Kentucky
VIDEO: Kentucky HC Mark Pope – Jackson State Postgame
Kentucky head coach Mark Pope addressed the media after the No. 9 Wildcats’ 108-59 win over Jackson State on Friday night at Rupp Arena.
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MARK POPE Q&A:
MARK POPE: All right. Great night. This Jackson State team, man, these guys played really hard. They just compete, compete, compete, and Mo clearly, come on, he’s one of the best basketball guys and ambassadors to this game ever. The opportunity to have Kenny Walker, and Purvis in the gym was super special. You know, BBN showed out like they always do for a game that might not be perceived as a headline game. It was great night, proud of our guys. I thought they did a ton of good things. It was fun. We got to see everything. We got to see a ton of transitions and a ton of shots.You know, all kind of fireworks from all of our guys and we got to see shoes flying in the air. It was a magical evening. Lee is saying, I should not have said that. I thought it was fantastic.
Q Mark, your guys at the end seem to get a bigger kick out of anything with Travis and Trent both getting their first 3s, do you remember your first collegiate points and what it meant to you and what do you think it meant to those guys?
MARK POPE: That’s a great question. I can’t actually, I’m not sure. I didn’t score many, so you would think I would remember. I don’t remember for me. I think for TP and Trent, you know, those guys are- we talked about them a lot. They are really really special. They are having a massive impact on his team and their futures are incredibly bright and it’s hard to sit for 35 minutes and come play. I think they are taking it really seriously and I thought they came to play tonight, I thought they were awesome, I thought they were really good doing a really hard thing. So, I’m proud of those guys. It’s incredibly beautiful to have freshman that you can trust like we trust them and they have great futures.
Q Coach, last game you talked about Koby and how you tried to get him going outside of his three-point shooting. He went five of eight from three. But also in the first half, he used that shoulder a little bit like you were talking and finished around the rim. How is his game evolving outside of the lethal three-point shooter that we know he is?
MARK POPE: He had a couple of cuts that I loved and he had the late cut in the first half down to – on the left block and then he had the back door right in front of our bench where Amari, just like I’m going to throw it in that triple coverage and somehow Koby wanted that and earned himself free throws. It’s an unbelievable winning catch and it was really special. I thought Koby was really good tonight about choosing a simple play and executing really quickly. He was much more of a pop rule vibe tonight and I was really proud of that and I was really excited about his cuts. I thought he was excellent defensively, actually. Had a couple of strips that were a really incredible job. I was really proud of him for that. And I thought, I was really excited about his cuts and I thought he was excellent defensively, actually. Had a couple of strips that were really an incredible job with champion chess catching the moves, he was just catching multiple moves in isolation, I thought he was really good, I thought he was terrific. And then one of my many favorite moments tonight. He banged a three right in the corner in front of me and turned around and started talking trash to me. Which that was awesome. I love that. I mean, Kobe is in a tough spot. He goes five from eight from the three-point line and it’s destroying his shooting percentage, which is just crazy and I’ve never seen that in my lifetime. He’s sure is doing special things for us, like all of our guys are right now.
Q We did talk a lot about 3s this week. Obviously, the high for the season so far with makes and attempts. Did you see anything diferent out there or was there a diferent focus on that coming in?
MARK POPE: It was certainly diferent defensively and this was a team that was much more eager to the ball. They were much more heavy bottom bringing multiple bodies and it was just easier for extra passes to come by for sure. There was a lot of pressure, so the game got a little scattered.With all that said, I thought our guys did an unbelievable job making plays for each other. You know, 29 assists is a good number for us and I would take that any night. Especially, guys especially in a game like this where it is so easy to think, awe man, in this game I’m just going to get one for myself. We just have a DNA, these guys have built a DNA on this team where they are actually excited to make plays for each other and I’m telling you that bodes well and it’s rare and it is important for the way we play and how this game is made up and our guys are going to continue to believe more and more that the more they give the more they get back, it’s the way this game works when it’s right and certainly they got to feel that tonight. I was really proud of them. You got to approach it with faith. If I make this next pass, if I just trust this game or trust the way we play it’s going to work out for me, and it did. One of the special stories for us tonight is that we had 11 players score, 11 of our 12 guys scored. The only player that didn’t score led us in assists. That’s exactly how a Kentucky basketball team is supposed to function. We had one guy that didn’t score and he led us in assists with seven. And every other guy on the court scored and shared the ball, I think we had four guys with five or more assists in the game. And those are all really important markers for how we want to represent this state and how we want to play this game and what we believe wins. I was proud of that and you can tell I’m happy hyped about that.
