Kentucky governor blasts 'decision-making' at UK

TL;DR
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear criticized the University of Kentucky's decision-making, particularly regarding a $1 million position for retiring athletic director Mitch Barnhart. His concerns highlight issues of management and potential outside influence in university decisions.
Key points
- Governor Andy Beshear criticized UK decision-making.
- Mitch Barnhart received a $1 million position with no defined duties.
- Concerns about outside influence on university decisions were raised.
Mentioned in this story
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has publicly questioned the "decision-making" at the University of Kentucky, including the seven-figure gig retiring athletic director Mitch Barnhart was recently given.
Beshear's chastisement, rare for a sitting governor, comes at a turbulent juncture for Kentucky athletics, which is falling behind its peers on the gridiron and the hardwood.
Barnhart, who will step down on June 30, was recently named Executive in Residence for the UK Sport and Workforce Initiative by Kentucky President Eli Capilouto. The contract for the gig, which will pay Barnhart $1 million per year beginning on July 1, does not provide a concrete job description. That has prompted prominent supporters to ask the school to reverse the offer.
"I am losing confidence and growing increasingly concerned with the management and decision-making at the University of Kentucky," Beshear said in the statement on Tuesday. "My concerns include the creation of a new $1 million job that has no defined duties and the announcement that the new dean of law was the only candidate not recommended by law school faculty.
"I've been told that despite previously saying the dean must be approved by UK's Board of Trustees, the university has shifted and now states approval is not needed. I worry that these actions are related to certain donors pushing partisan and undue outside influence onto the university. I hope students, faculty, trustees and the community attend this week's board meetings and ask the tough questions that should be answered."
Beshear's criticism also follows the recent firing of football coach Mark Stoops in December after four consecutive sub-.500 seasons. He was replaced by Will Stein, the offensive coordinator at Oregon.
It's also a difficult time for Mark Pope and the men's basketball program, which is the winningest Division I team in NCAA history but hasn't reached the Final Four since 2015. Last year, Pope made a run to the Sweet 16 in his first season. But that success didn't last as his second season was filled with injuries and inconsistent efforts, ending with a 19-point loss to Iowa State in the second round of the NCAA tournament in March -- only 48 hours after the team needed Otega Oweh's halfcourt heave at the end of regulation to force overtime in a win over Santa Clara.
Pope will enter his third season under a massive spotlight after missing on major targets in the portal, including BYU guard Robert Wright III and Syracuse transfer Donnie Freeman, who picked St. John's and Rick Pitino, Pope's mentor. While Tyran Stokes, the No. 1 recruit in the 2026 class, is still considering Kentucky, the Wildcats have not landed a top-100 prospect in the current recruiting class, per ESPN.
Q&A
What did Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear say about the University of Kentucky?
Governor Andy Beshear expressed concerns about the decision-making at the University of Kentucky, particularly regarding a new $1 million job for retiring athletic director Mitch Barnhart.
Why is Mitch Barnhart's new position controversial?
Mitch Barnhart's new position as Executive in Residence lacks a defined job description, raising questions among supporters about the appropriateness of the offer.
What are the implications of Governor Beshear's criticism of UK athletics?
Beshear's criticism suggests a loss of confidence in UK athletics management and raises concerns about potential outside influences affecting university decisions.





