Kentucky
Kentucky’s Mark Pope can look to Joe B. Hall entering pivotal season
Kentucky Wildcats reporter on UK basketball 20265-26 under Mark Pope
Kentucky Wildcats reporter Ryan Black on Year 2 under UK basketball coach Mark Pope after the season-ending loss to Iowa State in the NCAA Tournament.
LEXINGTON — Think about Mark Pope’s tenure through two seasons.
What are the first images that come to mind?
Do you think of a notable victory, like beating Duke in the Champions Classic in only his third game as Kentucky basketball’s coach? Or perhaps sweeping all four regular-season meetings against Tennessee? Maybe even topping ex-coach John Calipari last season, handing Arkansas its first — and what turned out to be, only — loss at Bud Walton Arena during the 2025-26 campaign?
Perhaps, as a pessimist, your focus is the losses. They aren’t hard to find. UK was run out of the building a couple times in his debut season (Ohio State in New York, Alabama in Nashville). Those one-sided setbacks — alarmingly — surfaced with more regularity in Year 2.
If you’re more about vibes, Pope has positivity in spades. In a world that can be relentlessly disheartening, Pope’s worldview is refreshing. Critics also can take the opposite tack: Pope hasn’t won enough games, at a high enough level, to be so upbeat all the time. Save those emotions for the offseason, they could say.
Those same detractors likely — and perhaps gleefully — cite his recruiting. The Wildcats’ propensity for missing on high-end high school talent and top transfers has turned into an Internet meme of sorts; though highly touted transfer Milan Momcilovic (formerly of Iowa State) committed to Kentucky on Monday, usage of the word “whiff” probably has increased tenfold since Pope took over the program.
All these varying factors can obscure the bigger picture.
But they also can be instructive.
While there have been highlights along the way, the bottom line is Kentucky hasn’t performed to its lofty historical standard. Pope is 46-26 (.639) entering his third season. If he walked away today, that winning percentage would better only one UK coach in the post-Adolph Rupp era. You Know Who. Billy Gillispie.
Not the company Pope wants to keep. Not the company any Kentucky basketball coach wants to keep if he wants to remain in the job.
Comparing win percentages does require some nuance, of course. Nothing Gillispie accomplished in his two-season stint in Lexington rivals, say, Pope’s first team topping eight opponents ranked in the top 15 of the Associated Press poll at the time of the matchup, which set a single-season school record (and tied a Division I single-season mark). Of greater import is that the SEC waters Pope inhabits are far deeper and more fearsome than anything Gillispie faced. Ergo, conference losses are more likely for every team — even UK, which owns every league record worth crowing about.
The SEC’s toughness aside, Pope himself would admit that’s an excuse. The day he stepped to the microphone in front of a sellout crowd at Rupp Arena for his introductory news conference in April 2024, Pope loudly proclaimed he understood “the assignment.” Which he noted, was to “win banners” at the SEC Tournament. And return to the Final Four. And capture the Wildcats’ ninth national championship.
Through two seasons, no new banners have been added to Rupp Arena’s rafters.
If Pope makes good on those promises, he’ll do so by bucking history.
Almost all of his post-Rupp predecessors achieved more in their first two seasons at UK than Pope. And those that didn’t? They’d proven more at prior stops than Pope’s stints at Utah Valley and BYU.
For all the criticism Gillispie received — and rightly so — at Kentucky, he arrived in the Bluegrass State in 2007 fresh off piloting Texas A&M to the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 for the first time in nearly three decades. In the near-20 years since Gillispie left, the Aggies only have reached the Sweet 16 twice more.
Don’t forget: Pope became his alma mater’s coach without an NCAA victory to his name (in two tries) at BYU.
The picture is bleaker when juxtaposed against other former Kentucky coaches.
