The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Louisville fires Payne after two seasons; ‘change is needed’

- By Gary B. Graves

Louisville fired coach Kenny Payne on Wednesday after going 12-52 in two seasons that marked the worst consecutiv­e finishes in the storied program’s history, saying “a change is needed” to reach expectatio­ns.

The move came a day after the Cardinals’ 94-85 first-round loss to North Carolina State in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament, their eighth consecutiv­e defeat.

“When we brought Kenny home in 2022, no one had a stronger belief than me in his potential success,” athletic director Josh Heird said a statement, “but it’s become clear that a change is needed to help this program achieve what is expected and attainable. While it is always difficult to make a coaching transition, this is the right one for our program.”

Payne, 57, is set to receive an $8 million buyout under terms of a six-year contract through 2028. That deal paid a base annual salary of $3.35 million plus incentives.

Louisville finished 8-24 (3-17 ACC) in a season that was expected to be the start of a climb back after a 4-28 campaign. The loss total was a program record. Louisville’s January win at Miami was its lone ACC victory in two seasons under the homegrown Payne, who

scored 1,083 points from 1985-89 and won the 1986 NCAA national championsh­ip while playing under Hall of Fame coach Denny Crum.

Speculatio­n now shifts to Payne’s successor, who

is expected to be more experience­d and with a higher profile than Payne. Possible candidates include Baylor’s Scott Drew, who guided the Bears to the national championsh­ip in 2021, Florida Atlantic’s Dusty May and Indiana

State’s Josh Schertz.

Whoever Louisville chooses faces a monumental task of lifting the program from its worst stretch ever to on-court relevancy, and quickly.

Despite the current losing stretch, Louisville is still considered one of the nation’s most attractive destinatio­ns because of a rich tradition highlighte­d by three NCAA championsh­ips won on the court. (The NCAA vacated its 2013 NCAA title and 2012 Final Four appearance in 2017 as punishment for an embarrassi­ng sex scandal.) Louisville’s next coach will be its third permanent hire and fifth overall since firing Hall of Famer Rick Pitino in October 2017.

For Heird — who as interim AD tapped Payne for his first head coaching job in March 2022 — that means finding a better fit for Louisville’s highest-profile athletic program.

Based on legacy alone, Payne and the Cardinals seemed to be a logical match.

The Mississipp­i native had overwhelmi­ng support to succeed Chris Mack and interim coach Mike Pegues because of his Louisville connection­s. His hiring was also viewed as a potential reconnecti­on with the community, particular­ly among African Americans in the aftermath of protests following the death of Breonna Taylor during a botched raid by Louisville police four years ago.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Louisville men’s basketball head coach Kenny Payne compiled a 12-52 record in two seasons at Louisville.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Louisville men’s basketball head coach Kenny Payne compiled a 12-52 record in two seasons at Louisville.

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