Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As of 2018, Owensboro Catholic has won 10 Kentucky High School Athletic Association championships: Baseball: 1985 Fastpitch softball: 1998, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2009 (runners-up in 2001, 2004, 2006, 2013)
The following is a list of NCAA Division I universities in the United States (listed alphabetically by their schools' athletic brand name) and their current athletic director. This list only includes schools playing Division I football or men's basketball. Schools are alphabetized by commonly used short name, regardless of their official name.
About two dozen small, private religious schools are sanctioned by the Kentucky Christian Athletic Association. [3] KHSAA was created by the Kentucky Department of Education to manage high school athletes in Kentucky. [4] Whether public, private, or federally administered, all member schools compete for state championships on an equal basis.
In addition to the above schools, one school located in Tennessee is a member of the Kentucky High School Athletic Association, the state's governing body for high school sports. Fort Campbell High School is located in the Tennessee portion of the Fort Campbell Army base, but has always competed against Kentucky schools.
Jun. 2—Jennifer Luttrell was named the new Owensboro High School principal Tuesday by the school's site-based decision-making council. Luttrell, who most recently hails from Hopkins County ...
Daviess County High School is located in Owensboro, Kentucky, United States. It is one of the largest schools in the area, with roughly 1750 students. It is part of the Daviess County Public Schools system. Its sister school is Apollo High School. Daviess County Middle School and College View Middle School feed into Daviess County High School.
Owensboro Catholic’s Brady Atwell, a 6-3 junior QB, has thrown for more yards and more TDs than anyone in the state this year, regardless of class, with 4,227 yards and 65 TDs.
In 1890, the school was moved to Winchester and soon after, women began to be admitted for the first time. In 1951, Lawrence W. Hager raised over US$1,000,000 to move the school moved to its present location in Kentucky's fourth largest city, Owensboro. [3] [4]