Kentucky
KFC headquarters is leaving Louisville. What we know about the move so far
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Cheddar
Yum! Brands is taking the chicken out of Kentucky; its fried chicken brand headquarters, anyway.Kentucky Fried Chicken, part of Yum! Brands, will soon be leaving its home state.
The Fortune 500 company that has been based in Louisville since 1997 on Tuesday announced plans to create two new brand headquarters in the U.S. in Plano, Texas, and Irvine, California. Officials said KFC will primarily be headquartered at the new Plano location.
The move is expected to affect 100 KFC U.S. corporate employees, many of whom were based in Louisville before the announcement. Additionally, 90 remote workers will be expected to relocate over the next 18 months.
Where is KFC headquarters?
The current headquarters for KFC is 1441 Gardiner Lane, Louisville.
While the headquarters is leaving, individual restaurants are staying.
In a news release, Yum! Brands said KFC will continue to have a strong brand presence in Louisville “with the ambition of building a first-of-its-kind flagship restaurant.”
KFC will be headquartered in Plano, Texas, alongside sister brand Pizza Hut Global.
Yum! Brands said the move is intended “to foster greater collaboration among brands and employees.”
“These changes position us for sustainable growth and will help us better serve our customers, employees, franchisees and shareholders,” CEO David Gibbs said in the release. “Ultimately, bringing more of our people together on a consistent basis will maximize our unrivaled culture and talent as a competitive advantage. I’m confident this is another important step in growing our iconic restaurant brands globally.”
Is Yum! Brands headquarters leaving Kentucky?
Yum! Brands which also owns Taco Bell and Habit Bar & Grill brands, will retain its corporate headquarters and 560 employees in Louisville.
Yum! Brands plans to donate a $1 million endowment to the College of Business at the University of Louisville. The KFC Foundation also will keep its corporate offices in Louisville.
Contact IndyStar reporter Cheryl V. Jackson at cheryl.jackson@indystar.com or 317-444-6264. Follow her on X.com:@cherylvjackson or Bluesky: @cherylvjackson.bsky.social.
Kentucky
Op/Ed: It was a Great Kentucky Derby Day, but Not Without a Sour Note as CAW Players Feasted on Regular Joes
There were plenty of people who liked the chances of Japanese shipper T O Elvis (Volatile) in Saturday’s GI Churchill Downs Stakes. He had won four straight races, was on the improve, and the word out of Japan was that this horse might be as good as any sprinter in the world. That he was 30-1 on the morning line made the idea of placing a large wager on the 4-year-old even more enticing.
He was never going to be 30-1. The linemaker whiffed badly on that one. But as the field left the gate, T O Elvis was 12.82-1, a price that would have led to a $27.64 payoff had he won. For a horse who was competitive on paper, but was surely facing the toughest assignment of his career, the price seemed right.
T O Elvis came through, thrashing 10 quality horses to win by 3 1/4 lengths. It should have been a time for his backers to celebrate, but there was likely more resentment than satisfaction among winning horseplayers when the win price was posted. T O Elvis went off at 5.87-1 and paid $13.74.
The ones who were really celebrating were the CAW players, who, without a doubt, were behind the massive odds drop and likely won about $1.6 million on their win wager.
And that’s just in the win pool. The winning exacta combining T O Elvis and Disruptor (Gun Runner) dropped from $122.77 to $54.22 in the very last betting cycle.
It appears that CAW players also crushed the daily double, combining T O Elvis and GI Turf Classic Stakes winner Rhetorical (Not This Time). In the next-to-last betting cycle that double combination was paying $63.82. It wound up paying $26.08 for a $1 wager.
That information is courtesy of economics professor and horseplayer Marshall Gramm, who charted the changes in the pools and the prices and posted them on X.
“In the third-to-last click, T O Elvis was 12.82-1, representing 5.97% of the win pool,” Gramm wrote in an email. “In the next click, the total win pool increased from $3.69 million to $4.39 million. If we assume the ‘regular’ money remained constant at 5.97%, then of the roughly $311,000 wagered on T O Elvis in that cycle, about $269,000 likely came from the team. (I’m using the singular since it appears to be one group).
“They also heavily bet into the other pools, definitely the exacta and double and likely others as well, all during this second-to-last click. The final click was relatively small. T O Elvis’s odds actually drifted slightly from 5.81-1 to 5.87-1. That last click appears to be when they finalized their exotic positions.”
