Bowling Inexperienced, Kentucky, has canceled its annual Christmas parade scheduled for Saturday as a result of threats in opposition to protests associated to the infamous lynching of 14-year-old Emmett Until in 1955.
The town introduced the cancellation in tweet. In a video posted on Fb, Police Chief Michael Delaney stated no less than three teams deliberate to protest at midday on Saturday at two places.
Warren County Sheriff Brett Hightower stated his workplace realized of threats late Friday night “to shoot anybody who’s protesting” or aiding protesters, Hightower stated.
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“At this second, we now have not been capable of decide the validity of the menace; nonetheless, we consider it’s essential to alert our residents,” the sheriff stated.
The protesters desire a Mississippi court docket to order the arrest of Carolyn Bryant Donham, the White girl now in her late 80s who accused Until of whistling at her in 1955 in Mississippi, based on CNN affiliate WBKO. He was kidnapped, tortured, and lynched, in a case that drew nationwide consideration and helped impress consideration on the civil rights motion.
In response to WKBO, Donham’s final recognized deal with is believed to be an condominium in Bowling Inexperienced.
Donham was by no means arrested in reference to Until’s loss of life, however a warrant for her arrest was discovered earlier this 12 months in a Mississippi courthouse basement. A grand jury in Mississippi declined to indict Donham in August.
The Bowling Inexperienced-Warren County NACCP stated it’s not slated to protest Saturday.
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“That is due partially to security considerations for the occasion, in addition to focusing our energies on those that are at the moment being discriminated in opposition to and wish fast help,” the group stated in a press release final week.
Kentucky’s comeback win over Duke signaled to the rest of college basketball that the Cats could be legit. For Mark Pope, it was just the next step in a sprint to San Antonio.
When asked how much confidence the win over the No. 6 Blue Devils gave his players, Pope said it was further proof of how eager they are to learn about each other and grow into a squad capable of cutting down the nets in April. That’s an especially tall task for a roster that was built in a manner of months.
“Hopefully, our confidence is growing all the time,” Pope said on Thursday. “I think mostly what it gives us is we’re just hungry to grow. You’re going to be so tired of me already talking about humility and curiosity, right, but I think that’s the biggest thing. Just go play again to find out who we are how we can get better and what we can do better and how we grow. It’s a race.
“With a team that’s constructed the way this team had to be, where every single person is new, it’s just a race from our first game on Nov. 4 to hopefully the Final Four. We know we have to get so much better and there’s limited time so it’s just a race to see how fast we can grow. I think that’s the biggest thing that this game did for us, that Bucknell did for us, that Wright State did for us; it just gave us more film and data and experience to try to figure out how we can become a great team.”
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For fans, the Wright State game was a storybook start to the season, with Kentucky winning by 41 points, Pope’s jersey number. The Bucknell game showed that the Cats can still put up 100 points on a night they’re not firing on all cylinders. The Duke game was the most promising sign yet, proof that they can battle back from a nine-point halftime deficit against an elite team even when the threes aren’t falling. Just three games in, that bodes very well for the future.
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Kentucky may be in a race against time, but Pope is determined to enjoy every step of it. When asked about the three 2025 recruits that signed with Kentucky this week, Jasper Johnson, Malachi Moreno, and Acaden Lewis, Pope said his current players are setting the standard for what it means to play for Kentucky under his watch.
“I’m telling you, it’s a joy to coach here, and it’s hopefully it’ll continue to be a joy for BBN to watch because we have great young men in this program. I’m talking about, like, elite-level kids, like really special people, and it’s fun. Like, you know, I’ve got to sit next to Otega [Oweh] and Andrew Carr postgame after our last game, and just listen to them answer questions and them talk about what this program is and what it means to be for them to be here. And it’s beautiful, actually. Like, it is.”
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The specific moment Pope is referring to is when Otega Oweh told reporters that wearing the Kentucky jersey inspires him to play even harder for fans and his teammates. Andrew Carr, who also had some big plays down the stretch vs. Duke, echoed that sentiment, adding that the team’s close bond is a major reason why they didn’t throw in the towel when the Blue Devils were surging. After Carr finished his thought, Pope looked around the room and said, “Who gets to coach guys like this? Come on, man. It’s awesome.”
“These are kids that are seeing something way bigger than just themselves, right and they care about the right things,” Pope said yesterday. “And it just guys that I want to coach, and it’s the way this should be, and it’s guys that are going to have that are in the middle of tremendous careers, are going to have great, massive professional careers, and then go on do even more important things after that. And that’s what we’re surrounded with in our locker room right now.
“So, that’s the first thing [in recruiting]. Our filters are really high in terms of bringing in great people. We want great people here, not perfect people. Like, we all screw up and make mistakes and do things like that, but people who are actually really eagerly trying to grow as human beings, right? So that’s number one.”
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Right before the 2024-25 college basketball season started, the analytics websites didn’t seem to have a ton of confidence in Mark Pope’s Kentucky Wildcats. This was a bit of a surprise, knowing how good of an X’s and O’s coach the Wildcats have. Big Blue Nation believed it wouldn’t take long for the analytics to see what they saw.
That was exactly the case after the win over the Duke Blue Devils, as the Wildcats are moving up the Evan Miya rankings. Kentucky currently sits 13th in these rankings with their offense ranked 16th and the defense ranked 12th. It is a bit surprising that the analytics show that Kentucky’s defense ranks higher than the offense. Not because Kentucky’s defense hasn’t been great because it has. The surprise has more to do with how great the offensive scheme is for Coach Pope.
The reason the defense being better than the offense in these analytics should excite Kentucky fans is because Kentucky fans know how good the offense is going to be. It will be in the top 20 in college basketball, without question. This means that if the defense is better, this Kentucky team is a top ten team in college basketball.
The analytics are starting to back the Wildcats, and if they are top 20 in both offense and defense all season long, this team is going to be a three-seed or better in the NCAA Tournament. Coach Pope has done something special early into his tenure as the Wildcats head coach.
ESPN analyst Jay Williams doesn’t seem quite ready to get over his Duke Blue Devils losing to Kentucky on Tuesday night in Atlanta. Nearly 48 hours after the Wildcats came out with a 77-72 win, Williams posted a… confusing… video to his X/Twitter account.
Essentially, he went on a two-minute rant that included explaining to his viewers what basic-level marketing is and why the projected number one pick in the NBA Draft, Cooper Flagg, is making headlines (a tough one to decipher) before making comparisons to a social media post from Nike about Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jaylen Brown. I really didn’t understand the purpose behind any of it.
It sure sounds like a guy wanting to show how “not mad” he is that the most talented Duke team in 20 years (his words) couldn’t get the job done against Kentucky.
My only question is this: what is the point of this video? Is it so Jay Williams can show off the B+ he received in Marketing 101 during his freshman year at Duke? Is he attempting to apologize to UK fans for his employer posting a giant Flagg (who turned the ball over twice in the final 15 seconds of his team’s loss) graphic behind him after the Blue Devils coughed up a nine-point halftime lead?
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I would understand the latter at least a little bit if that were the case, but this felt more sore loser-y and condescending than anything.