The U.S. State of Kentucky is currently home to two professional soccer teams: Louisville City FC, which plays in the USL Championship, and Racing Louisville FC, which plays in the NWSL. Kentucky has had professional sports teams in its past, such as the Louisville Brecks/Colonels of the NFL in the early 1920s.
Despite the national stereotype that Kentucky is a diehard basketball state, at the high school level the state produces many times over more top nationally ranked football players than basketball. In the past ten years the state has produced many players ranked among the top 20 in their position, notably Tim Couch, Jacob Tamme, Chris Redman, Dennis Johnson, Eric Shelton, Michael Bush, Brian Brohm, Mario Urrutia, Earl Heyman, André Woodson, Micah Johnson, and DeVante Parker. An increasingly growing number of top baseball talent is also coming from Kentucky, such as Brandon Webb, Austin Kearns, Jo Adell, and Paul Byrd.
Louisville has had practically a monopoly on the state's top players since their recent success on the national stage. The football Cardinals have historically depended on the states of Florida and Georgia for a majority of their talent, and currently over 65% of the team's starters are from those two states.
As of 2012, there were six high school rugby teams in Kentucky.[1]
Despite a recent surge in the quality of the University of Louisville football team, and all UofL sports during the "year of the cardinal" or "Louisville slam", college basketball remains the sport of choice in most of Kentucky. Western Kentucky University's men's basketball program is one of the ten most winning in the history of the NCAA, and has one Final Four appearance (1971). Murray State University is a perennial threat to win the Ohio Valley Conference and appear in the NCAA Tournament, having done so 13 times. However, the question in Kentucky college athletics is most often "Red or Blue?" referring to the primary colors of its two flagship universities – the University of Kentucky (blue) and the University of Louisville (red).
In recent years, the Louisville Cardinals have further proven themselves, not only as one of the state's best organized college athletic programs, but elite on the national stage. The University of Louisville Cardinals are consistently the most profitable college sports franchise in the nation, ranking first in Kentucky with a basketball revenue of $42,434,684 during the 2012 fiscal year. Kentucky came in at 5th on the list making $21,598,681.[2] The Cardinals' program has been deemed to have the most equitable fanbase of any school in the country, according to a study conducted by Emory Sports Marketing Analytics.[3] The University of Kentucky is ranked 7th on the list.
The rivalry between the North Carolina Tar Heels and the Duke Blue Devils is perhaps the only in-state basketball rivalry that compares on a national scale to the rivalry between the Kentucky Wildcats and Louisville Cardinals.
A 2006 Lexington Herald-Leader article stated that interest in UofL sports is surging across the state of Kentucky, especially in Hopkinsville and Owensboro.[4] An October 21, 2006 Louisville Courier-Journal article also stated that the total sales of UofL merchandise has tripled since 2001 and that the school now ranks 32nd nationally in sales, up from 41st in 2001. UofL ranks 2nd in the Big East Conference and the 3rd highest among all urban universities (to Southern California and Miami) in merchandise sales. UK's merchandise sales have steadily remained around 14th in the nation, by far the best in the state. UofL now has more registered collegiate license plates than the University of Kentucky (18,300 to 17,000); a fourfold increase since 2004. In 1995 UK had a 15,000 plate lead on UofL.[5] It is also important to note that in the last few years the Louisville Cardinals have been the most profitable college sports franchise in the nation and have been deemed to have the most equitable fanbase of any school in the country according to a few studies.
