Timmy Emongo from Scott County is our @bigassfans Kentucky Comfort Creator of the Week @cards_football, @HSFBamerica, @ChiefSmoke10, @khsaafootball, @KyHighFootball, @eCampusdotcom

Big Ass Fans

’27 ATH ready for a senior year run

Timmy Emongo is a big-time, ’27 prospect holding multiple power four (4) offers from FBS programs. That shouldn’t be confusing if you just roll the film. You can watch his highlights from his junior year where he led his team to a 9-4 record and regional championship game appearance with 1,712-total yards ,rushing and receiving, and 29-tuddies. You can watch his film on “Twitter” where he is repping out 425-pounds, six (6) reps, in the back squat with perfect depth while weighing 170-pounds. Either way, you come away with the same impression…impressive!

HB Lyon, Scouting Director, “KPGFootball”

Big Ass Fans from Lexington, Kentucky has a simple corporate goal. The company is “creating a more comfortable world,” one fan at a time.

The logo is the rear of a donkey (Fanny) swishing its tail back and forth. The trademarked logo is among Kentucky’s more celebrated and well known corporate identities across the commonwealth and has come to represent commitment to quality, cutting-edge innovation, and product reliability.

Big Ass Fans is so much more than just a gigantic fan. It is gigantic quality, gigantic performance, and a gigantic commitment to reliability and innovation. Its size is far from the only selling point about our product. 

Our product is a Kentucky Comfort Creator…and, these days, isn’t that exactly what Kentucky needs?

“Fanny” is among Kentucky’s more celebrated and well known corporate logos

Friday Night Fletch, “KPGFootball”

Georgetown, KY: We would be the first to tell you Jim McKee, the head coach at Scott County, can be a bit prickly from time to time. We haven’t met him; know him from reputation only, but that is what we have heard from trusted sources on whom we regularly rely.

No one questions McKee’s ability to coach a winning, high school football program. Matter of fact, many consider him among the elite to have ever attempted it. 

No one hired him at Scott County to be “Mr. Rogers.” It is a good thing because Mr. Rogers he is not.

McKee is hired to win football games, develop talent, citizens, students, and men and to be a solid reflection on the system and school which signs his paychecks.

He does all of that. He is more than ably checking the appropriate boxes. 

McKee is a “Centre Man.” He played for the Colonels and is a product of that elite environment. That means he’s smart, accomplished, and expects to meet with success which he certainly does. 

McKee has had a wonderful impact on his young athlete, Timmy Emongo (’27). Coach McKee has been instrumental in Emongo’s development, both on and off the field of play. If you don’t believe us, ask him.

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Emongo had an incredible junior campaign. Emongo and teammates finished 9-4 and lost in the regional championship game to Woodford County by 14-points (45-31). 

Along the way, the Cardinals beat Bowling Green, Collins, Cooper, and Conner. It was a solid effort; not the effort for which McKee, staff, and players (like Emongo) were hoping; but solid, nevertheless.

Emongo’s performance as a junior was way superior to “solid.” Matter of fact, Emongo was spectacular. 

Emongo ran for 1,052-yards and 18-TDs in 110-carries. Emongo caught 21-passes for 660-yards and 10-TDs.

Emongo led the team in scoring with 179-points in 13-games (13.4 per)

KHSAA statistical website

Emongo led the team in scoring with 13.4-points per game (179 points on the season with 18 rushing TDs, 10-receiving TDs, and a “scoop and score”). That is factoring into outcomes right prodigiously we would think.

Emongo played some defense too. Emongo registered 20-tackles, 3-INTs, the scoop and score we just told you about among his two-FRs.

It is not common for players to pull double duty at the high-end of 5A. It is especially uncommon for such production out of a single player with multi-phase utility.

Emongo is 5’10,” and weighs 170-pounds. Emongo runs the 40-yard dash in 4.4 seconds, carries a 3.6 GPA, and was the 5A, District 6, Player of the Year in 2025. 

The colleges have taken full notice. Emongo, among the more recruited “athletes” in Kentucky, is holding offers from UK, UL, EKU, Kent State, and Marshall with plenty more set to “jump on board” over the course of the upcoming summer evaluation/camp/combine sessions.

First, there is next year’s senior season to which to attend. Emongo cares much more about his team reaching its full potential over any of the individual awards. 

Now, there is a matter of next season’s “Mr. Football Award.” We have been forthcoming about our preferring candidates for that award who are multi-phases performers for their teams. We note the award is not, Mr. Running-backMr. Recruiting Service, nor Mr. Quarterback, but Mr. Football. 

To us, and we have always been this way, having a performer who contributes mightily to more than just one side of the football, or phase of the game, is an attractive candidate for an award called, “Mr. Football.” We could see next year’s award going to Mr. Emongo

Then again, that may be just we. We have always been a different breed of cat.

This is Friday Night Fletch, reporting for KPGFootball and reminding you to PLAY THROUGH THE WHISTLE!

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About Fletcher Long 2057 Articles
Two-time winner of Kentucky Press Association awards for excellence in writing and reporting news stories while Managing Editor of the Jackson (KY) Times-Voice

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