Calipari went to the Elite Eight in his first season with the Cats, then the Final Four a year later. Orlando “Tubby” Smith won it all in his maiden campaign at UK, then followed up with an Elite Eight appearance. Rick Pitino guided a sanction-riddled Kentucky group to 14-14 record in Year 1, then had the best record in the SEC (12-4) in his encore campaign — though the Wildcats weren’t eligible to claim the regular-season championship. Even Eddie Sutton, whose tenure landed the program in NCAA hot water, got out of the gate with guns blazing in his opening campaign, posting a 32-4 overall record and sweeping the league’s regular season and tournament titles on his way to the Elite Eight.
Ironically, the closest parallel to Pope is Joe B. Hall.
Both played for UK. Both dearly loved the university. Both had the unenviable task of following ultra-successful coaches — with larger-than-life personalities, to boot — whose tenures had started to sour in the waning years. Both had solid first seasons that preempted a step back in Year 2.
Hall went 13-13 in his second season. He responded by winning a share of the SEC championship (in the days the conference tournament still was on hiatus) and the league’s Coach of the Year award in 1974-75 as the Wildcats finished 26-5. After Indiana demolished Kentucky by 24 points in the regular season in a game remembered for Bob Knight smacking Hall on the back of the head during an exchange in the final minutes, the Cats enacted their revenge in the Elite Eight, handing the undefeated Hoosiers their only loss. The season ended in a seven-point setback to UCLA in the final contest of coaching icon John Wooden’s career.
By the time the buzzer sounded in that national title tilt, Hall had demonstrated Year 2 was an aberration. There was life after Rupp, after all. Hall went to two more Final Fours, cutting down the nets to cap the 1977-78 season. When he retired in 1985, only Rupp had more victories as UK’s coach.
In 2026-27, can Pope author a season like Hall’s third?
A Final Four berth would be a godsend for a fan base that hasn’t enjoyed one since 2015, when the 38-0 bunch stunningly fell to Wisconsin in the national semifinals. Even if next season’s group falls short of the Final Four, Pope must show progress. Like Hall, he must confirm his underwhelming Year 2 was the exception, not the rule.
If he can’t, hope in Pope will be in short supply.
Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on X at @RyanABlack.
Kentucky
Gun safety advocates discuss Kentucky’s new concealed carry law for young adults
CAMPBELL COUNTY, Ky. — Kentucky residents ages 18 to 20 will now be able to obtain a provisional concealed carry license under House Bill 312, which requires proper firearm safety training and background checks.
Gun safety advocates are stressing the importance of knowing the law and handling firearms responsibly.
Jeff Poynter has been teaching concealed carry safety for nearly a decade. He said training is critical for anyone looking to carry.
WATCH: Gun safety advocates stress responsible handling with concealed carry changes
Gun safety advocates discuss new Kentucky firearm law
“If you don’t have the training and know what to do, then you shouldn’t be using it,” Poynter said. “They will go over the laws, they will go over safe handling in the house, safety around children, their responsibilities when it comes to that, safety in their vehicle, safety while they’re carrying.”
Poynter also said gun owners should continuously revisit their safety training.
“It’s a perishable skill. It needs to be maintained,” Poynter added.
Kevin Michalowski, a former law enforcement officer with over 30 years of firearm safety training experience and a member of the United States Concealed Carry Association, said it is also important to know the laws beyond Kentucky’s borders. In Ohio, for example, there is no legally permitted concealed carry under the age of 21.
“It is your responsibility when you’re carrying your gun to make sure that you are carrying it legally and only carrying it where you are allowed to carry it, where that permit allows,” Michalowski said.
Kentucky State Police said applications for the new provisional concealed carry permit are expected to open in mid-September.
Michalowski said getting proper training is what separates responsible gun owners from the rest.
“If you’re going to carry a firearm, you need to get training. You need to understand where you can legally carry that firearm and what you can and can’t do with it,” Michalowski said. “The people who get that training are far more responsible than the people who don’t.”
You can find more information on the legislation by clicking the link here, with information on the Kentucky State Police website here.
Have a story idea or tip for WCPO 9 Northern Kentucky reporter Logan MacDonald? Email him at Logan@WCPO.com.
