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CLAY HENRY: Hiring Calipari shows Hogs’ basketball all way back

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My cell phone pinged with constant texts throughout the most magical 30 minutes in the history of Razorback Nation.

The introduction of John Calipari as Arkansas basketball coach was probably making phones ping not only in the state, but also across the nation.

Warren Stephens and John Tyson were getting texts, too. Both are key figures in this monumental Calipari hire.

They were probably just like those coming through my phone as I sat mesmerized in Bud Walton Arena as Calipari provided a glimpse of why he is the best recruiter in any sport anywhere.

I loved reading them.

“We are finally serious,” an old friend texted me. “Anyone in our state who supports the Hogs knows that now. And as far as anyone in the nation who says we are no longer relevant, take that.”

Another said simply, “Finally.”

There were other one-word texts: Unbelievable, wonderful, fantastic, yes!

But my favorite came from daughter Sarah, sitting in a church community group where the TV coverage of the event put the start of the meeting on hold.

It was a fantastic message:

“Everybody thought Cal was a blue blood but it turns out he bleeds Razorback red.”

My response: that’s a pretty good lead.

No matter how you write it, make sure the headline is in 90 point type, the biggest available from my old newspaper days.

There really has never been a sports story in Arkansas deserving of that big of a headline. Just think about the importance of Arkansas doings through the years. The only thing that rivals it came when Bill Clinton became president.

Yes, it’s a big deal.

Dane Bradshaw, ESPN basketball analyst and the man on the microphone for the SEC tournament, understands the excitement in our state.

“Cal doesn’t even have a roster yet, but you can actually make the argument that Arkansas has as good of a chance to go to the Final Four as anyone,” Bradshaw said.

“His move to Arkansas will actually be helpful in that goal because there will be less noise in year one at Arkansas than year 16 at Kentucky. He’s leaving behind the constant second guessing you get at Kentucky.”

Oh, that happens at Arkansas, too. But there is usually a honeymoon.

“It’s going to be a different mindset of the fans,” Bradshaw said. “He gets to prove a fan base right instead of trying to prove them wrong.

“It’s all about redemption now. The distractions will be less. The stress has to be less. It’s got to be a more enjoyable place for John.”

Bradshaw has always been a Calipari fan. He was a star at Memphis White Station, a state champ and player of the year in Tennessee. It was in the early stages of Cal’s great run at Memphis.

Calipari did recruit Bradshaw, but he would sign and star at Tennessee for Bruce Pearl. The story went that the phone call to Calipari upon Bradshaw’s UT commitment was received with kindness.

Calipari wished him well and told him the Memphis gym was open to him in the summer if he needed pickup games on trips home.

“If I’m being honest, he recruited me lightly,” Bradshaw said. “The city was full of great players at the time and he was getting anyone he wanted.”

Bradshaw said Calipari’s style would be fun for Arkansas fans.

“He’s got the modern dribble drive offense,” Bradshaw said. “Kentucky fans enjoyed it. They are going to shoot threes and he’s going to have great players.

“I know he’s got an empty roster, but he’ll be fine with NIL and the transfer portal. I think he understands now to mix it because you need some veterans.”

Calipari said as much Wednesday night in his visit with the media. He said the college game is terribly physical and freshmen are generally not equipped for it mentally.

“You might see players in college at 26 because of all of the waivers allowed now,” he said.

In other words, you better have some older players, too.

“He’s good at managing great players and their egos,” Bradshaw said. “The key is how much energy does he have for that? I think plenty. I see no problem with him coaching the next five years.

“What he does is let the stars play and he’s going to have stars. He teaches how to be the hunted. At Memphis and Kentucky, his teams were always the hunted.

“He doesn’t mind being the villain. He plays a good villain.

“The thing I’m sure about is that he has the energy and enthusiasm to do the job at Arkansas.”

The common theme from everyone who knows Calipari concerns community engagement. Whether it’s through the Catholic Church – and he’s a devout Catholic – or other charities, the community wins with Calipari.

“He engages the community,” Bradshaw said. “If there is a local crisis, he’s there with his players. They had those terrible floods in Kentucky and he got involved in fund raising.

“It’s pretty simple; he believes in washing the feet of the poor.

“John Calipari checks all of the boxes.”

It all seems like a dream. It happened as fast as a tornado. There was rumor of it, and then it was done.

Tyson set up the first meeting with Hunter Yurachek, the UA athletic director, on Friday. Things begin to whirl into motion on Saturday among the state’s top Razorback supporters.

Stephens said he got a call from Yurachek that morning and quickly called Tyson for an offer to join hands. If you have Tyson and Stephens involved, there can be no question that Calipari knows the money will be there. Both offered significant NIL support.