Fuel was added to the fire of this rivalry when Rick Pitino, the UK coach who led the Wildcats to their 1996 National Title before leaving to become coach of the NBA's Boston Celtics, returned to the Bluegrass State to coach the Cardinals in 2001. Many in the state compared the move to the treachery of Benedict Arnold. The situation was exacerbated by the transfer of underachieving Wildcat power forward/center Marvin Stone. Stone's best season with the Cats was his sophomore season, when the former McDonald's All-American averaged 6.0 points and 4.6 rebounds per game.[6] Under Pitino, however, Stone averaged 10.7 points and 7.3 rebounds for the Cards, including a 16-point, 7-rebound, 2-block performance against the Wildcats in an 81–63 Louisville win on December 28.[7]
Basketball is the iconic sport in Kentucky today. However, the first organized team on campus is the women's basketball team. Because after the establishment of the sports department, girls often carry out sports activities in response, and female physical educators also take action quickly. Provide professional assistance to any student run sports club. In the past, the relationship between basketball and the Department of physical education was very bad. Florence Stout, director of women's physical education, tried to make this sport a very limited part of her whole teaching plan. There has been no similar project for female students for nearly 20 years. It was not until the end of 1901 that the school council voted to establish a sports department with both men and women.
The origin of basketball is very humble. It took almost 20 years to establish itself as a viable sport and the main element of school.[8] Basketball was invented in 1891. Its origin is similar to college football. Charles Eliota repeatedly called for the end of football and basketball when he was president of Harvard. And football, like basketball, is short of resources and often can't buy the necessary equipment. The famous coach Adolph Rupp held many positions in the university before basketball was slowly proved. It was many years later that the sports department let him focus on basketball training.[8] Gradually, the basketball team developed from a trivial sport to a strong passion.
The modern series, which began in 1983, was started with a win by the Louisville Cardinals. However, in recent years the Kentucky Wildcats have dominated the series, winning 5 of the last 7 meetings. At least three college coaching legends have been associated with programs in the state of Kentucky: Adolph Rupp (UK), Denny Crum (UofL), and Rick Pitino (both UK and UofL). Also, several successful NBA players played in the state, including Pat Riley, Wes Unseld, and Dan Issel. Only the UCLA Bruins have won more NCAA championships than the Kentucky Wildcats, with the Wildcats ranking first in almost every other significant measure of a successful program. In addition to UK and UofL, the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers are also a historically successful basketball program.
In 2011, the University of Pikeville won the NAIA Men's Basketball National Championship, followed only days later by Bellarmine University, who won the 2011 NCAA Men's Basketball Division II National Championship in Springfield, Massachusetts. Both teams began their 2011–2012 seasons ranked #1 in the nation in their respective leagues. Bellarmine has since moved its athletic program to Division I, joining the ASUN Conference in 2020.
Team | Kentucky Wildcats | Louisville Cardinals | Western Kentucky Hilltoppers |
---|---|---|---|
All-time win–loss record (rank) | 2,021-637 (1st) | 1,726-874 (12th) | 1,622–720 (14th) |
All-time winning percentage (rank) | 76.0% (1st) | 66.1% (8th) | 66.5% (7th) |
NCAA Tourney appearances | 55 (1st) | 41 (5th) | 21 |
NCAA Tourney wins (rank) | 121 (1st) | 75 (6th) | 18 |
NCAA Final Fours | 17 (T-2nd) | 10 (T-5th) | 1 |
NCAA titles | 8 (2nd) | 3 (6th) | 0 |
The impressive history of college basketball in Kentucky has been punctuated by a few notable eras of dominance by the two flagship schools.
Under Adolph Rupp, the Kentucky Wildcats were the most dominant team in the early history of the NCAA Tournament. From 1942 to 1958 the Wildcats won four NCAA titles (1948, 1949, 1951, 1958). They also won the 1942 National Invitation Tournament.
The Louisville Cardinals were dubbed "The Team of the 1980s", winning two national titles during that decade (1980 and 1986). (Only the Indiana Hoosiers equaled this number during the 1980s.) Under coach Denny Crum, UofL was the only team to go to four Final Fours during the decade, and had more wins than any other team over that span. Darrell Griffith won the John Wooden Award in 1980 and in 1986 "Never Nervous" Pervis Ellison became the first freshman to ever be named NCAA Final Four MVP, a feat equaled only by Syracuse's Carmelo Anthony.
