Memphis not ready to forgive Calipari

Kentucky Coach John Calipari will be on the sidelines in Memphis tonight for the first time since he left the Tigers for the Wildcats.
Kentucky Coach John Calipari will be on the sidelines in Memphis tonight for the first time since he left the Tigers for the Wildcats.

MEMPHIS -- John Calipari knows people in Memphis still are pretty upset with how he abandoned their Tigers to take the Kentucky coaching job and that nothing will ever soothe the hurt feelings.

In case they still don't understand why he left back in 2009, Calipari made it as clear as possible Thursday.

"I had been talked to probably by six other universities during my time here, and three had offered jobs, and a couple I considered," Calipari said. "But Kentucky is one that you leave for. It just is."

Now, with an assist from the NCAA Tournament selection committee, Calipari will coach his first game in Memphis since leaving eight years ago. It's a town where some fans still hate him for departing, a move all the more painful because the coach's best season at the school was wiped off the books just months later.

This isn't Calipari's first trip back to Memphis since being hired by Kentucky in April 2009. The coach still visits friends here and recruits Memphis' talent-rich high schools.

But Calipari hasn't coached at the FedExForum since March 2009 when he won his last Conference USA Tournament title. That drought will end tonight when his Wildcats play UCLA in the South Regional semifinal.

"I think we did all right here," Calipari said. "Had some good times."

That's putting it mildly.

Before Calipari stunned Memphis by choosing the winningest program in all of college basketball, he oversaw the best four-year stretch in Tigers' history. He went 137-14 at Memphis, the kind of success fans dreamed of when Calipari was hired.

Calipari was seen as such a savior that fans came out to his introductory news conference, which also was shown live on local TV.

The coach delivered, dominating Conference USA with players from DaJuan Wagner to Derrick Rose. Calipari's best came in 2007-2008 with an NCAA-record 38 victories and an overtime loss to Kansas in the national championship game -- a season that no longer counts for either Memphis or Calipari.

He coached the Tigers to a loss in the Sweet 16 in March 2009 when Kentucky fired Billy Gillispie and came offering the SEC's power program to Calipari. Calipari not only took the job at Kentucky but he also took most of his coaching staff too while convincing John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins and Eric Bledsoe to join him with the Wildcats.

By August 2009, the NCAA stripped away every victory from that record season for Memphis for using an ineligible player believed to be Rose.

Calipari said he hadn't thought of not having a banner in the rafters for that 38-2 season.

"I would say that there's nothing that can take away what that run was about for all of us, including the city," Calipari said. "It was a special time."

A couple of hundred friends joined Calipari at a reception Wednesday night after he arrived in Memphis, with the coach hearing from former players such as Chris Douglas-Roberts, Robert Dozier and Antonio Anderson.

The University of Memphis president canceled a dinner announced in September 2015 to honor Calipari for his induction into the Naismith Hall of Fame that would have benefited the Tigers. Fans made it very clear they weren't ready to make nice with Calipari just yet.

When he walked onto the court Thursday for the final open practice, Calipari was met with a heavy dose of boos that not even the Kentucky faithful could drown out. He went straight to work, leaving people like Jack Vernon and his friend, Zach Kieffner, happy to finally let Calipari know how they feel.

Vernon, now 18, of Southaven, Miss., became a basketball fan in 2007-2008 when his sister attended Memphis.

"Just the way he left and everything," Vernon said. "We had Boogie Cousins lined up, John Wall, and all of a sudden our whole class just dispersed ... he just kind of left us in a bad place. And you see Memphis hasn't quite recovered from that."

Calipari, who signed a two-year extension Wednesday, knew he'd face questions about Memphis. He also predicts people will watch tonight because of the talented teams on the court, not because he's on the sideline "and it should be a lot of fun."

If you're not a Memphis Tigers fan.

Sports on 03/24/2017

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