March 7, 2015
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Kentucky Head Coach John Calipari
THE MODERATOR: Questions.
Q. How much emphasis do you put on 31-0 with so much more to go?
COACH CALIPARI: The only thing I keep telling them is I’m so proud and I respect them so much to be able to deal with this. I mean, not only every game is an event, every game they played this year is an event, every game is somebody’s Super Bowl. Every game the coach would walk off the court and say that was the best we played all year. They took on the challenges.
It’s not only you coming at them, it’s people around them coming at them. They were able to shield that and play for each other. They are able to play for each other. They did it again today.
Billy is trying to work his way through guys being injured, trying to come back. They were ready to play us, great game plan, what Florida did to us. We had that one stretch, probably five minutes of the game, that we won the game. That’s okay. That stuff happens sometimes.
Q. Talk about Karl(-Anthony Towns) in that five-minute stretch.
COACH CALIPARI: Well, look, I keep trying to explain to Karl, you are so good, you don’t have to do anything crazy, so why do you keep trying to do crazy stuff? You’re too good a player.
Now, if you’re not that good a player, you try to do something crazy so people see you. Like, ‘Wow, did you see that?’ The rest of the time the dude stinks.
He doesn’t need it. But he’s young. When we needed him to play at the end, he played. Now I’m on him. He goes 13-9 in 27 minutes, six blocks, three assists, one steal. We all know how good he is.
But I’m on him because I want him to be the best. I don’t want him to be just a good big, I want him to be the best. He’s working toward that.
Again, you had Trey Lyles today. You’re starting to see how good he is. Trey Lyles is as good as anybody in the country. Our guard play, Andrew (Harrison), Aaron (Harrison), Devin (Booker), Tyler (Ulis), they played well. Dakari Johnson played well. Dakari played better defense than Karl did, to be honest with you.
Q. Early in the season you were saying if this team loses one game, they need to lose it now. With them going 31-0, would a loss in the SEC tournament hurt or help?
COACH CALIPARI: I’m not a big fan of tournaments. Never have been. Three games in three days. What does that do for you? I mean, I don’t think it does anything. I’m not a big fan.
But this place is a different animal. Our fans who can’t get in this building… You’re saying, “What do you mean, there’s 25,000 (fans)?” There’s probably another 100,000 that want to come that can’t get tickets. They come to the Tournament, they spend their rent money, mortgage money, their car money. They get money, take loans, and they go to the tournament because they can’t get in here.
We all talked about it. We’re going to play for our fans. It’s not going to have a bearing on our seed in the tournament. It will have no bearing. It never has. Maybe this year it will have a bearing if we lose, I don’t know. But winning has never had a bearing on the NCAA selection stuff, never.
So we can’t promise we’re going to win every game, but we want to go have fun for our fans. We want them to enjoy the experience that we respect what they’re doing to get there. So it’s a weekend for our fans and for us to enjoy them.
Q. Was that decision after the game to have the celebration with the T-shirts? Was that up to the players?
COACH CALIPARI: I didn’t really have anything to do with it. It’s nice. I didn’t really see it. I kind of walked off the court.
What did they do?
Q. They got T-shirts, held them up.
COACH CALIPARI: That’s really nice (smiling).
Q. I asked you yesterday how it should be remembered if you finish an undefeated regular season, not counting what happens next. You said, “We could lose the game.” You didn’t. Billy talked about how people should take a minute to appreciate how hard this is to do.
COACH CALIPARI: I would tell you what these kids have accomplished, and as young as they are, it’s not winning every game; it’s that they shared. You got Andrew (Harrison) and Aaron (Harrison). I didn’t start them in the second half because I never do. Think about that. You know how good those two are?
Trey Lyles, who I’m telling you is as good as any player in the country, steps back so Dakari and the guards and these guys can step up. Our guards, sharing with each other, you know, passing. That’s the story.
This is a great story for college athletics, for society. Instead of me, me, me, it’s us, us, us. When you do that, we all benefit. Every one of these players has benefited by this. I’m not just talking about they won. No, their stock personally has risen, every one of them.
