Chattanooga Times Free Press

Former Kentucky captain returns as coach for Cats

- BY GARY B. GRAVES

LEXINGTON, Ky. — Initially off Kentucky’s radar as a target to become the next head coach for its men’s basketball program, Mark Pope is now entrusted with maintainin­g the gold standard of the blue-blood Wildcats.

He already did that as a player.

Kentucky hired the 51-yearold Pope away from Brigham Young University, bringing home a captain of the Wildcats’ 1996 national championsh­ip team to succeed John Calipari, who stepped down Tuesday and was introduced as the head coach at Arkansas — a fellow Southeaste­rn Conference program — the very next day.

The Wildcats announced their hire in a release Friday morning but did not provide any contract details. Pope’s formal introducti­on as the program’s 23rd head coach is set for Sunday afternoon in a news conference at Rupp Arena.

Calipari is the active wins leader in NCAA Division I men’s basketball and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2015. During his 15 years in Lexington, he led the Wildcats to their eighth NCAA tournament title in 2012 among a quartet of Final Four appearance­s in his tenure, but Kentucky hasn’t reached the national semifinals since going 38-1 in 2015.

Pope was 110-52 in five seasons leading BYU, with the Cougars going 23-11 this past season — their first in the Big 12 Conference — and making their second NCAA tourney appearance in four years. His first year in charge yielded a 24-8 record and a run to the West Coast Conference semifinals with the Cougars ranked in the AP Top 25, but the season came to a sudden stop when the NCAA tournament was canceled a week before it was set to tip off due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

He was 77-56 before that in four seasons at Utah Valley and guided the Wolverines to consecutiv­e runner-up finishes in the Western Athletic Conference his final two years. They reached the College Basketball Invitation­al quarterfin­als both times.

Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart cited Pope’s impressive 187-108 career record as a head coach and keen knowledge of the program’s meaning to the state. Barnhart also praised Pope’s “dynamic” up-tempo offense and tough defense and called him an innovator.

“He is a strong recruiter with internatio­nal ties and a person of integrity,” the AD said in the release. “He fully embraces our high expectatio­ns and standards and I know that as our fans get reacquaint­ed with Mark, they will be eager to join him on what promises to be an exciting ride.”

Pope said he understand­s the expectatio­ns of taking over college basketball’s winningest program and the high expectatio­ns that come with it.

“It’s the definition of blueblood program where hanging a banner is the expectatio­n ever year,” Pope said in the release. “Equally as important, UK changed my life forever as a human being. The love and passion I have for this program, this University and the people of the Commonweal­th goes to the depth of my soul.”

Pope’s hiring is highly surprising considerin­g the higherprof­ile coaches mentioned as Kentucky’s top candidates.

Turning down offers on Thursday, though, were Baylor University’s Scott Drew, who led the Bears to the program’s lone NCAA title in 2021, and the University of Connecticu­t’s Dan Hurley, whose Huskies just won their second straight national championsh­ip and the program’s sixth overall. And before that, Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan — a Kentucky assistant in the early 1990s, he led Florida to consecutiv­e NCAA titles in 2006-07 as head coach of the Gators — restated his commitment to the NBA club.

Pope now faces his biggest basketball challenge yet: returning his alma mater to national title contention after two first-round exits at the NCAA tourney the past three seasons under Calipari, with the 2022 trip going just one round further. Kentucky’s most recent deep run came in 2019, when the team lost to SEC rival Auburn in the Elite Eight.

Saint John’s coach Rick Pitino, a Hall of Famer who led Kentucky back from NCAA sanctions to that 1996 title, believes the school found the right candidate, saying Pope “will go on to greatness.”

“You have one of the premier young coaches in the game. Relish it because he will do you proud,” Pitino said in a video posted to social media. “I know I sit here today in Saint John’s and I couldn’t be any more proud than to see Mark Pope lead the Kentucky Wildcats to another championsh­ip. He’ll get it done. He’s got the right stock.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL ?? Mark Pope coaches the BYU men’s basketball team during a Big 12 tournament game against UCF on March 13 in Kansas City, Mo. After five seasons leading the Cougars, he has been hired as head coach at Kentucky, his alma mater. Pope was a team captain when the Wildcats won the 1996 NCAA tournament title.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL Mark Pope coaches the BYU men’s basketball team during a Big 12 tournament game against UCF on March 13 in Kansas City, Mo. After five seasons leading the Cougars, he has been hired as head coach at Kentucky, his alma mater. Pope was a team captain when the Wildcats won the 1996 NCAA tournament title.

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