Actually, they were already bought in on NIL, but are now at new levels.

Stephens went one step further. He offered a retention package (that Musselman walked away from) that is above the school’s compensation.

“We did it among (Stephens, Inc.) colleagues for Musselman,” Stephens said. “It was a seven-year package and there was still five years left. If you leave, you get nothing.

“Hunter asked if we could do that for John. I told him he could count on me and I’d think the others would go along. It will be for five years.

“I have to admit when Hunter called and he told me we were involved in talks with Cal, you could have knocked me over with a feather. I immediately asked if John (Tyson) was in the loop.”

Then Stephens phoned Tyson, his old friend.

“I told Johnny, you’ve done good,” Stephens said. “This deal does not happen without him.

“It’s an incredible thing, really. I think it’s the most significant hire in the history of Arkansas athletics.

“I think it sends a great message to the basketball world. It’s just extraordinary.

“I’m excited. Our family is long time supporters of Razorback athletics. It goes pretty deep with us and this is the most high profile hire in our history.”

Stephens recalls a conversation last week at Augusta National Golf Club that that provides perspective.

“I was already at (Augusta National Golf Club) last week and was talking to a caddie,” Stephens said. “I asked him who would be the best to hire for our basketball job. He said maybe Bruce Pearl or Bill Self.

“After we got Cal it hit me, that no one would ever think that high. He’s at the top. Give credit to John Tyson for thinking that big.”

Tyson was smiling from ear to ear when approached him at the end of the Calipari introduction.

“This is big, but spread the credit,” he said. “Call Warren. He really helped. So have many others. This is not a one-man deal. It’s so exciting.”

As it marinated over night, it was clear Tyson was just as thrilled.

“What a great evening for Hog basketball and all sports,” he said. “It was an outstanding moment.”

One of the unanswered questions among fans, how did Calipari and Tyson become such great friends?

“I met (Calipari) through a mutual friend involved in sports – mostly basketball – about 20 years ago,” Tyson said. “We just started talking about common leadership issues.

“It was based on a desire to improve and teach young people how to approach and achieve their personal and professional goals, be it in sports, business and most of all in life while being good folks.

“Since then our relationship has evolved and grown.”

Calipari is all about relationships. He’s a master recruiter with no rivals. He convinces parents that he cares about their sons. Tyson saw that immediately.

That is the common theme of the talk Calipari had Wednesday morning with Nolan Richardson. Calipari sought Nolan’s blessing early on in his talks with Yurachek and Tyson.

Calipari said “it made his day” when Nolan spoke of the way he “cared for players,” almost all who remain tight with their old coach as they make hundreds of millions in the NBA.

In his podium interview with Chuck Barrett (who was perfect), Calipari described himself as a “grinder” and a “gatherer.” He also detailed his upbringing, highlighting his mother’s work selling ice cream in the school cafeteria.

“It was Friday to Friday for my family,” Calipari said. “Who knows what that means?”

It means tough times as you run out of money on Thursday each week. Many in Arkansas know that feeling. He connected to everyone immediately as he always does, usually forever.

In that respect, the circle was complete. Clearly, he’s got the state’s billionaires on his side and now everyone else.

The last Arkansas coach celebrated the return of Bud Walton Arena sellouts. He begged for a breakthrough in attendance, especially with students.

Asking fans to attend shouldn’t be necessary. Nolan didn’t just fill Bud Walton Arena, there was a waiting list of 10,000.

Calipari joked with Yurachek in the media interviews about ticket sales.

“I don’t have to sell tickets, do I?” Calipari said.

No, that’s not going to be a problem anymore. Arkansas basketball is all the way back.

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — New Arkansas Razorbacks coach John Calipari just needed a couple of days to think about becoming the new coach replacing Eric Musselman because he’d never thought about it until late last week. Then, he wasn’t going let it out he was even talking about it until after the Final Four. You can watch the entire press conference after his introduction Wednesday as the Hogs’ new coach.

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Colin Fisher got the start and did not allow a hit in his three innings of work. He scattered three walks and lowered his season ERA down to 1.96. The lefty has now turned in back-to-back scoreless starts in midweek games.

Koty Frank and Jake Faherty followed for three more scoreless frames. Frank faced one over the minimum in his two innings of work while Faherty turned in a 1-2-3 inning with two swinging strikeouts.

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IT’S OFFICIAL! Hogs shock world hiring John Calipari

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Naismith Hall of Fame coach John Calipari, who has led six teams to the Final Four, was named the 14th Razorback head men’s basketball coach, University of Arkansas Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics Hunter Yurachek announced Wednesday.

