names of ineligible voters and notification sent to the state’s attorney general, along with authorization for the State Board of Elections to work with the federal government to identify noncitizens who are registered to vote;
● Removing names of individuals convicted of a felony whose cases are currently on appeal from voter rolls;
● Allowing candidates for judicial office to publicly discuss their political party affiliation;
● And allowing Kentucky politicians who currently hold elected federal office to be a candidate for two different federal offices in one election, if one of the offices is decided by the United States Electoral College. The only office that applies to is U.S. president.
U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican who has not hesitated at times to vote against President Donald Trump’s policies, has not shut the door on speculation he may make a run for the White House in 2028. He would also be up for reelection that year as a U.S. senator, a role he’s held since early 2011. State Rep. Joshua Watkins, D-Louisville, was the only representative to speak out against the provision during the March 5 vote on the House floor.
Other Democrats spoke up with concerns about disenfranchising voters appealing felony convictions, in the event the verdicts against them were to be later overturned. And multiple party members were critical of the provisions pertaining to noncitizens, with Rep. Adrielle Camuel, D-Lexington, calling them “another example of a nonproblem” aimed at riling up voters to be concerned about “a very major situation that isn’t actually happening.”
The bill advanced on a relatively narrow margin and is pending in the Senate.
HB 593 — Data center energy costs
House Bill 593 was filed by Rep. Josh Bray, R-Mount Vernon, with a group of five co-sponsors that includes House Speaker David Osborne, R-Prospect. The legislation would take steps to ensure companies hoping to build data centers in Kentucky are legitimate and are able to take on additional energy costs instead of dropping them on consumers.
The bill from Bray, who previously co-chaired the legislature’s Artificial Intelligence Task Force, includes several clauses regulating data centers, which are critical for AI usage but often require huge amounts of energy, a hurdle that frequently draws community criticism.
The legislation requires a nonrefundable application fee of at least $75,000 — Senate President Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, said the clause could help scare off “cowboy developers” who buy large amounts of land in hopes of building a data center on the property but are unfamiliar with the development process — and requires the company to pay for an electric supplier study, with provisions aimed at ensuring the data center does not drive up service rates for non-data center customers.
The bill is on its way to the Senate after passing in the House on a 90-4 vote on March 4. It has not yet been given a committee assignment.
Reach Keely Doll at kdoll@courier-journal.com. Reach Lucas Aulbach at laulbach@courier-journal.com. Reach The Courier Journal’s politics team at cjpolitics@courier-journal.com.
Kentucky
KHSAA Sweet 16 bracket, field for Kentucky girls basketball championships
2026 Kentucky Mr. and Miss basketball finalists lists
A look at the finalists for Kentucky’s top high school basketball honors, featuring regional Players of the Year.
The field is nearly set for the 2026 Clark’s Pump-N-Shop Girls Sweet 16.
The tournament is scheduled for Wednesday-Saturday, March 11-14, at Rupp Arena in Lexington.
The field will include at least nine of the 16 teams in the final Kentucky High School Basketball Media Poll — No. 1 George Rogers Clark, No. 2 Assumption, No. 3 Simon Kenton, No. 5 Calloway County, No. 7 North Laurel, No. 9 Taylor County, No. 11 Notre Dame, No. 14 Ashland Blazer and No. 15 Henderson County.
Fifteen regional champions have been decided. The last regional final is set set for Sunday night — Paul Dunbar (25-4) vs. No. 8 Frederick Douglass (23-7) in the 11th.
Here is the Sweet 16 schedule:
Wednesday, March 11
11 a.m. – 11th Region champion vs. Henderson County (24-9)
1:30 p.m. – Assumption (24-5) vs. Calloway County (33-2)
6 p.m. – Notre Dame (24-7) vs. Pikeville (22-8)
8:30 p.m. – Taylor County (27-6) vs. West Jessamine (22-12)
Thursday, March 12
11 a.m. – Bullitt East (19-12) vs. Franklin-Simpson (24-7)
1:30 p.m. – Ashland Blazer (26-5) vs. Simon Kenton (31-2)
6 p.m. – Owensboro Catholic (26-9) vs. Letcher County Central (23-10)
8:30 p.m. – George Rogers Clark (29-2) vs. North Laurel (25-6)
Friday, March 13
11 a.m. – Third Region champion-Henderson County winner vs. Assumption-Calloway County winner
1:30 p.m. – Notre Dame-Pikeville winner vs. Taylor County-West Jessamine winner
6 p.m. – Ashland Blazer-Simon Kenton winner vs. Owensboro Catholic-Letcher County Central winner
8:30 p.m. – Bullitt East-Franklin-Simpson winner vs. George Rogers Clark-North Laurel winner
Saturday, March 14
11 a.m. – Semifinal No. 1
1:30 p.m. – Semifinal No. 2
7:30 p.m. – Final
This story will be updated.
