Kentucky
KSB Advisory discusses facilities updates, security measures
The Kentucky Faculty for the Blind (KSB) Advisory Board mentioned updates to campus amenities and extra safety measures being put in place throughout its in-person assembly July 12.
KSB is within the course of of creating varied renovations, together with putting in fencing round campus, updating roofs, changing HVAC items and lighting, and repaving parking tons and walkways on campus.
John Aaron, operations supervisor for KSB, shared updates on renovation initiatives round campus.
A brand new playground has been ordered however is not going to arrive till after faculty begins. Aaron hopes to start demolition on the previous playground as quickly as attainable.
The brand new working observe is within the last design phases and ought to be accomplished by mid-fall. They’ve begun changing fencing round campus, which can enhance social distancing between the general public and college students, and supply further security for the campus, he stated.
Different renovations will embody putting in new door {hardware} in lecture rooms, tinting classroom home windows, changing water heater techniques with tankless techniques, and changing sinks within the Scoggin constructing. Aaron stated he hopes to exchange the turning circle within the car parking zone close to the campus entrance by subsequent spring to make entry simpler for buses and emergency automobiles.
Within the wake of the Could 24 faculty taking pictures in Uvalde, Texas, KSB Principal Peggy Sinclair-Morris mentioned further safety measures on the faculty.
She stated the Kentucky Middle for Faculty Security supplied disaster response coaching to employees on Could 25.
KSB additionally has been in contact with native regulation enforcement companies to safe faculty useful resource officers (SROs), however as a consequence of companies being short-staffed, discovering SROs to cowl all three shifts has been a problem.
In the course of the 2022 legislative session, the Kentucky Normal Meeting handed Home Invoice 63, which requires an SRO on each faculty campus in Kentucky, with exceptions allowed by the Workplace of State Faculty Safety Marshal. Nevertheless, the legislature didn’t acceptable the funds essential to pay for the positions or put into place the helps for regulation enforcement to correctly practice new SROs.
Sinclair-Morris stated it’s necessary to maintain college students and employees secure and transfer away from the mindset that occasions like faculty shootings won’t ever occur on campus.
“We have to be vigilant; we have to shield our children. It’s unlucky, however that is the way in which issues must be now,” she stated.
Sinclair-Morris additionally mentioned that the advisory board is on the lookout for new candidates to volunteer to serve on the board, so present members could rotate off. The board wants new members representing mother and father, KSB alumni and group companions. people could fill out the shape, embody a canopy letter and resume, and ahead it to Carol Ann Morrison.
In different enterprise, the board heard:
- KSB registration shall be held on Aug. 14. Sinclair-Morris stated they hope to transition to on-line registration by way of Infinite Campus, but additionally will hold paper paperwork in the meanwhile. The primary day of faculty is Aug. 15.
- Sinclair-Morris stated they’re implementing a brand new program referred to as Step Again this fall. The Step-back Program has been developed to offer an entire faculty strategy to assist educators, caregivers and different professionals to grasp their function in supporting kids/younger individuals with further studying must change into as unbiased as attainable, with a deal with maximizing the kid/younger particular person’s independence.
- KSB will begin utilizing a brand new communication device for the upcoming faculty yr to extend communication with households. There shall be weekly blurbs about what’s taking place in lessons and sports activities, and it additionally will embody a counselor’s nook.
- KSB has began working with the Autism Middle on the College of Louisville to offer coaching for academics as KSB begins to enroll extra college students with autism.
- KSB is also within the strategy of beginning a bowling staff. Sixty-seven college students have registered thus far.
- Carol Ann Morrison, director within the Kentucky Division of Schooling’s (KDE’s) Division of State Faculties, supplied an replace on the Mum or dad Involvement Survey. She stated KDE is trying to enhance father or mother participation. The survey is open till Sept. 1.
Kentucky
Chip Trayanum injury: Kentucky RB status updated vs. Tennessee on Thursday report
Kentucky and No. 7 Tennessee will kick off the final month of the season with a matchup against one another on Rocky Top.
With that, the second injury report for the game between the Wildcats and Volunteers is out. That comes after the initial one was released with 22 players designated on Wednesday.
Kentucky is much more concerned health-wise for this game with 17 of the 22, including 10 of those already being out with starters and significant names on both sides of the football among them. From there, four are probable, two are questionable, and one was doubtful.