Calipari has signed a five-year contract to lead the Razorbacks with a salary beginning at $7 million per season. The contract runs through April 30, 2029 with a maximum of two automatic rollover years for NCAA Tournament appearances that would extend the contract to 2031. The deal includes a $1 million signing bonus and features retention bonuses of $500,000 each year of the contract along with one-time bonuses for making the NCAA Tournament, reaching the second round, Sweet 16, Final Four and winning a national championship.

Calipari will be formally introduced on Wednesday (April 10) at 6 p.m. in Bud Walton Arena. The event will be open to the public. Fans should enter the south entrance of Bud Walton Arena. Doors will open at 5 p.m. Public parking is available in Lots 46, 56, 56B and 60, with the exception of resident reserved parking spaces.

“By all accounts, John Calipari is one of the premier coaches in college basketball,” Yurachek said. “A national championship coach, a four-time national coach of the year and one of the nation’s top recruiters, Coach Cal has consistently demonstrated his ability to attract outstanding talent and build championship teams within the Southeastern Conference and position his programs among the best in the nation.
“As I visited with Coach Calipari during this process, he acknowledged the tremendous opportunity we have at the University of Arkansas to attract and retain top players and compete for championships. He understands the deep passion of the Razorback Nation and has experienced the tremendous home court advantage of Bud Walton Arena. I have no doubt that under Coach Calipari’s leadership and with the collective support of all those who love the Hogs, Razorback Basketball will continue to maintain its national prominence within college basketball.”

Calipari is one of the most successful and decorated coaches in college basketball history having been inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2015. However, he takes the greatest pride in the success his players experience in college, in professional basketball and life after their playing days are over.

Calipari has coached 58 players to be selected in the NBA Draft – 41 first-round picks including 27 among the top 15 and four as the overall first pick – during his 32-year coaching career and had 28 players on NBA rosters this past season. His players have earned:

• 4 National Players of the Year (3 UK, 1 UMass)
• 2 National Freshmen of the Year (1 UK, 1 MEM)
• 15 Conference Players of the Year (9 UK, 3 MEM, 3 UMass)
• 20 Conference Freshman/Newcomers of the Year (12 UK, 6 MEM, 2 UMass)
• 24 All-American Honors (14 UK, 7 MEM, 3 UMass)
• 81 All-Conference Selections (36 UK, 22 MEM, 23 UMass)

He is the winningest active coach in men’s college basketball with a record of 855-263 (.765), including a 410-122 mark in 15 seasons at Kentucky (2009-24), 214-68 in nine seasons at Memphis (2000-09) and 189-70 in eight seasons at UMass (1988-96). In fact, Calipari became the fourth-fastest coach to 800 on-court wins ever at 1,037 games. Only Adolph Rupp (972 games), Roy Williams (1,012 games) and Dean Smith (1,029 games) did it faster.

Calipari also coached in the NBA for the New Jersey Nets for three seasons (1996-99) and internationally for the Dominican Republic national team (2011 and ’12) and the United States U-19 basketball team (2017).

Calipari has been named both the Naismith (1996, 2008, 2015) and NABC (1996, 2009, 2015) National Coach of the Year three times – once at each collegiate stop – and AP College Coach of the Year (2015). He has added SEC Coach of the Year honors four times (2010, 2012, 2015, 2020), C-USA Coach of the Year three times (2006, 2008, 2009) and Atlantic 10 Coach of the Year three times (1993, 1994, 1996).

Of the 31 NCAA Tournaments held during his collegiate coaching career, he has led 23 teams to the NCAA Tournament, including 15 trips to the Sweet 16, 12 appearances to the Elite 8, six Final Four births, three national title games and a national championship. (Note, in 2019-20, Kentucky was 25-6 and won the SEC with a 15-3 record but the NCAA cancelled the tournament due to COVID-19.)

Calipari is one of two coaches in NCAA history to take three different programs to the Final Four and one of just three coaches all-time to make four Final Fours in a five-year span. His teams have won an NCAA record 38 games three times – twice at UK (2012 and 2015) and once at Memphis (2008).

At Kentucky

Calipari made an immediate impact at Kentucky with his first three Wildcats teams dominating college basketball. His inaugural team (2009-10) posted a 35-3 record and reached the NCAA Elite 8. Later that spring, he saw five of his players selected in the first round of the 2010 NBA Draft, the first time a school had ever produced five first-round picks in a single draft. Among those picks was the first Wildcat ever taken as the No. 1 overall selection, John Wall.

