Kentucky
Kentucky is taking a break from summer practice — where are they headed?
The new-look Kentucky men’s basketball team has spent the last two months practicing as the Mark Pope era gets underway in Lexington. After being hired in April, assembling a staff, and adding 12 fresh faces to the roster, every second of practice has been vitally important for Pope and his group. But some brief time away is also important.
Due to NCAA rules, a break in summer practice sessions is mandatory. Thursday morning was Kentucky’s final practice until the end of this month. Workouts start back up again on Monday, August 26 — the same day the fall semester begins at UK. That leaves two-plus weeks of free time for the players to enjoy.
Where do they plan to go during that sabbatical and who are they most excited to see? Thanks to a short video posted to social on Friday, 11 of the 12 the Wildcats (sorry, no Kerr Kriisa in this video) told us themselves.
So. G Otega Oweh: “First I’m going back to New Jersey, aka Dirty Jerz. If you know you know… I’m most excited to see my brother. He has a preseason game. I haven’t seen him play in a long time.”
Gr. G Koby Brea: “For break I’m going back home to New York City, gonna spend time with my family, get a lot of love from them and giving them love too. After that I’m gonna be going to the Damian Lillard camp, just keep getting better. Excited for the opportunity. Then we’ll be right back here.”
Sr. F Ansley Almonor: “Three trips. I’m about to go out to Cali for a few days, then I’m going back to New York for a few days, and I’ll be going on a vacation to the Dominican Republic. I’m most excited to see everybody… I’m just excited to see my family and hug them and kiss them and all that.”
Gr. C Amari Williams: “I’m going to Nottingham, England. Back home. Who am I most excited to see? I would say my family, my grandma, my parents.”
Fr. G Collin Chandler: “For the break, I’ll be going back home to Utah. I’m most excited to see my family and just be with them and spend a few weeks with them.”
Fr. G Travis Perry: “For the break I’m going back home, Lyon County, so staying in Kentucky. I’m most excited to see my mom, it’s her birthday today, so Happy Birthday to her, and my oldest sister. She texts me every day so it’s gonna be good to see her again.”
Gr. G Lamont Butler: “Going back home and then I’m taking a four-day trip to Hawaii with my girlfriend. Who am I most excited to see? I most excited to see my family.”
So. C Brandon Garrison: “Where I’m going on break, I’m gonna go home first. Friday I’m gonna leave out for San Juan (Puerto Rico), hit the beach. And then who I’m most excited to see? Probably my family and my mom for real.”
Gr. F Andrew Carr: “I’m going back to Westchester (New York). I’m most excited — sorry mom, I’m probably most excited to see my girlfriend.”
Gr. G Jaxson Robinson: “I’m going home, and I’m most excited to see my parents and my dogs.”
Fr. G Trent Noah: “During the break I’m going to Florida for a few days. And then I’m going home for the rest of the time. I’m most excited to see my golden retriever, Nugget.”
We’ll see you back in Lexington soon, boys.
Kentucky
WATCH: Kentucky’s postgame press conference after beating Tennessee
It was a happy trio at the podium at the Food City Center following Kentucky’s 80-78 comeback win vs. No. 24 Tennessee, their fourth in a row in Knoxville. For the third straight game, the Cats overcame a double-digit deficit to win, 17 points down in the last two. Today, they did it against a ranked Tennessee team, outscoring the Vols by 13 in the second half after being down 11 at halftime.
“We actually felt great going in halftime down 11,” Mark Pope quipped at his postgame press conference. “It’s the first time we’ve only been down 11 in a month, right? So, we felt like we won the first half, which is weird, but it’s the Kentucky way right now.”
Obviously, it would be easier on all of us if the Cats wouldn’t dig themselves into a hole in the first half, but their ability to climb back out has become their defining trait. Pope said the team talked about that in a meeting last night, Collin Chandler sharing a parable about a currant bush he heard in church that describes how you can come back stronger after being cut down.
“I hope people aren’t missing what this group is going through, what this group is trying to endure, what this group is trying to become, and what this group is actually doing on the court,” Pope said. “For three straight SEC games now, coming into halftime down heavy and things looking bad, and everybody being discouraged, except for the players in our locker room, that’s really special, man. So don’t miss it, because it’s a tribute to these guys.”
Yes, it is. You can hear more talk about Kentucky’s slow starts, Denzel Aberdeen’s second-half heroics, and a gritty game by Mo Dioubate below.
More Postgame Content on the KSR YouTube Channel
Kentucky Sports Radio has expanded its coverage of the Wildcats in the most ridiculous manner possible on our YouTube Channel. Here you will be able to find interviews with coaches and players, as well as commentary from the KSR crew. From Rapid Reactions following big events to our lengthy lineup of live shows, subscribe to the KSR YouTube Channel to stay up to date on everything happening around the Big Blue Nation.
Kentucky
Lights, camera, Franklin: “House of Holloway” rolls next week
SIMPSON COUNTY, Ky. — A Hollywood film titled “House of Holloway” will begin production in Franklin. The horror film’s plot hasn’t yet been disclosed. It will be filmed in residential areas throughout Franklin.