The Kentucky Wildcats were the most dominant team of the 1990s, winning two national titles (1996 and 1998), with three straight trips to the NCAA Championship game and four total trips to the Final Four. UK's 1996 National Championship team is considered to be the best NCAA team of all time, as evidenced by the nine players on the roster who played in the NBA.[9]
Apartheid also existed in sports for a long time. From the first season in 1930 to his retirement in 1972, Adolph Rupp signed only one black player throughout his career in Kentucky. It was not until the 1960s that African American athletes began to be recruited in most regions. Even in the south, where apartheid lasted longer, schools such as Louisville signed their first black players in the early 1960s.
College football started late in Kentucky. Sports historian Ronald Smith pointed out that as early as the 1850s, football originated from the bullying and entrance ceremony of Freshmen in some schools in the eastern United States.[10] Teachers at universities such as Harvard and Yale were so shocked that they voted to ban the ceremony. The sport was born in the late 19th century. In 1924, the University of Kentucky's school newspaper, the Kentucky Kernel, reported that a group of students from the University of Transylvania had football they had seen for the first time in the blue grass area. In 1880, with the efforts of this group of college students, they ordered a football and a rule book and organized an internal game. And in the following ten years, people knew little about these competitions, and sports "had no special management". The first student sports association was established in 1892. Although the team ushered in the first winning season in 1893, it was plagued by various financial problems in the following decades. In the same year, the school council was disturbed by the informal status of sports on the university playground and the violence of football. Raised objections to the existence of the team. In 1900, it was the only team to beat the powerful Louisville sports club. But with success, more and more accusations came out of thin air that a team in Lexington hired professional players to play at festivals. Then, in view of these dark statements, football became a valuable symbol of masculinity in America's best universities. As Buck became president, the uncertain status of college sports has changed. He said that football is a symbol of good qualities such as courage and perseverance.
For all their success in basketball, the Kentucky Wildcats have been unable to remain consistently competitive in football. The last two Kentucky football seasons have resulted in an embarrassing 2–10 record. Playing in the brutally competitive Southeastern Conference, the Wildcats won an SEC title in 1950 under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant and shared SEC titles in 1976 and 1977 under Fran Curci. Bryant left the school in 1953; some attribute the move to a conclusion that the football program's popularity would always remain a distant second to the basketball program, at that time coached by Adolph Rupp, a legend in his own right.
UofL hired legendary coach Howard Schnellenberger in 1984. The team has continued to rise under coaches John L. Smith, Bobby Petrino, and Charlie Strong. On November 2, 2006, the 5th-ranked UofL football team defeated the 3rd-ranked West Virginia Mountaineers in what was dubbed "The Dream Game", the second time in Big East history that two top-5 teams had ever met. The game was ranked as the most-viewed ESPN Thursday night football game ever.[11] The game marked a new high in a program that had been on the rise for several years.
Only one week later the Cardinals were defeated by a third undefeated Big East team, the upstart and 15th-ranked Rutgers Scarlet Knights, in what was billed as the biggest college football game in the New York City Metro Area in 60 years; with the Empire State Building even being lit with the Rutgers team colors. The game was also one of the highest rated ESPN Thursday Night games ever as a record crowd in Piscataway, New Jersey stormed the field in celebration. The loss ended the Cardinals' national title hopes, but the team did receive a bid to the FedEx Orange Bowl. On January 2 the Cardinals defeated Wake Forest 24–13[12] in the Orange Bowl to claim the team's first BCS Bowl win.
More recently, the state has been at the forefront of coaching integration in Division I FBS football. Following the 2009 season, all three of the state's FBS programs filled their coaching vacancies with African Americans. The first to do so was Western Kentucky, who hired Willie Taggart to replace the fired David Elson. Louisville followed suit by hiring Charlie Strong to replace the fired Steve Kragthorpe. Finally, Joker Phillips, who had been the designated successor to Rich Brooks at Kentucky, took over after the latter announced his retirement. The first African American head coach at any of the Division I football programs in Kentucky was Ron Cooper, who coached at Louisville between 1995 and 1997.
The Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) Eastern Kentucky Colonels have held a long tradition of football success. Until the 2009–2010 season, the Colonels were tied with Florida State University for the most consecutive winning seasons (32). In that season, EKU finished 5–6. Eastern returned to the FCS Playoffs in the 2011 season, in which it lost to #17 James Madison 20–17 in the opening round. The Colonels have won 20 Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) titles and two FCS (formerly I-AA) National Championships, in 1979 and 1982. Much of Eastern Kentucky's success came during the long tenure of head coach Roy Kidd, who led the team from 1964 through 2002. The program has continued its success under more recent coaches Danny Hope and Dean Hood.
In 2022, sprint football, a variant played under standard NCAA football rules but with a strictly enforced weight limit of 178 pounds (81 kg) (also with a minimum of 5% body fat), came to Kentucky with the establishment of the Midwest Sprint Football League. Two of the six charter MSFL members are the Bellarmine Knights and Midway Eagles.
School | Nickname | Division |
---|---|---|
Elizabethtown Community and Technical College | Barons | III |
Simmons College of Kentucky | Panthers | I |
Professional football, baseball and basketball all at one time had teams in Kentucky. The National Football League and National League had early franchises in Louisville, and the Kentucky Colonels were a mainstay of the American Basketball Association that joined the National Basketball Association with the ABA-NBA merger in 1976; the Colonels were one of only two ABA teams that were kept out of the merger (the other was the Spirits of St. Louis).
In 2004, the New ABA added a Louisville-based team called the Kentucky Colonels, which was replaced by a team in Murray, Kentucky in 2007.[13] That team was originally also named the Kentucky Colonels, but the name was changed to the Kentucky Retros in March 2007 in deference to the tradition of the Louisville-based teams.[14] The team eventually announced that they would relocate to Louisville.[15] The team folded during the 2007–08 season. Pikeville, Kentucky was also home to pro basketball in the 2007–2008 season, with the East Kentucky Miners joining the Continental Basketball Association.[16] But they met the same fate and folded sometime between 2009 and 2010.
The state's first top-level professional team since the demise of the Colonels is Racing Louisville FC, an expansion team in the National Women's Soccer League that began play in 2021. The NWSL team is owned by Louisville City FC, which has played in the second-level men's league now known as the USL Championship (USLC) since 2015. A second top-level professional team, one of two women's teams operated by Lexington SC, started play in 2024 as one of the eight inaugural members of the USL Super League (USLS), which shares Division I status in the US women's soccer system with the NWSL.
The state is home to several minor league sports teams:
Semi-pro football
Women's football
Women's Rugby
Indianapolis 500 winner Danny Sullivan was born in Louisville. Kentucky Motor Speedway opened in 1960 and was the home track of Owensboro natives Darrell Waltrip, Michael Waltrip and Jeremy Mayfield. MotoGP world champion Nicky Hayden and his brothers Tommy Hayden and Roger Lee Hayden were also born in Owensboro.
Louisville Motor Speedway hosted NASCAR Truck Series races from 1995 to 1999. Kentucky Speedway opened in 2000 to host IndyCar Series, NASCAR Truck Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series, and later NASCAR Cup Series races.
Churchill Downs opened in 1875 and is home of the Kentucky Derby, part of the American Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing. The venue has also hosted several editions of the Breeders' Cup.
Keeneland opened in 1936 and hosts the Blue Grass Stakes and Shadwell Turf Mile Stakes. Other Thoroughbred racetracks include Kentucky Downs, Ellis Park and Turfway Park. In addition, The Red Mile is one of the major harness racing venues in the country, hosting the Kentucky Futurity.
Venues with a minimum capacity of 5,000 are listed here.