So, here we go again. Horse racing is the only gambling game where you can win a bet and be made to feel like a chump. As expected, there were a number of players who voiced their outrage on X.
NYRA linemaker David Aragona posted this: “T O Elvis was dazzling, and anyone who watched his last race can’t be surprised he just did that. But hopefully this race serves as a needed inflection point around the lack of regulation of CAW wagering, because that was as egregious as you’ll see.”
“T O Elvis listed at 12-1. Wins easy at 5-1,” Mike Mutnansky tweeted. “You thought you were getting a $26 winner. You got a $12 winner. What a terrible look for racing. Happy this happened on national TV. What a [expletive] joke they’ve let the CAWs become.”
It’s not that this was anything particularly new. We’ve seen thousands of these large odds drops over the last several years and it happens at every track in the country. But what made this different was that it was on the Derby Day card. Some people believed and said that the pools are so big on the day that the action from the CAW players couldn’t possibly put more than a small dent in the prices.
Obviously, that’s not the case. Between the win pool, the exacta pool, the double pool and whatever other bets they used T O Elvis in, the CAW players easily bet more than $500,000 on the horse. The race went to show the money these teams have, the power they have and their willingness to wager huge amounts when they think they have found inefficiencies in the wagering pools.
They could have lost. But they didn’t. And their windfall cost the regular player hundreds of thousands of dollars they would have collected had the CAW players not been involved.
Here’s what Del Mar Dennis had to say on X. “The CAWs most certainly did. What gives. There’s “funny business” and then there’s funny business when the winner, T.O. Elvis, drops down seven clicks as the gates open. Why? Better question, why am I and fellow fans like you still betting?”
A lot aren’t. Especially when you factor in inflation, pari-mutuel handle is plummeting in this country and the most obvious reason why is that a lot of horseplayers have simply given up, knowing that they can’t compete with the CAW players.
Unfortunately, nothing is going to change. The tracks are not going to turn down the billions in handle that comes from the CAW teams. And there are tracks, Churchill among them, that own betting outlets set up to take bets from CAW players.
But there is a cost. On the sport’s most important and visible day, the T O Elvis payoffs were a terrible look and added to the growing anger among those who just want to have a fair chance when it comes to playing the horses. T O Elvis won, but the sport lost as his win no doubt led to more customers deciding that they are done with this game.
Kentucky
Yankees’ Elmer Rodriguez ‘started crying’ watching cousins take top two spots in Kentucky Derby
Rookie right-hander Elmer Rodríguez, just days after making his MLB debut with the Yankees, had another memorable moment Saturday, as two of his cousins rode in the Kentucky Derby and finished first and second.
José Ortiz took Golden Tempo to the winner’s circle at Churchill Downs, with Irad Ortiz Jr. aboard favorite Renegade finishing second.
Rodríguez, who is set to make his second start for the Yankees on Tuesday against the Rangers, said he watched the race alone and was “more nervous watching that race than [in] my debut. I don’t know why. I started crying.”
Rodríguez, a 22-year-old right-hander, said he saw Irad Ortiz ride Renegade on Feb. 7 at Tampa Bay Downs.

Rodríguez, who allowed two runs in four innings in a loss to Texas on Wednesday, likely won’t be with the Yankees for long, as Carlos Rodón is expected to return from elbow surgery after one more rehab start in the minors.
But he expects to have gained something from his first outing.
“You take all the good and bad and learn from it,” the right-hander said. “The first one feels like the toughest one. I’m more comfortable now.”
Kentucky
Kentucky makes the final three for 2027 offensive lineman
The Kentucky Wildcats coaching staff has had an impressive offseason, both in building the 2026 roster from the transfer portal, and in recruiting for 2027. The 2027 Kentucky class could get even better soon. They continue to work on the offensive line, and are in the running for Kaden Buchanan.
Buchanan is a 6’4″, 328 lb offensive lineman out of Tennessee who projects to be an interior lineman at the next level. He is currently rated four stars by 247Sports and is ranked as the No. 237 overall player in his class.
Offers came in from a number of top schools, but Buchanan has narrowed down his list to a final three, and Kentucky made the cut. The other two teams are Virginia Tech and North Carolina State. He has visited Lexington multiple times already, and is set to visit officially in June.
Coach Will Stein wants to build the offensive line, and Buchanan would certainly be a tremendous addition. No date has been set for a commitment yet, but we will update it once more information is available.
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