Amy Ellis, the executive with the Simpson County Tourism Commission, said, “The West Kentucky Film Commission contacts and says, ‘We’re looking for a house. It has to have a basement, woods, and it has to have a creek. The things they need.’ We send photos and the director looks at the pictures and says, ‘Yeah, this is kind of what I’m looking for.’”
The film will be in production for a couple of weeks, starting Tuesday, Jan. 20. According to Judge-Executive Mason Barnes, this influx of Hollywood investment into the area could boost local tourism.
Barnes said, “The more things that happen in this community, it brings people in, they’re staying overnight, that just bolsters our tourism efforts.”
According to Ellis, film productions are coming to Kentucky because of the Kentucky Entertainment Incentive Program, which gives tax credits to films whose productions happen in the Commonwealth.
Ellis said, “If you come to Kentucky, and you film, hire people from Kentucky, do business in Kentucky, and stay in our hotels and eat in our restaurants, you keep all of those receipts, Kentucky gives you back a certain percentage of that.”
“House of Holloway” is hiring for positions such as production assistants and script screeners.
People can apply by sending an email to nick@goldhivemedia.com.
Kentucky
Kentucky medical cannabis rollout: 1 year after legalization, when will dispensaries open in NKY?
DAYTON, Ky. — In the year since Kentucky legalized medical cannabis, the commonwealth has seen a slow and steady rollout of the statewide program — but Northern Kentucky is still waiting on its first dispensary to open.
Four Northern Kentucky businesses received dispensary operating licenses during a state-run lottery drawing in November 2024, before one of the four original licenses was sold, resulting in the following dispensaries slated to open:
- Yellow Flowers, LLC in Erlanger (Kenton County)
- C3 Kentucky, LLC in Wilder (Campbell County)
- Bluegrass Cannacare, LLC in Florence (Boone County)
- Green Grass Cannabis, LLC in Carrollton (Carroll County)
According to Rachel Roberts, a former state lawmaker and current executive director of the Kentucky Cannabis Industry Alliance, of the four, only one, Bluegrass Cannacare, has been “completely approved” by the Kentucky Office of Medical Cannabis to operate.
“I think the other (dispensaries) are still a couple months out, as they’re building out their facilities and working through their zoning issues,” Roberts said. “Not only do facilities need to be built out, but the plant itself needs to grow. So we’re dealing with that.”
Per WCPO 9 news partner WVXU, the operators of C3 Kentucky, LLC told Wilder’s Planning and Zoning Commission in late November 2025 that they plan to begin construction on a new dispensary location along Country Drive in Wilder in early 2026.
WATCH: Northern Kentucky’s first medical cannabis business has opened. The region’s dispensaries will soon follow. Here’s when.
Kentucky medical cannabis rollout: when will dispensaries open in Northern Kentucky?
Across 11 Kentucky regions, 48 dispensaries were awarded licenses to operate.
Chad Johns, general manager of Bluegrass Cannacare, said the dispensary’s open date has, for the most part, been tethered to when the limited supply of product grows enough to sustain business.
“Right now, I hope and pray that we get enough (product) to get us through,” Johns said. “Is it enough to keep everybody open until more can come online and keep going? That’s the question.”
Roberts said the limited supply could be why other dispensaries in the region haven’t opened yet — to bide their time.
“Do they open as soon as they possibly can, or do they wait until there’s (a) more robust product array for patients?” Roberts said. “And here in Northern Kentucky, that really plays into it, because we’re right across the river from a recreational state.”
Kentucky’s first medical cannabis dispensary, The Post, opened in December in Beaver Dam, Ky. Johns said by its fourth day of operating, it ran out of products to sell to patients. After a restock this month, it is back open.
“As more cultivators come online and as more dispensaries come online, those issues are going to balance out,” he said.
There are currently four cultivators, or growers, operating in the Commonwealth. Roberts said a fifth has received its commencement inspection and “may have plants in today or as early as next week.”
Johns said Bluegrass Cannacare is eyeing a February opening date.
“(It feels) like we won the lottery — the same as when they announced our name on the state drawing a year ago,” he said. “We literally are Kentuckians who put in one application, and we hit out of 5,000. Those odds are astounding.”
While no dispensaries are open yet, Kentucky’s first operational medical cannabis processor, Bison Processing, opened on Thursday.
It will be responsible for taking Kentucky-grown cannabis and transforming it into safe, lab-tested medical products — such as tinctures, edibles and topicals — for patients registered in the Kentucky Medical Cannabis Program.
More than 17,000 Kentuckians have been approved for medical marijuana cards, Gov. Andy Beshear said on Wednesday. Roberts said, given where the rollout’s momentum is headed, anyone in Northern Kentucky interested in applying for a card should do so now.
“The fact that we, in just over a year, have dispensaries open with product variety available for the patients of Kentucky is lightning fast in the grand scheme of how medical cannabis works,” Roberts said. “I think Team Kentucky deserves a really big round of applause for the way they handled this rollout, the way that they did the regulations.”
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