Curtis Turley, one of Henderson County’s most decorated basketball coaches, has been inducted into the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Hall of Fame.
Turley is among the 2026 inductees into the Kentucky High School Athletic Association Hall of Fame, an honor that recognizes achievement across all sports statewide. For Turley, the recognition reflects far more than wins and banners.
“This honor is for a bunch of people,” Turley said. “It’s for my family, it’s for all the players I had the privilege to coach, the coaches I got to coach alongside. For me, it’s the fans, friends and everybody that supported me in my career. God put a lot of good people in my life that allowed some good things to happen and I am very appreciative of it.”
Turley compiled 624 wins over 32 seasons as a head coach, beginning at age 22 in 1976. He led programs at a dozen Kentucky schools and recorded 17 seasons with 20 or more victories. He coached Henderson County from 1987 through 1995. He is one of a select few coaches to guide three different schools to the Sweet 16, with Warren Central (1982, 1983), HCHS (1990) and Daviess County (2003).
But in Henderson, his name is closely tied to the unforgettable 1990 postseason run.
“Henderson County is a special place,” Turley said. “My family would tell you that we enjoyed every school and every community that we coached in, but Henderson County holds a special place in our heart. It was a great community, a great school, and a great run. I can’t say enough about it.”
That “great run” included one of the most memorable regional tournament games in local history.
In 1990, Henderson County drew University Heights in the first round after UHA, ranked No. 1 in the state most of the season, had been upset by Christian County in the district tournament. The matchup created an electric atmosphere.
“It was so full at that game, the Sheriff’s Department had to escort us into the gym to create space,” Turley said. “It was unbelievable. We were behind at halftime by about 12, and we came back to beat them 106-99. People tell me it was the greatest high school game they ever saw.”
Henderson County averaged more than 100 points per game across its three regional tournament victories that season. The Colonels’ run carried added meaning for the community.
“Henderson County had never gone to state since they were a consolidated school from their merger with Henderson City,” Turley said. “It had been a long time since anybody from Henderson County had gone.”
The excitement surrounding that team remains vivid for Turley more than three decades later.
“I said, if we could bottle up this enthusiasm and then pass it out on a bad day, then the world will be a better place,” he said. “Because there was just so much enthusiasm surrounding our team at Henderson County.”
Turley’s Hall of Fame résumé extends beyond Henderson. He was named Coach of the Kentucky All-Stars in 1988 and earned Coach of the Year honors from both the Lexington Herald-Leader and the Louisville Courier-Journal in 1996. He was previously inducted into the Kentucky High School Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019 and the Kentucky All-Star Basketball Hall of Fame in 2025.


















