Kentucky
Kentucky basketball coach Mark Pope relishes being on the hot seat
Kentucky basketball’s Mark Pope doesn’t like ‘yes men’ in his program
Kentucky Wildcats basketball coach Mark Pope doesn’t like “yes men” in his program because he wants to help his players grow by challenging them.
ROCK HILL, S.C. — Kentucky basketball coach Mark Pope sat with legs crossed in the foldout chairs overlooking two basketball courts at the NBPA Top 100 basketball camp last week.
His posture and newly grown beard gave off a relaxed and confident vibe that suggested he was in full summer mode, a look that belied all of the chaos that seemed to engulf his position not too long ago.
Pope has grown comfortable with it all. The highs from winning big games. The crushing feeling from failing to meet UK’s standard. The criticisms. The pats on the back.
However Pope’s tenure as Kentucky’s coach plays out, he’s not trying to satisfy popular opinion of how people think he should be operating.
Pope’s going to do things at his pace. He has no time to be scared of being on the hot seat because, the way he sees it, his job performance has been dissected since he took the job in 2024.
“It’s probably hard to understand from the outside, but, Kentucky is the hot seat,” Pope said.
If it’s not the most-dissected, most-watched, most-critiqued position in college basketball, it would have to be tied for first, because it certainly isn’t No. 2.
A month ago, things looked awfully bleak for Pope while he was still awaiting word on whether center Malachi Moreno would turn pro or return to school. He missed on 14 of the top 20 transfers he pursued, per 247Sports’ rankings, and the Wildcats’ incoming transfer class still had no sizzle to it.
Between the end of the Cats’ second-round loss in the NCAA Tournament up to the May 27 deadline to pull out of the NBA draft, there was growing anxiety on the moves, or lack thereof, Pope was making.
It was easy to connect the dots: With UK ushering in a new athletics director — J Batt was officially hired from Michigan State on Monday — Pope’s job status could be in trouble next year should they have a down season.
Since then, Pope turned all the dread into optimism.
Moreno returned.
Milan Momcilovic, an Iowa State transfer ranked by multiple outlets as the top free agent in the class, took his name out of the draft and signed with UK.
And just for good measure, 6-foot-6 forward Ryan Hampton, who is ranked No. 10 in the 247Sports Composite in the Class of 2027, committed to the Cats as well.
“There’s a good chance that I’m the happiest coach in the world,” Pope said. “Because I have a one-of-one job. I love every bit of it. I love the things that go great. I love the challenges.”
One of the biggest challenges, if not criticisms, for Pope through his two seasons at UK has been recruiting.
The Cats’ first high school signing in the Class of 2026, Mason Williams, didn’t come to fruition until the end of March. And Williams, the son of former NBA guard and newly hired UK assistant coach Mo Williams, wasn’t ranked in the top 100 of the 247Sports Composite rankings. Pope’s first full recruiting class in 2025 did include blue-chippers in Moreno and Jasper Johnson, but both of those players were Kentucky natives.
Hampton is a Texas native who currently plays at DME Academy in Florida. He’s also the highest-ranked recruit Pope has ever landed.
Pope is pursuing six of the remaining nine players ranked in the top 10 of the 2027 class, including power forward C.J. Rosser, the No. 1-ranked recruit. He’s not afraid to come up empty knowing the criticism that will follow.
“When you’re relevant and you’re great, you’re gonna have critics,” Pope said. “When you don’t have critics, that probably means you’re not very relevant or very great.”
Being the coach at UK will always keep Pope relevant, so the critics aren’t going anywhere. But, for now, he’s found a way to keep them silent for a summer.
Reach sports columnist C.L. Brown at clbrown1@gannett.com, follow him on X at @CLBrownHoops and subscribe to his newsletter at profile.courier-journal.com/newsletters/cl-browns-latest to make sure you never miss one of his columns.
Kentucky
8 vehicle crash closes I-24 in Kentucky
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Kentucky
1 missing, 4 injured in Fourth of July boating collision on Kentucky lake
Videos above are from FOX19 NOW’s top stories.
HARRODSBURG, Ky. (WXIX) – After a boating collision at a popular Kentucky lake, a specialized rescue team from Ohio is helping search crews find a missing victim.
The collision happened between a large boat and a pontoon on Herrington Lake, located about 115 miles south of Cincinnati. The lake is over 2,300 acres long with many sharp, winding curves. It is also the deepest lake in Kentucky.
Multiple emergency crews were called to Pandora Marina to help rescue the victims sometime after 8 p.m.
Water Rescue 6 rescued one person who sustained traumatic injuries. They were flown to the University of Kentucky Hospital via medical helicopter, according to the Mercer County Fire District.
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Three others were also rescued and transported to a hospital in Danville, officials say.
“Unfortunately one victim is still missing. Dive teams and boats have been deployed from Boyle County to continue search,” the fire district wrote online the day of the collision.
The situation appears to be the same on July 5 as the last victim remains missing.
“A specialized rescue crew has been dispatched from Ohio and is enroute,” the district wrote in an update. “If you are on the lake please be respectful of the rescuers and search teams. This operation will remain active until the victim is recovered.”
FOX19 NOW has reached out to Mercer County officials for more information on the crash. We are waiting to hear back.
Herrington Lake officials released a statement about the crash.
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Kentucky
Recovery operations underway to find possible drowning victim on Kentucky Lake | NewsRadio 1230 AM/99.3 FM | Hopkinsville’s News Leader
Recovery efforts are set to begin anew after weather delay efforts Saturday night, as officials in Stewart County search for a possible drowning victim.
According to Stewart County Fire Rescue in Tennessee, first responders were called to Grays Landing on Kentucky Lake for reports that a person had gone missing in the water. Search and recovery efforts began at once, but due to severe storms rolling through, water conditions quickly became rough.
Recovery operations were suspended for the night after water conditions and severe storms partially sank a civilian boater near the boat ramp.
No additional details on the matter have been released.
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