Yeah. Pretty obvious.There's no way that's real
Yeah. Pretty obvious.There's no way that's real
At least Louisville was doing their corrupt **** to make their program better. Ours are just stuffing their pockets and leaving the dead husk of our program on the curb.UofL once thought they were untouchable as well; too big to answer the simplest of questions. UK has been taking things away from the fans for years, raising prices while giving each other raises, refusing to answer for anything, and the two major programs have sucked. At least Louisville fans got their whole 'Year of the Cardinal' thing in exchange for UofL's sins.
Not sure that this changes that at all.This is awesome . Before they said it’s just stupid fans
It’s real.Yeah. Pretty obvious.
i don’t think the BoT was very happy they got end run by Eli and Mitch for Mitch’s do nothing 1M dollar job.sounds like donors reach out to the Guvnah since ole Eli is ignoring them.
The governor of Louisiana sure had some say about that AD when it came to what went on down there. He spoke and said that he wouldn't be making the next football hire and 2 days later he was gone.The University of Kentucky (UK) is governed by its Board of Trustees, which is the final authority on all financial, educational, and institutional policies. The Governor’s influence is primarily structural and indirect rather than operational.
Does the Governor have jurisdiction over the University?
No, not in a direct, managerial sense. The Board of Trustees acts as the governing body. While the institution is a state entity and subject to state law (Kentucky Revised Statutes), the Governor does not run the university's day-to-day operations or dictate its specific policies.
Can the Governor override the Board of Trustees?
No. The Governor does not have the power to "override" decisions made by the Board of Trustees. The Board is the legal authority vested with the power to manage the university.
However, the Governor exerts influence through appointment power:
Appointments: The Governor appoints 16 members of the Board of Trustees (who must be confirmed by the state Senate). These appointments allow a Governor to shape the long-term composition and direction of the Board.
Removal: While the Governor has statutory authority to remove trustees under specific conditions (KRS 63.080), this is a formal legal process, not a tool for overruling a specific board vote.
Can the Governor fire the President?
No. The President of the University of Kentucky (currently Dr. Eli Capilouto) is hired, evaluated, and fired exclusively by the Board of Trustees. The President reports directly to the Board, not the Governor.
How the System Works
The Board is the Boss: The Board of Trustees is responsible for the university’s governance, including the hiring, performance evaluation, and potential termination of the University President.
Institutional Independence: The university maintains a degree of autonomy. While the state government provides funding and sets general legislative frameworks (like the laws governing public institutions), the University’s internal administration and strategic direction are overseen by the Board.
Legislative vs. Executive: The Governor’s power is largely limited to the executive function of filling board seats. Direct changes to university governance, such as changing how presidents are hired or how institutions are managed, typically require action by the Kentucky General Assembly (the legislative branch), which creates the laws that dictate how the university operates.
And into some chrome cufflinks.Finally! Get these clowns out of here.
If he ha any more negligence left he will sit down and shut up.He probably too sacred to show his little head right now after whiffing on an entire high school and portal class.
My understanding is that the Provost has not placed approval of the newly hired law dean on the agenda for the upcoming BOT meeting. Beshear has interpreted this as an end-around of the trustees he appointed.The University of Kentucky (UK) is governed by its Board of Trustees, which is the final authority on all financial, educational, and institutional policies. The Governor’s influence is primarily structural and indirect rather than operational.
Does the Governor have jurisdiction over the University?
No, not in a direct, managerial sense. The Board of Trustees acts as the governing body. While the institution is a state entity and subject to state law (Kentucky Revised Statutes), the Governor does not run the university's day-to-day operations or dictate its specific policies.
Can the Governor override the Board of Trustees?
No. The Governor does not have the power to "override" decisions made by the Board of Trustees. The Board is the legal authority vested with the power to manage the university.
However, the Governor exerts influence through appointment power:
Appointments: The Governor appoints 16 members of the Board of Trustees (who must be confirmed by the state Senate). These appointments allow a Governor to shape the long-term composition and direction of the Board.
Removal: While the Governor has statutory authority to remove trustees under specific conditions (KRS 63.080), this is a formal legal process, not a tool for overruling a specific board vote.
Can the Governor fire the President?
No. The President of the University of Kentucky (currently Dr. Eli Capilouto) is hired, evaluated, and fired exclusively by the Board of Trustees. The President reports directly to the Board, not the Governor.
How the System Works
The Board is the Boss: The Board of Trustees is responsible for the university’s governance, including the hiring, performance evaluation, and potential termination of the University President.
Institutional Independence: The university maintains a degree of autonomy. While the state government provides funding and sets general legislative frameworks (like the laws governing public institutions), the University’s internal administration and strategic direction are overseen by the Board.
Legislative vs. Executive: The Governor’s power is largely limited to the executive function of filling board seats. Direct changes to university governance, such as changing how presidents are hired or how institutions are managed, typically require action by the Kentucky General Assembly (the legislative branch), which creates the laws that dictate how the university operates.
Thats cause you kept asking to go into a game that was a VHS replay and you didn’t have as much as beer as you said.Everyone told me, it was just stupid fans on rafters, who wanted Mitch gone.
@Monday NitroWell I certainly give credit where it's due. What do you think Andy's screenname is on here?
Barnhart or McConnellWould love to see Mitch crumble
Barnhart or McConnell![]()
And possibly in a way that is agains the law.Our great program has been hijacked.
Matt Jones needs to interview him on KSR. Talk about ratings!Wonder what Brett Setzer has been up to lately. He's been kind of quiet.