Jason Frakes: 502-582-4046; jfrakes@courier-journal.com; Follow on X @kyhighs.
Kentucky
KY workers struggle in weakened unions while execs cash in | Opinion
House Bill 585 is about making sure Kentucky works for the people who do the work, not just those at the top.
Rep. Morgan McGarvey speaks at ‘It’s Better in a Union’ AFL-CIO tour
US Rep. Morgan McGarvey spoke at the ‘It’s Better in a Union’ AFL-CIO bus tour in Louisville on July 26.
“Right-to-work” isn’t working in Kentucky.
Kentuckians are struggling to keep up with rising costs and it’s not hard to see. Workers’ wages are not keeping up with basic needs, such as housing, groceries, health care and childcare. Some people need multiple jobs just to feed their families. While hardworking Kentuckians struggle, the wealthy and well-connected continue to receive tax breaks and special treatment from politicians in Frankfort and Washington.
This didn’t happen by accident. This was by design.
In 2017, we saw a dramatic shift against working families. The first order of business for the new Republican majority in the Kentucky House was passing so-called “right-to-work” legislation, House Bill 1. This legislation weakened unions and led to lower pay for workers. Nearly a decade has passed, and workers are not thriving in Kentucky like they said they would.
Kentuckians want support for workers
Big business has virtually no limits on their influence in Frankfort. They spend exceedingly large amounts of money on lobbying the Kentucky supermajority to shape laws to further enrich themselves. When workers try to organize, demand fair wages, safe workplaces and decent benefits, big business uses the profits they’ve gathered off the backs of working people to directly advocate against them.
Some wealthy business interests claim “right-to-work” has contributed to the state’s economic growth over the past several years, but whose growth is it, really? The fact of the matter is corporate profits are soaring and executives are cashing in, while families are left scraping by.
It’s true Kentucky has seen record-breaking economic momentum under the leadership of Gov. Andy Beshear, including $43 billion in private sector investments and over 63,000 new jobs. However, Beshear agrees Kentucky can attract businesses and investment without simultaneously suppressing unions.
A recent statewide poll conducted by KyPolicy found that 85% of Kentucky voters want the state legislature to prioritize raising worker pay and improving worker benefits. This poll also found that 60% of Kentuckians support making it easier for workers to join or form a union.
Kentuckians are telling us they want us to focus on supporting workers, and our colleagues in the General Assembly should listen.
A fight worth having
Bad faith politicians in Frankfort will tell you we have a worker shortage. They pin the problem on Kentuckians not willing to work, and absolve big business from any accountability. But in reality, we have a wage problem. Repealing “right-to-work” is a necessary step toward fixing that imbalance.
That’s why we have introduced House Bill 585, legislation to repeal Kentucky’s “right-to-work” law and restore Kentucky’s ability to have strong unions fighting for workers’ rights. House Bill 585 is about making sure Kentucky works for the people who do the work, not just those at the top.
Across the country, states with stronger unions have higher wages, better benefits and safer workplaces. Union workers earn more, are more likely to have health insurance and retirement security and are better protected on the job. When unions are strong, workers are strong.
This is a fight worth having. It’s a fight working people are ready for, and it’s a fight we cannot afford to keep putting off.
Standing together is how workers have always won dignity, fairness and opportunity. This is how Kentucky can build a stronger future for everyone.
Working Kentuckians deserve better.
Rep. Chad Aull represents Kentucky’s 79th House District in Lexington
Rep. Adrielle Camuel represents Kentucky’s 93rd House District in Lexington
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