Venue | City | Capacity | Type | Tenant(s) | Opened |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kentucky Speedway | Sparta | 86,000 | Motorsports | No races; previously Quaker State 400 | 1998 |
Kroger Field | Lexington | 61,000 | Football | Kentucky Wildcats | 1973 |
L&N Federal Credit Union Stadium | Louisville | 60,800 | Football | Louisville Cardinals | 1998 |
Churchill Downs | Louisville | 50,000 | Horse Racing | Multiple races, most notably Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks | 1875[a] |
Houchens Industries–L. T. Smith Stadium | Bowling Green | 22,113 | Football | Western Kentucky Hilltoppers | 1968 |
KFC Yum! Center | Louisville | 22,090 | Basketball | Louisville Cardinals | 2010 |
Rupp Arena | Lexington | 20,545 | Basketball | Kentucky Wildcats | 1976 |
Roy Kidd Stadium | Richmond | 20,000 | Football | Eastern Kentucky Colonels | 1969 |
Freedom Hall | Louisville | 18,252 | Multi-purpose | Bellarmine Knights | 1956 |
Roy Stewart Stadium | Murray | 16,800 | Football | Murray State Racers | 1973 |
Louisville Slugger Field | Louisville | 13,131 | Baseball | Louisville Bats | 2000 |
Lynn Family Stadium | Louisville | 11,700[b] | Soccer | Louisville City FC, Racing Louisville FC | 2020 |
Manual Memorial Stadium | Louisville | 11,463[49] | Football (high school) | Manual Crimsons | 1954[c] |
Jayne Stadium | Morehead | 10,000 | Football, soccer | Morehead State Eagles | 1964 |
Truist Arena | Highland Heights | 9,400 | Basketball | Northern Kentucky Norse | 2008 |
CFSB Center | Murray | 8,825 | Basketball | Murray State Racers | 1998 |
Keeneland | Lexington | 8,799 | Horse Racing | Multiple races | 1936 |
Memorial Stadium–McRight Field | Paducah | 8,500[50] | Football (high school) | Paducah Tilghman Blue Tornado | 1956 |
T. T. Knight Stadium | Louisville | 8,500[51] | Football (high school) | Southern Trojans | |
Maxwell Field | Louisville | 8,000[52] | Football (high school) | Male Bulldogs | |
Lexington SC Stadium | Lexington | 7,500 | Soccer | Lexington SC (men and women) | 2024 |
Reid Stadium | Owensboro | 7,500[53] | Football (high school) | Daviess County Panthers | 2019 |
E. A. Diddle Arena | Bowling Green | 7,326 | Basketball | Western Kentucky Hilltoppers and Lady Toppers | 1963 |
Clark Field | Somerset | 7,000[54] | Football (high school) | Somerset Briar Jumpers | |
Legends Field | Lexington | 6,994[d] | Baseball | Lexington Legends, Wild Health Genomes (2022 only) | 2001 |
Broadbent Arena | Louisville | 6,600 | Multi-purpose | 1956 | |
Baptist Health Arena | Richmond | 6,500 | Basketball | Eastern Kentucky Colonels | 1963 |
Eastern Field | Middletown[e] | 6,500[55] | Football (high school) | Eastern Eagles | |
Ellis Johnson Arena | Morehead | 6,500 | Basketball | Morehead State Eagles | 1981 |
Memorial Coliseum | Lexington | 6,500 | Basketball | Kentucky Wildcats | 1950 |
Brother Thomas More Page Stadium | Louisville | 6,200[56][57] | Football | St. Xavier Tigers (high school), Bellarmine Knights sprint football | 2007 |
Harrison County Athletic Complex | Cynthiana | 6,000[58] | Football (high school) | Harrison County Thorobreds | |
Louisville Gardens | Louisville | 6,000 | Multi-purpose | 1905 | |
Reed Conder Memorial Gymnasium | Draffenville[f] | 6,000[59] | Basketball (high school) | Marshall County Marshals | |
Viking Stadium | Morehead | 6,000[60] | Football (high school) | Rowan County Vikings | |