Q Mark, Collin posted a team best plus 29 in just 13 minutes. Have you seen him get more comfortable? The last two games, he’s looked a lot more comfortable.
MARK POPE: Collin is not scared, he checked in the game and shot a 30 footer in transition and said yeah, I’ve got this. He’s an incredible talent. None of us, I can’t, there’s nobody in this room that can relate to going and putting down the basketball for two years and you know, he is an extraordinary talent and you know, we are all going to be surprised with what he turns into, but we shouldn’t be.He’s really an extraordinary talent. Beautiful, beautiful young man too.
Q Mark, you talk about the unselfishness, but this is 12 guys on the roster you had to put together really quickly. Were you able to determine that in kind of the interview process before you were ever extended?
MARK POPE: Yes, the answer is yes. It’s – yeah. Especially with these guys from the transfer portal, right? You have so much data on them and footage of them. Also, I don’t know, guys, I think Kentucky attracts really good people. I think really good people. Because if you come to Kentucky, then you, by definition, it is the one place in all of college basketball where you are representing just a fan base in a diferent unique way. And to want that, it’s almost like it’s own filter, right? To really want that. I think it’s built into the DNA of our guys and I think our job have done a really good job being intentional about and trying to learn each other and love each other and we talked about that a lot. I think that’s what Kentucky draws, right? You know, everybody knows that we talk about the name on the front of the jersey. Our guys know that and they know that when we recruit them. In general, you know, I think every guy that we recruit is desperately dreaming of hanging a banner and going to play in the NBA. But they believe the pathway to do that is not actually making this exclusively about themselves. And that sounds like a strong statement, but it’s actually hard not to be that way. I think the filter is pretty good and certainly our guys are proving that right now. It doesn’t come easy, it’s not a one conversation thing. It’s things our guys are talking to each other every single day. Trying to believe that and trust in that path, I’m proud of our guys functioning.
Q Mark, you have been talking about stretching Brandon out a little bit. Played a lot of minutes tonight, this line is just full of numbers. What did you like about his energy?
MARK POPE: I thought BG was great tonight and the six assists was a great number for that game. BG was a six two, which is really good for him, actually. Six assists is great with three steals and three blocks, right? in a really physical game on the interior with some big bodies, like some really big bodies. I thought as the game went on he got better and better and better. I thought he made some really great challenged catches. I thought he was really disciplined with how he distributed the ball and he is a decision-maker on our team and I thought he was terrific tonight. I thought he was super forceful inside trying to, you know, sometimes when he finishes moves a little bit weak soft going away and tonight, I thought he was super forceful against big bodies and there is a lot of growth in him tonight.
Q You mentioned Travis, Trent, Collin all being under diferent circumstances this season. Kerr, obviously, the guy who had zero points and seven assists. How big of an adjustment for him starting 93 games over his career and then coming into this roll and embracing it so far?