Tennessee then has five more of their own. That comes with the Vols being off of a bye last weekend. Three of those are already out with two more, Caleb Herring and William Satterwhite, labeled as questionable.
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Here’s how the latest injury report looks for Kentucky and Tennessee following its release:
Thursday Injury Report for Kentucky vs. Tennessee
Kentucky
DB Maxwell Hairston – Out
RB Chip Trayanum – Out
DB Jantzen Dunn – Out
DB Quay’sheed Scott – Out
OLB JJ Weaver – Out
ILB Jayvant Brown – Out
OLB Steven Soles Jr. – Out
DL Darrion Henry-Young – Out
ILB D’Eryk Jackson – Out
OL Gerald Mincey – Out
TE Jordan Dingle – Out
DL Josaih Hayes – Out
DT Deone Walker – Probable
DB DJ Waller Jr. – Probable
DB Nasir Addison – Probable
DL Tavion Gibson – Probable
Tennessee
DB Jourdan Thomas – Out
LB Keenan Pili – Out
LB Edwin Spillman – Out
DL Caleb Herring – Questionable
OL William Satterwhite – Probable
Kentucky
Early voting underway in Kentucky
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – Thursday is the first day of early voting for the general election in Kentucky.
In Lexington, you can vote early at any public library from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
If you’re outside of Fayette County, you can go to the Secretary of State’s website to see where you can vote in your county. Remember to bring your photo ID.
MORE
- How Ky. law enforcement, county clerks are working to make polling locations safe
- What you need to know before heading to the polls
There’s been an effort by state leaders to encourage Kentuckians to use the state’s three days of early voting and, as you can see, many people in south Lexington are taking that advice at Tate’s Creek Library:
During the past few weeks, we’ve covered some of the various things you may see on your ballot, from Kentucky House races, U.S. House races, Kentucky Senate races, local ballot questions, and Constitutional Amendments 1 and 2:
Copyright 2024 WKYT. All rights reserved.
Kentucky
There’s a lot new with Kentucky basketball. Here’s early scouting report of 2024-25 Cats
Kentucky basketball: Mark Pope discusses win over Minnesota State
Kentucky basketball coach Mark Pope was happy with his team’s second half performance to get the win over Minnesota State in an exhibition game.
Sam Upshaw Jr.
LEXINGTON — Kentucky basketball opens the 2024-25 season — and the Mark Pope era — next week, as it welcomes Wright State to town for a 7 p.m. tipoff at Rupp Arena.
The Wildcats held their annual Big Blue Madness event earlier in October, which included a 3-point competition and dunk contest. Then they held a scrimmage session during the repurposed Blue-White event — though only fans in attendance at Memorial Coliseum were able to watch in person, as it wasn’t televised. And now, UK is done with the preseason, routing Division II clubs Kentucky Wesleyan and Minnesota State Mankato in a pair of home exhibitions.
But there’s still plenty to learn about this season’s roster.
The Courier Journal provides insight about this edition of the Wildcats by answering key questions entering the 2024-25 campaign:
Everything. From the scholarship players to the coaches, not a single part of the 2023-24 team is back this season. For that reason, the 2024-25 roster is historic: Per bigbluehistory.net — a statistical database devoted to detailing every aspect of Kentucky’s men’s basketball program — the 2024-25 campaign will be the first time UK has fielded a roster without a returning scholarship player from the previous season. Two seniors from last season, Tre Mitchell and Antonio Reeves, ran out of college eligibility. Three more (Rob Dillingham, Justin Edwards and Reed Sheppard) entered the NBA draft. The other seven scholarship players transferred: Aaron Bradshaw (Ohio State), Jordan Burks (Georgetown), Joey Hart (Ball State) and Ugonna Onyenso (Kansas State) left the SEC, while three ex-Wildcats (Zvonimir Ivišić, Adou Thiero and D.J. Wagner) followed former UK coach John Calipari to his new intraconference gig at Arkansas.
With Calipari gone, Kentucky turned to Pope, an alum and a team captain of “The Untouchables,” the program’s iconic national championship squad of 1995-96.
The dozen scholarship exits wrought 12 scholarship newcomers. Pope and the Wildcats treaded heavily in the transfer portal, adding nine players: guards Koby Brea, Lamont Butler, Kerr Kriisa, Otega Oweh and Jaxson Robinson, forwards Ansley Almonor, Andrew Carr and Amari Williams and center Brandon Garrison. UK also had a three-man signing class composed of Collin Chandler, Trent Noah and Travis Perry.