Appalachian Wireless Arena | Pikeville | 5,700[g] | Basketball | Pikeville Bears | 2005 |
Alltech Arena | Lexington | 5,517 | Equestrianism | 2009 | |
El Donaldson Stadium | Bowling Green | 5,500[61] | Football (high school) | Bowling Green Purples | |
Putnam Stadium | Ashland | 5,500[62] | Football (high school) | Ashland Tomcats | |
Racer Arena | Murray | 5,500 | Volleyball[h] | Murray State Racers | 1954 |
Shawnee Alumni Stadium | Louisville | 5,500[63] | Football (high school) | Shawnee Golden Eagles | |
Mason County Fieldhouse | Maysville | 5,400[64] | Basketball (high school) | Mason County Royals | |
Roy L. Winchester Gymnasium | New Castle | 5,400[65] | Basketball (high school) | Henry County Wildcats | |
Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Stadium | Louisville | 5,300 | Soccer | Louisville Cardinals | 2014 |
Eagles' Nest | Mayfield | 5,200[66] | Basketball (high school) | Graves County Eagles | |
Alumni Field | Frankfort | 5,000 | Football | Kentucky State Thorobreds | |
Badgett Athletic Complex | Madisonville | 5,000[67] | Football (high school) | Madisonville–North Hopkins Maroons | |
Baker Field | Morganfield | 5,000[68] | Football (high school) | Union County Braves | |
Boyd County Middle School Gymnasium | Summit[i] | 5,000[69] | Basketball (high school) | Boyd County Lions (HS) | |
Bradner Stadium | Middlesboro | 5,000[70] | Football (high school) | Middlesboro Yellowjackets | |
Colonel Stadium | Henderson | 5,000[71] | Football (high school) | Henderson County Colonels | |
Cunningham Stadium | Mount Sterling | 5,000[72] | Football (high school) | Montgomery County Indians | |
Davis Memorial Stadium | Rosspoint[j] | 5,000[73] | Football (high school) | Harlan County Black Bears | |
Dr. Robert J. Bell Stadium | Lexington | 5,000[74] | Football (high school) | Henry Clay Blue Devils | |
Fryar Stadium | Fort Campbell[k] | 5,000[75] | Football (high school) | Fort Campbell Falcons[l] | |
Henry R. Evans/Ivan McGlone Stadium | Flatwoods[m] | 5,000[76] | Football (high school) | Russell Red Devils | |
Jack D. Rose Stadium | Murray | 5,000[77] | Football (high school) | Calloway County Lakers | |
Jon R. Akers Stadium | Lexington | 5,000[78] | Football (high school) | Paul Laurence Dunbar Bulldogs | |
Lions Stadium | Cannonsburg[n] | 5,000[69] | Football (high school) | Boyd County Lions | |
Morton Combs Athletic Complex | Hindman | 5,000[79] | Basketball (high school) | Knott County Central Patriots | |
Owensboro Sportscenter | Owensboro | 5,000 | Basketball | Kentucky Wesleyan Panthers, Owensboro Thoroughbreds, Owensboro Catholic Aces (HS) | 1949 |
Pat Crawford Stadium | Louisville | 5,000[80] | Football (high school) | Ballard Bruins | |
Pike Central Stadium | Pikeville[o] | 5,000[81] | Football (high school) | Pike County Central Hawks | |
Preston Young Complex | Louisville | 5,000[82] | Football (high school) | Western Warriors | |
Pulaski County High School Gym | Somerset | 5,000[83] | Basketball (high school) | Pulaski County Maroons | |
Stadium of Champions | Hopkinsville | 5,000[84][p] | Football (high school) | Christian County Colonels, Hopkinsville Tigers[85] | |
Toyota Stadium | Georgetown | 5,000 | Football | Georgetown Tigers, Lexington SC | 1997 |
War Memorial Stadium | Mayfield | 5,000[86] | Football (high school) | Mayfield Cardinals |