MARK POPE: He was that way from the beginning too, I think he knew exactly what he was walking into and I think he loves it. I’m telling you, Kerr Kriisa, I don’t know if we get him walking in our doors every year. I’m enjoying and savoring every second I get to coach him because he’s really unique, he’s bringing so much to our team, you know, it’s interesting. I don’t know if you guys notice this but we were in the second half we kind of made a run, this was back in the Duke game. We were somewhere in the second half and we made a run early and Duke kind of came back and pushed us up to seven, eight, or nine and we were a little stymied for a moment and we came to a media timeout and we were walking at the huddle and Kerr was pushing everybody, just shoving them, right? He just refuses to accept whatever the common vibe is. He’s going to be contrary to it.Right? It’s really important and our guys receive it really well. And it just keeps everybody really sharp. He’s really special, he’s got a really unique skill set and personality and he brings defiance and a swag and an insistence for a team. He’s also got this incredible commitment. I mean, I think it was probably the first blue-and-white scrimmage we all sat down and I mentioned that Kerr promised he was going to be the best pace guy in college basketball and he has lived up to that every second he’s been on the floor every single game, right? And that’s an incredible consistent determination is beautiful too and he’s got both of those vibes going on in a really special package. He’s special, and he was special tonight, if you think about it. Seven assists, zero points, let’s go, he’s cool with that. Dude is going to put up 20 one night when we need him to too.
Q Coach, I think you said in a previous press conference you have not been surprised by any of your players and you knew exactly what you were getting when you brought them here to Kentucky. But I think the play of Otega Oweh certainly surprised Big Blue Nation. Just talk about double O tonight with another 20 point game.
MARK POPE: It’s interesting with Otega, right? What is really great about Otega. He’s 8 for 12. He’s 4 for 4 from the free-throw line. He’s got 21 points, two assists, zero turnovers, three steals and ends up with 20 points on the night and we don’t get to him until the very end of the press conference.When he kind of does that every single night. He gets us of to unbelievable starts every single night. He’s got physicality and a joy about him. I think he’s been incredible. I’m really proud of him, you know, one of the things that all of us are working on growing and one of the things that he has been focusing on growing is being a every day, every play guy. Man, he’s probably been our most consistent guy in games. And that is a massive tribute to him. And Coach Fox works with him a lot. I’m just really proud of him and he’s just bringing joy to every single game. The only time I got mad at
Otega today was when he was celebrating with his guys too much after a play and not running transition defense. He’s really special. I have to stop talking about him because he started to get a big head back here, you know what I’m saying? Awesome. Thanks guys, have a great night.
Kentucky
Midwest Equipment Manufacturing invests $15M in Northern Kentucky, creating 66 jobs
FRANKFORT, Ky. (WKRC) – Governor Andy Beshear announced a major expansion of Kentucky’s manufacturing sector as Midwest Equipment Manufacturing Inc. plans to invest $15 million to expand operations in Maysville, creating 66 skilled jobs.
“Kentucky’s thriving manufacturing sector has been an important component in our state’s recent economic momentum,” Beshear said. “We continue to see leaders in the manufacturing sector invest in the commonwealth and our communities, providing good-paying, quality job opportunities for Kentuckians, and this includes 66 new jobs being created by Midwest Equipment Manufacturing. I want to thank the company’s leaders for relocating and investing in Mason County, and I look forward to seeing their success in our New Kentucky Home.”
The project will transform the company’s Maysville facility into a new manufacturing hub, helping address labor shortages and production backlogs. Several key product lines, including the Tru-Cut Mower and the 500 Series Brown Bear Composter, will be relocated from Thorntown, Indiana, to Maysville.
Dan Kallevig, president of Tru-Cut Mowers, said the company is enthusiastic about the move. “I have been to Maysville a few times in the past few months, and I am very impressed with the kindness of the people I have met.”
“As part of the ongoing renaissance of residential and commercial activity in the city’s east end neighborhood, the city of Maysville is pleased to express its full support for the relocation of Midwest Equipment Manufacturing to Maysville. We remain committed to sustaining the positive momentum within our community and are excited to not only retain 16 valuable manufacturing jobs in our city but also welcome the creation of an additional 66 positions through Midwest Equipment Manufacturing’s expansion,” said Maysville Mayor Debra L. Cotterill.
Kentucky
‘My hero.’ George Clooney’s sister dies at 65 in Northern Kentucky
Beverly Hills fire: Nick Clooney recounts event that left 165 dead
Nick Clooney, who was a TV anchor at the time, remembers the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire 40 years later. He’s joined by state Sen. Julian Carroll, hospital administrator John Hoyle and volunteer Bill Klingenberg.