The next season, Calipari took the program to the next level, reaching the Final Four before falling to eventual national champion UConn. Despite losing three players from the 2011 runner-up team, the progression reached the pinnacle of college basketball in year three. Led by the #1 recruiting class in the nation – featuring National Player of the Year Anthony Davis and All-American Michael Kidd-Gilchrist – Kentucky won the 2012 national championship, going 38-2 overall and 16-1 in the SEC. The 38 wins tied the NCAA record for most victories in a season (matching his own mark set at Memphis in 2007-08). The 2011-12 team was later tabbed the team of the decade by the AP.

Kentucky’s 21-win season in Calipari’s fourth season was not enough to receive an NCAA bid. However, the following year, the 2013-14 Wildcats were NCAA runners-up, beating three teams in the NCAA Tournament that were in the Final Four the previous year. Kentucky rode that momentum the following year. With the core of the 2014 team returning and adding one of the top recruiting classes, the Cats used a two-platoon system to win its first 38 games of 2014-15, marking the third time Calipari matched his own NCAA record for wins in a season, before losing in the Final Four. For that historic 2014-15 season, he earned National Coach of the Year from the AP, Naismith and NABC.

Over the next four seasons, Kentucky played in four NCAA Tournaments, reaching the Sweet 16 three times including two Elite 8s. In 2019-20, the Wildcats were on their way to another NCAA Tournament, posting a 25-6 record and winning the SEC regular-season crown, before the SEC and NCAA Tournaments were cancelled due to COVID-19.

The remnants of COVID carried over to 2020-21 and Kentucky did not reach the postseason. However, in each of his last three years with the Wildcats, Kentucky went 71-30 (.703), finishing among the SEC’s top three teams each year and earning NCAA Tournament berths each year.

At Memphis

After his NBA tenure, Calipari returned to the college game in 2000 at Memphis, where he led the Tigers to the 2008 NCAA title game. Memphis’ 38 wins in 2007-08 set the NCAA record for most wins in a single season (a number he tied twice at UK). As a result, Calipari was named the Naismith National Coach of the Year for a second time in his career.

Calipari, the 2009 Sports Illustrated National Coach of the Year, led the Tigers to nine straight 20-win campaigns and nine consecutive postseason appearances, the only Memphis coach to do that. He posted 252 wins — 28.0 wins per season — as the Tigers’ head coach, making him the winningest coach in school history.

He was named C-USA Coach of the Year three times and his 2006 and 2008 Tigers were #1 seeds in the NCAA Tournament. Over his last five seasons at Memphis, the Tigers won 30 games each year and posted a 61-1 C-USA record.

NBA Experience

From 1996–99, Calipari served as the head coach and executive VP of basketball operations for the New Jersey Nets. The 1997-98 Nets reached the NBA playoffs before losing to the eventual NBA champion Chicago Bulls in the first round. He additionally served as an assistant coach under Larry Brown with the Philadelphia 76ers for the 1999-2000 season. That squad reached the second round of the NBA Playoffs.

At UMass

Calipari started his head-coaching career at UMass in 1988-89, guiding a struggling program to the top of college basketball, capped off by a Final Four appearance in 1996.

At 29, when he was named head coach, Calipari’s first two Minutemen teams went 27-32. In year three (1992), UMass won its first Atlantic 10 championship with a 30-5 overall record, including a 13-3 mark in league play. The ’92 campaign was highlighted with a 77-71 overtime win over Syracuse in an East Regional second-round game to lead UMass to its first NCAA Sweet 16 appearance.

Including that 1992 season, UMass won five-straight A10 titles while compiling a 66-12 league record over the span and made five straight NCAA Tournaments including three Sweet 16s.

Calipari’s 1995-96 team posted a 35-2 record and reached the Final Four. He was named the 1996 Naismith National Coach of the Year and The Sporting News National Coach of the Year. He was also named the A10 Coach of the Year for the third time in four years.

In addition to his Naismith National Coach of the Year honors in 1996, Calipari was a Naismith Coach of the Year finalist in 1994 and 1995. He was the USBWA District I Coach of the Year in 1993.

JOHN CALIPARI FAST FACTS
Born: February 10, 1959
Hometown: Moon Township, Pa. (Moon Area HS, 1978)
Collegiate Career: UNC Wilmington (1978-80); Clarion (1980-82)
Alma Mater: Clarion, 1982 (Marketing)
Family: Wife: Ellen; Children: Erin, Megan, Brad

COACHING CAREER

1982–85 Kansas (Associate Assistant Coach)
1985–88 Pittsburgh (Assistant Coach)
1988-96 UMass (Head Coach)
1986–99 New Jersey Nets (Head Coach and Executive VP of Basketball Operations)
1999–00 Philadelphia 76ers (Assistant Coach)
2000–09 Memphis (Head Coach)
2000–24 Kentucky (Head Coach)
2024–pres. Arkansas (Head Coach)