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Main menu. Main menu. move to sidebar hide. ... Football. Year 6A 5A 4A 3A 2A A 2023: ... 2006: Bowling Green: Highlands 2005: Paul Laurence Dunbar: Highlands
The 2006 Kentucky Wildcats football team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2006 NCAA Division I FBS football season. They participated as members of the Southeastern Conference in the Eastern Division. They played their home games at Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky. The team was coached by Rich Brooks.
The two teams played for a trophy called the "Bourbon Barrel" from 1987 until both schools mutually agreed to retire the trophy in 1999 following the alcohol-related death of a Kentucky football player. [137] The two teams last met on September 17, 2005, with Indiana winning 38–14; Indiana leads the overall series (18–17–1). [138]
Stone Tower Winery Cavan Images You'll feel like you're a world away from nearby Washington, D.C. when you visit the 400-acre property that's home to Stone Tower Winery in Loudoun County, Virginia.
Covington Catholic Colonels quarterback Evan Pitzer (5) carries the state semifinals trophy to the rest of his team after winning the KHSAA Class 4A state semifinals high school football game ...
These are two of eight team state records that Highlands holds. [15] Highlands is also ranked second nationally, and first in the state, in all-time wins with 842, and have finished the football season nationally ranked on eight occasions. [15] The football team has had thirteen undefeated seasons, and 88 winning seasons out of a total of 98.
Predictions for Ky. high school football’s state semis. Three Lexington teams still in it. Kentucky football coaches name district players, coaches of the year for 2023
McLean Stadium was the site of Kentucky football games until they were moved to Commonwealth Stadium in 1973. On that first game in 1880, which Transylvania University won over Centre College 13¾–0, "The two teams met in a cow pasture, belong to Hubert McGoodwin near Lexington, the present site of the University of Kentucky's Stoll Field . . .