Is new Arkansas men’s basketball coach John Calipari overrated?
There might not be a more popular coach in college basketball today than new Arkansas head coach John Calipari. However, given the stacked deck he has to work with year in and year out, some believe he should be a lot more accomplished than he is. Statistics are sourced from Sports Reference.
Calipari has coached at the Division 1 level for 32 seasons. He’s made three Final Fours and won one national title. However, there’s an asterisk associated with two of the Final Fours his teams have appeared in.
The Memphis Tigers’ 2008 Final Four appearance was later vacated by the NCAA. Bleacher Report noted that the penalty was levied because one player had a college entrance exam fraudulently taken for him, and also paid for over $2,000 worth of travel for Derrick Rose’s brother.
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Unfortunately for Calipari, the Memphis scandal was not the first time this has happened to a team he led. The University of Massachusetts made a run to the Final Four 12 years earlier, but were stripped of their accomplishments as well. The New York Times reported that star player Marcus Camby received substantial payments from agents during his college career.
The Memphis infraction seems suspect to this day, as a player on the Tigers’ team arguably shouldn’t have been accepted to the school for academic reasons. However, with the NCAA’s introduction of name, image and likeness earning ability for athletes in 2021, it’s possible that Camby’s violations would not have been viewed the same way today.
Calipari’s career record in 32 years of coaching stands at a staggering 855-263. He’s led teams that have lost less than 10 games in 21 different seasons.
In a piece by the Athletic in 2022, Calipari said, “I’m having a ball. I don’t have a timeline (to retire). But I’ll know. You know when? When I can’t help kids anymore.” If Calipari does stick around for several more seasons, he will continue to shoot up the all-time list of wins for Division 1 men’s college basketball coaches.
Calipari’s one career championship came during the 2011-2012 season with Kentucky. That team featured future NBA All-Star Anthony Davis, and swingman Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, who was also a premium NBA draft pick.
After the victory, Calipari told The Kansas City Star, “I don’t feel any different, and I’m not going to feel any different. It’s over now, and I can get about the business of coaching young people.”
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Of course, Calipari’s name has become synonymous with recruiting players who only intend to stay in college basketball for one season. Davis and Kidd-Gilchrist were just two of many “one and dones” he has developed.
John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins, Brandon Knight, Nerlens Noel, Julius Randle, Karl Anthony-Towns, Devin Booker, Jamal Murray, Malik Monk, De’Aaron Fox, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Tyler Herro, Tyrese Maxey and Bam Adebayo are just a few names NBA fans will recognize from this category. All of them played one season at Kentucky under Calipari.
At various points, The Ringer and Bleacher Report both looked into the reasons why Calipari has had so much success bringing in top basketball prospects. Bleacher Report said Calipari has excellent connections, works all the angles, and is viewed as a winner that young players want to be associated with.
The Ringer approached some of the highly touted players Calipari has brought into his program. Kidd-Gilchrist appreciated Calipari’s honesty above everything else. “He would tell me stuff I didn’t want to hear. But something about that makes you realize you can trust him.”
Nerlens Noel told The Ringer, “My goal was to be in college for one year, and then go to the next level. That was it. That was my mindset.” That aligns with what Calipari has previously said his goals are for his players. He told the Huffington Post in 2015 “Last year we started the season with a goal…it was to get eight players drafted.”
Calipari looks like he is going to continue to focus on McDonalds All-Americans coming out of high school as the backbone of his teams moving forward. He’ll also look to the transfer portal, which Calipari told ESPN “was the same as one and done.”
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In April 2024, Calipari stunningly left the University of Kentucky to take the same position as head coach of the University of Arkansas. Yahoo Sports believes that he was desperate to leave Kentucky after their surprising first-round exit in the 2024 NCAA tournament.
Let us know what you think about his coaching record, recruiting history and how you think he'll do at Arkansas by leaving a comment!