Thursday, February 19, 2026

XXV Olympic Winter Games, Milan Cortina 2026 (More Again)

Ski mountaineering is the only new Winter Olympics sport, and the first medals are being hashed out today. 

Wikipedia casts ski mountaineering as another offshoot of the military-patrol tree which also yielded the biathlon branch. (All-time medals leaders in military patrol, which was officially competed only once, at Chamonix 1924: 1, Switzerland 1 gold, 0 silver, 0 bronze; 2 Finland 0 gold, 1 silver, 0 bronze; 3, France 0 gold, 0 silver, 1 bronze.)

At least in the events they are showing on USA Network this morning, this is a three-minute deal of skiing uphill and then downhill. You start out in front of a big grandstand of fans like they throw up at a fancy country club for a golf major. First, you navigate the "diamond section" by filing into one of two lanes through a maze of obstacles. Then you go up some stairs, and then you go down a twisty, rampy path back down toward the grandstand. The whole deal has the feel of something that rich kids would figure out on the fly for one last competitive rush after their moms texted them to get back to the clubhouse for $40 chicken strips (i.e. Bro, you've gotta go through the landscaping on the way up and tag the fountain at the top, and you've got to do at least one jump on the way down ... Ready! ... Go!).

I don't envy the TV people who are tasked with both introducing me to a curious sport like this and emotionally investing me in the competitive landscape basically all in the same breath. There has been a good bit of talk about the precision required in equipment changes, even when heart rates are very elevated, and just how treacherous the course really is ("It never looks as steep as it actually is!"). It doesn't help NBC, of course, that Team USA isn't much a medal threat in today's events. But rest assured, they said, that the American dude is actually more of a distance guy, which better positions him for some other, presumably longer event Saturday. The juice they are really trying to squeeze is ski-mountaineering juggernaut Spain, which has won only five Winter Olympics all time, none at Milan Cortina and only one gold ever, at Sapporo 1972.

For me, though, the star of today's show is the snow. It is thick and beautiful over Bormio this (my) morning (their afternoon). Milan Cortina 2026 is down to three days and change of competition. I've enjoyed so much of it so far, and I'm going to enjoy every last second of it that I can--ski mountaineering and whatever else--through Sunday night. 

Spoiler alerts in the comments ...


Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Pope Update

Here's the situation.  No one -- not one single person -- believes that Mark Pope is going to turn UK into a serious basketball power.  That's just a fact.  But the folks in Lexington have decided that they would rather have Pope be the face of the program than deal with the type of difficult personality who would be able to take UK back to the Final Four.  And, of course, most folks in the media want to maintain good relations with the folks in Lexington.  So, the Administration and the media are solidly behind Mark Pope.

Now the ideal outcome here for the Administration and the media is that the decline of the UK basketball program happen in such a gradual manner that they can plausibly maintain that he's about to turn the corner.  So they really, really want Pope and the Cats to make the NCAA Tournament -- not because UK will have any success in the tournament, but because it will allow them to make the argument that he deserves to come back next year.  And then we'll have the same argument next year.

So tonight's game against UGA was big for the Administration -- they need ten wins in the SEC, they only have eight, and four of the last five games after this one are really difficult.

On the other hand, the fans who would like to see UK go back to the Final Four in this century have a strong incentive to see the Cats fail now.  If UK would collapse down the stretch, and miss the tournament altogether, the Administration would come under tremendous pressure to make a change.

In short, everyone knows the program is in decline -- but the Administration wants slow decline (like what happened to Indiana after Bobby Knight left) -- and the hardcore fans want fast decline (like what happened with Billy Gillespie).

Early on, it looked like fast decline was coming.  The Cats were blown out in game after game, and even Pope's champions in the media were finding it difficult to come up with anything hopeful to say.

But then, the Cats won a whole series of close games.  They beat LSU on a buzzer beater.  They beat Tennessee by two points on the road.  They won five games in which they were behind by double digits.  They got their record to 8-3 in the SEC, and they appeared to be a solid 6 or 7 seed in the NCAA's -- exactly the type of season that Mitch Barnhart is hoping for.

Significantly, however, the analytics showed that the team was not actually getting better -- it had just been lucky.  And luck has a way of turning.  Tonight, the Cats ran into a Georgia team that was fighting for its life.  The Bulldogs were 5-7 in the SEC, and had lost five of their last six.  Georgia really needed this game.  And that was bad news for the Cats.  Georgia outhustled UK, and outfought the Cats, and were much the more enthusiastic team.  Worst of all, they went 14-31 from three-point range, which is what their offense needed.

Of course, the Cats made another attempt to come from behind.  With 1:18 left in the game, UK had the ball down only 81-78.  It looked tailor-made for another comeback.  But luck does run out.  Otega Oweh, UK's only first-rate player, came dribbling up the floor, drove toward the basket -- and dribbled the ball off his knee and out of bounds.  UGA came down and scored at the other end, and that was it.  The Dawgs won 86-78, for their first victory at Rupp Arena until they beat Gillespie back in 2009.

It was a dark day for the Administration.  And the Media.  But it offers rays of hope to anyone who would like to see a national power in Lexington one more time.