No one. Other than a pair of walk-ons (Grant Darbyshire and Walker Horn) who played a combined five minutes in 2023-24.
Jaxson Robinson. He’s the only member of UK’s roster to have played for Pope before. (Robinson spent the past two seasons at BYU, Pope’s previous school.) He was the Cougars’ top scorer last season, coming off the bench to average 14.2 points per game on his way to winning the Big 12’s Sixth Man of the Year award and earning an honorable mention nod for the All-Big 12 team. Robinson’s already showcased his top-flight ability offensively, pacing the Wildcats in points in both of their exhibition outings, scoring 19 versus Kentucky Wesleyan and 24 against Minnesota State Mankato. In the latter, every point from Robinson came from distance, sinking eight 3-pointers.
While he’ll likely be the Wildcats’ chief point-getter at the end of the season, don’t expect much of a margin between Nos. 1 and 2 — or perhaps even 1 and 5. Pope and his staff crave balance and sporting multiple scoring options on the floor at all times.
Take note: Four players on BYU’s 2023-24 roster finished with double-digit scoring averages, with three more above 9.0: Robinson (14.2), Fousseyni Traore (10.9), Trevin Knell (10.6), Spencer Johnson (10.3), Richie Saunders (9.6), Noah Waterman (9.5) and Dallin Hall (9.0).
Ansley Almonor. He’s the lowest-ranked transfer to join the program, according to every major recruiting service (Rivals, 247Sports and On3). The same goes for basketball statistician Evan Miyakawa, who not only had Almonor last among UK’s nine transfers but also questioned how quickly the former Fairleigh Dickinson star could adapt to the SEC. “He was (FDU’s) leading scorer last year, and he put up good numbers. … But they don’t play in a great league,” Miyakawa said. “So those sorts of statistics don’t typically translate that well, and my projections take that into account: just the massive talent jump that he’s gonna be taking in terms of teams that he’s playing against.” At UK’s media day in October, Almonor said he’s well aware of his detractors; friends and family pass along critical comments they’ve heard aloud or seen on social media. Now, it’s on Almonor to prove his doubters wrong.
Andrew Carr. A good bet to rank among the top two in points (behind Robinson) and rebounds (alongside center Amari Williams), Carr could have the best statistical profile of any Wildcat come the end of the season. He’s a gifted passer, too. But that’s not all: His 6-foot-10 frame belies his shooting ability, which he showcased throughout the team’s pro day Oct. 7. Carr was arguably the Wildcats’ top player that evening — and put that on display for scouts from all 30 NBA teams. With his size, length, top-tier decision-making and knack for knocking down shots from well beyond the 3-point line, Carr possesses every skill NBA teams desire from big men in modern basketball. If Carr’s play matches his potential, that bodes well for the Wildcats this season.
Seven. As in, seven players on Kentucky’s roster have played 2,000 or more minutes in college. (A hat tip to former Courier Journal UK beat writer Kyle Tucker for that figure, which he unearthed during a deep-dive analysis of the SEC ahead of the 2024-25 season.) Those seven 2,000-plus-minutes Cats are more than any outfit in the now-16-team conference, besting Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas A&M, which each boast six such players.
No, not a single member of UK’s roster has played together before. But the past decade has proven that programs with plenty of experienced veterans win national titles. No SEC club is as seasoned as the Wildcats in terms of college minutes. If the chemistry develops quickly, Kentucky will be a contender in March.
Lamont Butler. His individual stats might not dazzle. He might not go among the 60 picks in next year’s NBA draft. But Butler’s importance to this team’s won’t be judged by such numerical measures. His best attribute: lockdown, 1-on-1 defense. Pope regularly refers to him as the best perimeter defender in college basketball. Up and down Kentucky’s schedule, foes feature ultra-talented guards. Those lead guards take on even greater importance in March Madness; more often than not, teams with the best guard play make the deepest NCAA Tournament runs. Butler flummoxing and frustrating those guards would go a long way toward ensuring UK has a long stay in the Big Dance.
Reach Kentucky men’s basketball and football reporter Ryan Black at rblack@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter at @RyanABlack.
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