Kentucky AD Mitch Barnhart retiring after 24 years as Athletic Director

LEXINGTON, Ky. (ABC36 NEWS NOW) – The leader of Kentucky athletics is expected to step down.

According to college sports reporter Pete Thamel, Mitch Barnhart is expected to retire as athletic director at the University of Kentucky. An official announcement is anticipated in the near future.

Barnhart is currently in his 24th year as Kentucky’s athletic director, making him one of the longest-serving ADs in the Southeastern Conference.

During his tenure, Kentucky has seen growth and national success across multiple programs, including football, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and other Olympic sports. He has also overseen major facility upgrades and fundraising efforts within the athletics department.

Barnhart was hired in 2002 and has played a key role in shaping the direction of UK athletics for more than two decades.

No details have yet been released regarding the timing of his retirement or potential successors.

Here is the letter sent to the UK community from President Eli Capiluoto:

Campus Community,

Some people occupy a position. They do good work, create a sense of stability and then move on to the next stop. There’s nothing wrong with that.

Still others, though, stay and create something more.

They challenge those around them to do things they didn’t think possible. They don’t simply hold a position, they transform it. In so doing, they also make everyone around them better. And they create lasting legacies of excellence that we strive to meet.

That describes Mitch Barnhart, who has led University of Kentucky Athletics for nearly a quarter century. And, today, it is with a profound mix of emotions that I write to you that Mitch will be leaving his position as UK Athletics Director at the end of June.

Mitch and I began discussing this possibility and the future a few months ago. After thoughtful discussions, I am gratified that he has agreed to stay at UK and write another new and exciting chapter.

Mitch will be the first executive in residence of the UK Sport and Workforce Initiative. This initiative will be part of a workforce effort that I mentioned in my remarks recently to our Board of Trustees and that I will be announcing more details about in the coming weeks.

Athletics is fundamental to who we are at UK and how we work to advance Kentucky. It is also a growing and dynamic area of our economy, here and nationally.

College athletics is undergoing a dramatic series of changes. We need people – from sports administration to marketing, from philanthropy to academic support and mental and physical health – ready for leadership.

Mitch is distinctively equipped to help us think about the future of intercollegiate sports. I am excited he accepted my offer to take on this new role, after he informed me of his desire to move in a new direction.

Over the next several weeks, as I have done before during a hiring process, I will conduct a listening tour. As I make a decision regarding leadership in UK Athletics, I want to talk with people on campus and off it about priorities, the landscape of college athletics and the attributes we will need as we prepare for a future that will continue to dramatically change.

There is time ahead for that period of listening. Today, we should pause to recognize and reflect on what Mitch Barnhart has meant for UK – not only athletics – but our entire community and the world of college sports.

Six NCAA championships as well as more than 60 conference or conference tournament titles have been achieved at UK under his leadership.

UK has placed in the Top 20 in the Director’s Cup – the national all-sports standings –numerous times continually over the last two decades, a marker of overall excellence in the program.

Eleven of our student athletes have been named National Athlete of the Year under his watch, scores more have garnered All-America status and many more have also been named SEC Athlete of the Year or winners of the conference’s Community Service Award.

Nationally, Mitch chaired the Men’s Basketball Committee during COVID, a crucial test of leadership. He also served on the College Football Playoff Committee – one of only four people to serve on the selection committee for both sports.

He is in the Kentucky Sports Hall of Fame and was named the National Athletics Director of the Year by the Sports Business Journal. He also received the National Football Foundation award for excellence as an athletics administrator.

Seven people, who worked for him at UK, have gone on to Athletics Director positions at major Division I programs, a reflection of his mentorship and capacity to find and nurture talent.

Most importantly to me, Mitch often speaks of the idea that our goal at UK is for student athletes to place championship rings on their fingers and put diplomas in their hands.

Those aren’t mere words. They are aspirations that he continually has helped our program, our people and our students meet.

Our athletes graduate at a rate of 93 percent, three points higher than the national average. And earlier this year, UK Athletics revealed that the 2025 fall semester marked the department’s 27th consecutive term with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 or higher. Wildcat scholarship student-athletes collectively earned a 3.414 GPA.

Mitch has been at the vanguard of developing academic support structures for our student athletes through innovations like the Student-Athlete Experience Division, which develops our student-athletes academically, in the community and in career preparation. You can read more about his record here: https://ukathletics.com/news/2026/03/03/mitch-barnhart-to-retire-as-university-of-kentucky-director-of-athletics/

Mitch deeply understands that we are here to help students achieve great things on fields and courts, but also to prepare them for lives of meaning and purpose.

At UK, nearly 25 years ago, he found a place that matched his passion and sense of purpose. And he has done it with an abiding sense of integrity.

It is easy now, after so much success, to forget that when Mitch joined UK some three decades ago, the department was at a low point.

People questioned our commitment to winning in the right way. Mitch quickly changed that. He made clear that we would win, we would serve students and we would always do things ethically and with highest possible principles.

To all of this, Mitch also brings a deep commitment to his family and his faith. His wife, Connie, their three children and spouses along with their wonderful grandchildren, have been as committed to UK as he has been for so long. They, too, are members of our community and committed as we are to advancing Kentucky.

Positions like this require the commitment not only of a person, but of an entire family. And the Barnhart family is, at this point, synonymous with our institution and our community.

It is fitting that when the complex surrounding the baseball, softball and soccer stadiums was named for Mitch several years ago, the word family was included.

That is Mitch’s greatest legacy – his commitment to family and the sense of community and belonging he created and sustained within UK Athletics for so long and at such a high level of excellence.

We will not replace Mitch Barnhart. But we will seek to carry on his legacy of excellence, integrity and commitment, even in the midst of so much change and challenge for college athletics.

That is our task now. We are fortunate that someone like Mitch Barnhart has been here to provide us with an example of how.

I know you join me in congratulating Mitch, Connie and the entire Barnhart family on the successful completion of this part of their journey with us. I am excited for the next leg of that adventure that he will help lead.

Eli Capilouto

President

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