Meg Vogel, Cincinnati
George Clooney’s sister, Adelia “Ada” Zeidler, died on Friday in Northern Kentucky.
Zeidler died at St. Elizabeth Hospital on Dec. 19, according to her obituary. Clooney confirmed to People magazine his sister died after a battle with cancer. She was 65.
“My sister, Ada, was my hero,” Clooney told the magazine. “She faced down cancer with courage and humor. I’ve never met anyone so brave. Amal and I will miss her terribly.”
Zeidler was born in May 1960 to her parents, Nick and Nina Clooney in Los Angeles, her obituary says. She was an artist and worked as an elementary art teacher at Augusta Independent School for several years. She was a member of the Augusta Art Guild and was a past grand marshal of Augusta’s Annual White Christmas Parade.
Augusta, Kentucky, is a small town about an hour east of Cincinnati along the Ohio River. It was the childhood home of Clooney while his father, Nick Clooney, was a reporter for WKRC Local 12.
In a 2015 interview with “CBS This Morning,” Clooney noted he is really close with his family. “My sister, I’m very close to,” he said.
Zeidler was not a public figure like Clooney. But in 2012, she gave an interview to the New York Daily News, where she shared that she had dreams of becoming an actor herself.
“Yes, there is a part of me that would very much like to have become a famous actress or something like that,” she said at the time. “I enjoy acting and I was fairly OK at it, but I did not have a thick enough skin for it.”
She added that she instead prioritized raising her children, saying, “I really enjoyed being a wife and a mother and that kind of wound up taking precedence with me.”
Zeidler was preceded in death by her husband Norman Zeidler, who died in 2004.
She leaves behind her two children, Nick Zeidler and Allison Zeidler Herolaga and her husband, Kenny; her brother, Clooney and his wife, Amal; and several uncles, aunts, and cousins.
A funeral Mass will be offered at noon on Monday, Dec. 22, at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Maysville, Kentucky. Private interment will be in the St. Patrick Cemetery in Washington, Kentucky.
USA TODAY reporter Brendan Morrow contributed.
Kentucky
Kentucky salvaged the season — and proved mercenaries still kill
“I’m stupid, you’re smart. I was wrong, you were right. You’re the best, I’m the worst. You’re very good-looking, I’m not attractive.”
It’s a Happy Gilmore quote, but the crow-eating tastes the same for me as I gather my thoughts with an emotional day winding down at State Farm Arena. Kentucky hit rock bottom in Nashville with a 35-point loss to Gonzaga to make it four losses in four tries against name-brand competition, these Wildcats getting worse before they were getting better — but most damning of all, they didn’t look like they cared. That’s why Big Blue Nation booed them off the floor and I called them overpaid, heartless portal mercenaries who were taking the “sacred piece of cloth,” as Mark Pope likes to call these uniforms, and wiping their asses with it.
My words and my words alone.
Those were very real heat-of-the-moment reactions that felt deserved. They were also the heat-of-the-moment reactions that led to a stern talking to from Rick freaking Pitino, saying Kentucky media members were too quick to judge Pope’s Wildcats without having the full picture with injuries destroying this group to start the season.
“I think you all need to learn a little bit of a lesson as writers because you’re expecting Kentucky to be this great basketball team with all those injuries,” Pitino said. “So you all need to learn a lesson because you can’t be a great basketball team without two of your best players, with no point guard, no big men. So I think everybody really exaggerates one game or two games or three games.
“Kentucky got blown out, and usually Kentucky doesn’t get blown out of any game, okay. But you have to look at it when they come back, two gigantic pieces.”
There is a lot of truth to that and I want to start there. It was unfair to put this team in its coffin without first seeing how all of the pieces would work together — not just most of them. You don’t walk out to the floor blaring Many Men by 50 Cent if you haven’t heard the noise that you’ve been written off as a group. Jaland Lowe and Jayden Quaintance were complete game-changers and availability has been quite literally the only question mark for both players since the season tipped off. They play — and play well — and Kentucky wins. Is it that simple? They haven’t been allowed to prove otherwise, so until then, we can only judge what’s in front of us. For that, I was completely wrong and shortsighted with a sample size far too small and incomplete. I have no problem owning up to my stupidity.