UK falls to 31 on Ken Pom, who has them projected to finish 10-8 in the SEC and 19-12 overall.  To achieve that goal, the Cats have to win two of their last five games:

02/21:  at Auburn
02/24:  at S. Carolina
02/28:  VANDERBILT
03/03:  at Texas A & M
03/07:  FLORIDA

To me, their best chances are at South Carolina and home to Vandy.  I think the other three games are very heavy lifts for the Cats.

For the record, Matt Jones is hammering Pope on Twitter.  Here's an example:

There were a lot of issues in this game . . . missed Free Throws, turnovers, giving up open three point looks and a couple of guys playing horrendous defense.  But the biggest in my mind was how awful Pope's substitution pattern was in that first half.  Completely changed the game.

Jones is clearly signaling that he's not going down with this particular ship, and I don't blame him.  He's done everything he can to support Pope, and he risks his own credibility with the fan base if he doesn't take a tougher line.

Scottish Football Update

No team other than Celtic and Rangers have won the Scottish Football League since the 1984-85 season, when Aberdeen turned the trick.  But this year, Heart of Midlothian F.C. is making a run at the title.  Here is the top of the standings with three months left in the season:

1.  Heart of Midlothian:  17-4-6 (57 points)
2.  Rangers:  15-2-10 (55)
3.  Celtic:  17-6-3 (54)

I'm going to keep an eye on Hearts.  The manager of that Aberdeen team back in 1984-85 was Alex Ferguson, and he went on to Manchester United, where he became one of the greatest managers of all time.

Meanwhile, the top of the English Premier League looks like this:

1.  Arsenal:  17-3-6 (57 points)
2.  Manchester City:  16-5-5 (53)
3.  Aston Villa:  15-6-5 (50)

Arsenal haven't won the League since the 2003-04 season, so Nick Hornby is probably on pins and needles, and he still has a long way to go.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Pope Watch

With six games left in the season, here's how UK compares to its usual rivals (along with a few other teams of interest) in the KenPom rankings:

2.  Duke:  23-2
6.  Florida:  19-6 (beat UK 92-83 in Gainesville)
12.  Vanderbilt:  21-4 (beat UK 80-55 in Nashville)
14.  Louisville:  19-6 (beat UK 96-88 in Louisville)
15.  Kansas:  19-6
17.  Arkansas:  19-6 (lost to UK 85-77 in Fayetteville)
18.  Alabama:  18-7 (beat UK 89-74 in Tuscaloosa)
19.  Tennessee:  18-7 (lost to UK twice:  80-78 in Knoxville; 74-71 in Lexington)
21.  St. John's:  20-5 (lost to UK 78-66 in Atlanta)
22.  Brigham Young:  19-6
27.  Kentucky:  17-8 (has a record of 5-5 against the teams on this list)
28.  N. Carolina:  20-5 (beat UK 67-64 in Lexington)
36.  Indiana:  17-9 (lost to UK 72-60 in Lexington)
42.  U.C.L.A.:  17-8

Here's Kentucky's record through 25 games in each of the last five seasons:

2022:  10-2 in the SEC; 21-4 overall; 3 on Ken Pom (lost in first round of NCAAs)
2023:  7-5 in the SEC; 16-9 overall; 44 on Ken Pom (lost in second round)
2024:  8-4 in the SEC; 18-7 overall; 22 on Ken Pom (lost in first round)
2025:  6-6 in the SEC; 17-8 overall; 18 on Ken Pom (lost in regional semifinals)
2026:  8-4 in the SEC; 17-8 overall; 27 on Ken Pom

The 2022 team was the last UK team to reach the semifinals of the SEC tournament; the Cats have been eliminated in the quarterfinals of the SEC in each of the last three seasons.

Here's the top of the SEC standings:

Florida:  10-2
Arkansas:  9-3
Vanderbilt:  8-4
Alabama:  8-4
Tennessee:  8-4
Kentucky:  8-4
Texas:  7-5
Texas A & M:  7-5
Missouri:  7-5

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Belmont Owns Murray State

We don't write as much about the Murray State men's basketball team as we used to, and that's because the team isn't as good as it used to be.  Here are the last six games between Murray State and its former rival, Belmont (home team listed first):

02/07/24:  Belmont 69 - 64 Murray St.
02/28/24:  Murray St. 61 - 83 Belmont
01/25/25:  Murray St. 77 - 95 Belmont
03/02/25:  Belmont 70 - 60 Murray St.
01/31/26:  Belmont 103 - 86 Murray St.
02/15/26:  Murray St. 70 - 87 Belmont

Today's game was particularly painful.  The Racers were up 39-24 at the half, on their home court.  And then Belmont blitzed them 63-31 in the second half.  Just humiliating.  That's like a 1996 UK half.

In mid-January, the Racers were 16-3 overall, and 8-0 in the Valley -- but that's all over now.  Murray State has now lost six of its last nine games.  This loss drops Murray State to 11-6 in the Missouri Valley and effectively kills any chance the Racers had of winning the regular season title.  Meanwhile, Belmont moves to 14-3 in the Valley.

On the other hand, Murray State did reach the College World Series last year, which is my favorite thing the Racers have ever done.