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Kentucky's basketball opening offers top pay and perks. Candidates must also have tough skin

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Kentucky's basketball opening offers top pay and perks. Candidates must also have tough skin
News

News

Kentucky's basketball opening offers top pay and perks. Candidates must also have tough skin

2024-04-11 03:18 Last Updated At:03:20

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — Life can be sweet for a Kentucky basketball coach who wins – especially in April – with a seven-figure salary and endorsements among the tangible rewards. The intangibles include selfie requests from blue-clad Wildcats fans and the occasional sightseers who drive slowly past their house as if a celebrity lives there because, well, it’s Kentucky.

The downside is sometimes-harsh criticism from fans on social media and sports talk shows after losses, with recruiting strategy, rotations, substitutions and, of course, X’s and O’s under some of the most intense scrutiny in the game. It can border on personal if a pattern develops, which generally happens with any coach, but perhaps more so given the storied status of the Wildcats ' program.

Eight national championships and nearly 2,400 victories leave no room for error and nowhere to hide at a destination job.

“The pressure you feel there as a coach is relentless, but that’s what makes it the best job and the worst job all on the same day,” said ESPN basketball analyst and former coach Jimmy Dykes, recalling an observation by then-Kentucky coach Eddie Sutton in the late 1980s when he was there as an assistant.

“John Calipari has been a master at it for 15 years, and that job requires someone that doesn’t just sit in their office and watch film. There’s a lot there’s a lot going on with that job.”

Calipari gave it all up on Tuesday and was hired the next day as Arkansas' coach, swapping Lexington for Fayetteville and a pay cut, at least in terms of annual salary.

His successor must not only have a similarly sparkling resume, but it wouldn't hurt to also have an outsized personality to handle being the face of the program and its rabid Big Blue Nation fanbase. That candidate must also have a thick skin to handle the pressure that comes with maintaining the so-called “gold standard" symbolized by eight title banners hanging from the Rupp Arena rafters.

Adolph Rupp won the first of four titles in 1948, followed by Joe B. Hall (1978), Rick Pitino (1996), Tubby Smith (1998) and Calipari (2012). The next coach is expected to end a 14-year title drought sooner rather than later.

That puts a premium on hiring another high-profile, highly motivated type like Calipari, who in his farewell video mentioned the perception of Kentucky as “the bluest of blue(bloods).” Besides recognizing that tradition, the choice must also have a firm grasp of a recruiting landscape made tougher by the transfer portal and name, image and likeness (NIL) endorsement opportunities for athletes.

If the next coach masters all that and returns Kentucky to the mountaintop, there'll be no ceiling for his popularity.

“When Kentucky is at or near the top and is as relevant as any program in the country, the status of their coach goes hand in hand," said Dick Gabriel, a longtime Kentucky broadcaster. "That coach IS the program because of the way we in the media treat coaches now and the way fans look at coaches.

"In the eyes of fans, coaches are omnipotent. You know that if you’re winning, buddy, you can do no wrong. And fans will make all kinds of excuses for you. And if you’re not, you’re out there on the island.”

Dykes added, “You’ve got to be out in the community, be aware of charity events. You got to be aware of the needs in that state. You gotta be out putting your program in front of the Bluegrass roots and people that live in all four corners of that state.”

Which explains the narrow list of possible coaching candidates such as Dan Hurley, just a couple of days removed from leading UConn to its second consecutive NCAA championship and sixth overall since 1999. Or Baylor's Scott Drew, who led the Bears to their first national in the 2020-21 season.

Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan, a former Kentucky assistant under Rick Pitino, has been mentioned as well but said Tuesday night that he hadn't been contacted and reiterated his commitment to the NBA. At the same time, the former Florida coach was flattered to be mentioned and knows from experience why Kentucky is shooting high for its next coach.

After all, he lived on that lofty perch for a while.

“I understand the magnitude of that place and the history and the tradition and everything that goes into that place,” said Donovan, who coached the Gators to consecutive NCAA titles in 2006 and '07. "It is flattering to be mentioned with a school and a tradition like that in this game. ... I’ve got an enormous amount of respect for Kentucky, their program and what it stands for.”

AP Sports Writer Andrew Seligman in Chicago contributed to this report.

Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan gestures during the first half of the team's NBA basketball game against the New York Knicks in Chicago, Tuesday, April 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan gestures during the first half of the team's NBA basketball game against the New York Knicks in Chicago, Tuesday, April 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

UConn head coach Dan Hurley greets fans after their win against Purdue in the NCAA college Final Four championship basketball game, Monday, April 8, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

UConn head coach Dan Hurley greets fans after their win against Purdue in the NCAA college Final Four championship basketball game, Monday, April 8, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

BERLIN (AP) — Six climate activists broke through a security fence at Munich airport on Saturday and glued themselves to access routes leading to runways, temporarily shutting down flights.

The activists from the group Last Generation were protesting flying as the most polluting form of transportation, said the German news agency dpa. Police detained the six.

Some 60 flights were canceled during the disruption that lasted a couple of hours and passengers were rebooked on alternative flights, airport spokesperson Robert Wilhelm told dpa. Fourteen flights that were due to land in Munich were diverted to other airports, according to police.

Last Generation accused the German government of “downplaying” the negative effects of flying on the environment instead of “finally acting sincerely,” in a post on the social media platform X.

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser called for an end to such protests. “Such criminal actions threaten air traffic and harm climate protection because they only cause lack of understanding and anger,” she wrote on X.

Fraser also applauded police efforts to bring order back to the airport and called for airport safety measures to be checked.

Minister for Transport Volker Wissing said that his ministry was already working on further tightening existing laws.

The general manager of the German Airports Association, Ralph Beisel, also criticized the activists’ actions. “Trespassing the aviation security area is no trivial offense. Over hundreds of thousands of passengers were prevented from a relaxed and punctual start to their Pentecost holiday,” he told dpa.

Beisel also called for harsher penalties for activists who break into airports.

Climate activities blocked flights at Hamburg and Duesseldorf airports for several hours in July.

In January, Last Generation — known for gluing themselves to streets to block traffic which has infuriated many Germans — said it would abandon the tactic and move on to holding what it calls “disobedient assemblies.” Their actions have been widely criticized, and Chancellor Olaf Scholz described them as “completely nutty.”

Climate activists lie on a access road for runways at the Munich airport, Germany, Saturday, May 18, 2024. German officials and local media reported say authorities closed down Munich airport temporarily after six climate activists broke through a security fence and glued themselves to access routes leading to runways. The activists from the group Last Generation were protesting flying, the most polluting form of transportation, said the German news agency dpa on Saturday. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa via AP)

Climate activists lie on a access road for runways at the Munich airport, Germany, Saturday, May 18, 2024. German officials and local media reported say authorities closed down Munich airport temporarily after six climate activists broke through a security fence and glued themselves to access routes leading to runways. The activists from the group Last Generation were protesting flying, the most polluting form of transportation, said the German news agency dpa on Saturday. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa via AP)

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