Hear me out on this, though. I had roster construction concerns and still don’t feel totally comfortable about how all of these puzzle pieces fit together — again, where is the creation and shooting?! — for Pope to believe “we’re going to become a really explosive offensive team,” but those things can all play out. They’ve clawed back enough to earn that patience.
The root of our frustrations had to do with the fight and want-to, though. That’s why these Wildcats got booed. That’s why they were generally unlikable through nine games and four losses. Nothing about their play suggested they wanted this the way Big Blue Nation wanted this or that representing the name on the front of their uniforms actually mattered. Take the first halves vs. Indiana and St. John’s, for example. The offensive execution stunk in both games and they couldn’t buy a basket if their lives depended on it, but not once did I question effort or heart. Trying and failing is fine for fans, to an extent, but what they don’t tolerate is not trying at all. Pitino can say what he wants and that may be how those inside the Kentucky program feel right now — we certainly haven’t made any friends over there recently, which is fine — but there has been a stark difference in the first nine games vs. the last three. That’s where they have deservedly been crushed, not general production.
Maybe it was the realization that Lowe was nearly back to himself and Quaintance was on the cusp of his debut, or that Mo Dioubate was the spark going 1-on-5 for rebounds and taking entire teams on by himself? Or maybe they finally took their criticism to heart and recognized just how much they were letting the fanbase down as the most underperforming team in college basketball with a couple of inexcusably gutless performances?
Whatever it was, rooting hard for this group is now coming naturally. They were gutless, then showed nothing but guts in that second half against the Hoosiers a week ago, winning in the trenches with defense and toughness. Fans reacted accordingly, acknowledging that while this IU team may not be a world-beater, giving a damn goes a long way. You can steal our hearts with a few dives for loose balls, defensive stops and second-chance scores. That continued into an emotionally charged battle between student and teacher, Pope taking on his former head coach under the bright lights in Catlanta. The offense was a disaster — especially when Lowe reinjured his shoulder after seven seconds on the floor — but hey, they fought and the C-A-T-S chants and Go Big Blues kept coming.
Then when the breakthrough came in the second half of both games, BBN was there to push these Wildcats across the finish line. Lowe fought through the pain like a warrior and put the team on his back while Quaintance had the debut of a lifetime, plus big days for Otega Oweh, Kam Williams and Malachi Moreno, leading to the 78-66 victory to move to 8-4 on the year with two straight wins against teams with a pulse.
You still have to take care of business vs. Bellarmine on Tuesday, but what Kentucky did was allow a hard reset going into the holidays and the start of SEC play. This stretch has given this group the benefit of the doubt. Was it the injuries or effort? Doesn’t matter, because at full strength, the fight was right where it needed to be. The on-court talent has improved, but so has the edge they’re playing with. They can now take the next two weeks and tinker with the offense while building upon their tangible defensive growth, knowing that it’s all salvageable with a resume slowly but surely coming together. No bad losses and two Quad 1 wins with 11 more opportunities to come during SEC play, plus whatever happens in Nashville? Last year’s group had 10 Q1 victories entering the SEC Tournament and earned a No. 3 seed. This one found itself in a massive hole, but to their credit, the Wildcats are digging their way out with reasons to believe — even if the identity is substantially different than any of us expected going into the year.
Heartless mercenaries? They’ve certainly shut me up on the first part of that statement these last two outings, showing nothing but heart. As for the second, we should probably remember that no matter the why, mercenaries are still trained professionals hired to kill. They may have been expensive with some egregious early misses on the young season, and it may not be the aesthetically pleasing product we all thought we were signing up for this year, but the trigger is now being pulled with back-to-back hits.
And judging by the jersey pops with Big Blue Nation roaring behind them and bench celebrations for every big play, it certainly looks like they’re starting to enjoy representing the name on the front, too.
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