A record-setting wide receiver, an Olympic gold medalist, a trailblazing gymnastics judge and a history-making trap shooter will make up the Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2025.
It's a fun NFL reunion but also a reminder.
They were an All-American family until everything changed in an instant on Sept. 15, 1980.
Former NFL quarterback and University of Louisville legend Teddy Bridgewater went back to his high school alma mater this season and won a state championship.
Opt-outs will quickly become the storyline for every bowl game that is not part of the 12-team college football playoff.
The San Francisco 49ers rookie running back scored his first NFL touchdown.
He built a career record of 138-21, including a state-record 50-game winning streak from 1988-91, and in 1990 was named National Coach of the Year. He was Kentucky Coach of the Year three times.
Douglas will be first on Sept. 7 when Jacksonville State visits while Bridgewater will be honored on Oct. 19 when Louisville hosts Miami.
Redshirt freshman Caden Veltkamp came off the bench to throw for 383 yards and five touchdowns, Lucas Carneiro made a winning 29-yard field goal in overtime and Western Kentucky erased a 28-point deficit to beat Old Dominion 38-35 on Monday at the Famous Toastery Bowl.
Former University of Louisville quarterback Teddy Bridgewater plans to retire from the NFL after the season, reported by the Detroit Free Press.