WCPO
Kentucky
Kentucky health officials investigating 100 reported cases of cyclosporiasis outbreak
KENTUCKY – The Kentucky Department for Public Health is investigating 100 reported cases of cyclosporiasis statewide, 61 of which have been confirmed.
Cyclosporiasis is an intestinal illness caused by ingesting food or water contaminated with the microscopic parasite Cyclospora; the highest risk of infection is for people living in or traveling to subtropical regions.
Foodborne outbreaks are associated with various types of produce, such as raspberries, basil, cilantro, snow peas, and mixed greens.
Symptoms typically begin two to 14 days after exposure.
The most common symptoms include diarrhea, fatigue, and abdominal cramping. It is commonly treated with a combination of antibiotics.
Public health experts are urging people to follow food-safety guidelines to reduce the risk, such as washing hands with soap and warm water after handling produce, cleaning food preparation areas and tools with soap, and water and washing all fruits and vegetables before eating or cooking.
Copyright 2026 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
Kentucky State Police seeks public vote for national cruiser contest – Winchester Sun
Kentucky State Police seeks public vote for national cruiser contest
Published 3:12 pm Monday, July 13, 2026
FRANKFORT – Gov. Andy Beshear and the Kentucky State Police are calling on Kentuckians to help power a statewide push in a national competition that celebrates the most eye-catching police cruisers in the country.
KSP has entered the 2026 Best Looking Cruiser Contest, held annually by the American Association of State Troopers (AAST). The contest consists of the public voting on their favorite cruiser photo, with the winning image earning the cover of the association’s 2027 calendar.
“The men and women of the Kentucky State Police represent the very best of public service,” Beshear said. “I encourage every Kentuckian to show their support by voting in this national contest.”
This year, KSP is highlighting the dedication and training required to be a trooper by featuring a 2024 Mustang GT cruiser outside of the KSP Academy in Frankfort, Ky. Beyond its striking design, the image also serves as a tribute to fallen heroes who paid the ultimate sacrifice.
The Kentucky State Police have 39 troopers, officers and patrolmen who lost their lives in the line of duty. Among them was Trooper James W. McNeely who drowned during a rescue mission on the Kentucky River in 1972 and his body was never recovered.
In 2015, the KSP unveiled a nearly 10-foot-tall bronze statue, titled ‘The Trooper’, which is in front of the Academy Building. This statue was created in Trooper McNeely’s likeness and depicts a trooper walking towards the future to serve the citizens of Kentucky.
“This year’s contest photo symbolizes what it means to be a Kentucky State Police trooper, by showcasing the devotion, hard work, commitment and sacrifice that our troopers give to their local communities daily,” stated KSP Commissioner Phillip Burnett, Jr. “We would be humbled and honored to have your vote and support on social media.”
KSP has placed in the top five in the past eight years, taking home back-to-back wins in 2021 and 2022. While the Florida Highway Patrol won the competition last year, Kentucky is ready to take the top spot and needs your help to win it all.
Kentuckians are encouraged to vote for KSP’s entry now through Friday, July 10, at 12:00 p.m.
-
Los Angeles, Ca30 minutes agoStabbing at Chino Hills liquor store ends in attempted murder arrest
-
Detroit, MI54 minutes agoA small group of citizens rally for mental health coverage in Detroit
-
San Francisco, CA1 hour ago1 dead, 2 missing after boat capsizes near Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay
-
Dallas, TX1 hour agoDeath penalty off the table for man accused of beheading Dallas motel manager, prosecutors say
-
Boston, MA1 hour agoChickadee, the popular Mediterranean restaurant in Seaport, is shutting down – The Boston Globe
-
Denver, CO2 hours agoDenver Nuggets 7-Year NBA Veteran Gets Honest On Peyton Watson
-
Seattle, WA2 hours agoTop 25 Seattle Seahawks Going into 2026 NFL Season: #17 Grey Zabel
-
San Diego, CA2 hours agoTijuana earns spot in Little League World Series, hoping third time’s a charm