This is how this is supposed to work. We do this together, everyone benefits. Not the school, not the coach, all the players benefit. That’s what’s happening and I’m proud of them.
Q. Despite all of this and the pressures of being undefeated, these guys seem like they’re really loose, having fun with this run. Do you like that? Do you see it as well?
COACH CALIPARI: I think, again, the one worry I had prior to the game was I wonder if they’re feeling this. I’m older. I’ve been through so much. You shoot me, it goes through a bazooka hole, OK. I’ve been shot at so much. I’ve been through the grind of this. They haven’t.
Willie Cauley, you think about it, he was on a team that went to the NIT, lost to Robert Morris. All of a sudden you’re in this boat, on this team?
The biggest thing I’m trying to tell these guys, I’m telling my staff, man, we all have to stay connected and enjoy this. I’ll tell you, I would imagine – just saying – there will be some stuff written and said. I want to tell you all, no one will steal my joy. If you want to attack what we’re doing, be nasty about it, have at it. You’re not stealing my joy. Coaching this team, with these kind of kids, you’re not stealing my joy (smiling).
Q. Since you’re in such a joyous mood, was that part of the reason for starting the three seniors that you did?
COACH CALIPARI: What would you have done if we would have lost this game? How many of you would have said, “How could he do that, start these kids with this on the line?”
Let’s think about it. I keep telling you this is about these players, it’s about them. What about those three?
The reason I started them is I wanted a picture of them starting. We’re framing it. CBS is going to get me the starting lineups with their names on it. It’s going to be framed. I told them prior to the game, 35 years from now you can say you started. Who the hell knows (smiling)?
In the end, the students wanted them back in. I listened to the students.
Q. You’ve obviously achieved a lot. Now you have the perfect regular season. How will you view this year if it doesn’t end with a national championship?
COACH CALIPARI: Well, it’s not that. It’s on the 28th of June. That’s my last day. That’s draft day. We’ll see. I’ll be able to tell you after that.
Eight or nine guys get drafted, I’m going to be very happy for whatever happens. I’ll be really happy.
Q. You’re already an odds-on favorite to win the NCAA tournament before the selections have been made.
COACH CALIPARI: You don’t know the bracket yet. I can guess the bracket. Do you want me to guess it for you?
Q. Sure.
COACH CALIPARI: I bet you they slide the Lakers in there (smiling). I can give you the names. You’ll say, You’re not in that room, how did you know?
Q. As a follow-up, do you think that’s a realistic evaluation of your chances?
COACH CALIPARI: I don’t know. I mean, I’m going to try my hardest to keep these guys in the moment. What I told them after the game, “I want you to think of us as if each of you is the best version of yourself. If you know you’re not, you got to ask the question of yourself, ‘Why am I not what I should be?’ ”
By getting all these kids, worrying about them playing well, worrying about them, if that’s not good enough, I’m telling you, I can live with it. I had to live with a nine-point lead with 2:20 to go and missing free throws. You know what, I live with it because our kids gave everything they could. Missing free throws down the stretch. I’ll live with it. I’ll live with what the result is.
I’m telling you again, I know our fans get mad when I say this, my concern is our players. If we do right by them, they’ll drag us where we’re trying to go.
If Andrew and Aaron are driving the ball, not settling. If Tyler and Devin are playing their best. If Trey Lyles gives you what he gave you today. If Karl plays like he did the last five minutes. Willie hasn’t been there the last two games. Missing shots, missing free throws, that’s not who he is. What if he’s at his best? What if Marcus Lee is in blocking shots like he did against Michigan? What if Dakari is playing like he did today, making free throws, baskets, flying around, great defense?
Man, you start looking around, Boy, are they really good. We’re unselfish. We got to get a bunch of guys playing their best. That’s the whole goal.
I’m going to say this again. You all know I’m not looking for two guys to score, the rest of you play defense, take charges, get rebounds, set screens. I want all these kids to play basketball. I want them all to do the things they can do.
Q. If this is the best version of themselves, if they live up to their potential, is this your best Kentucky team?
COACH CALIPARI: I don’t compare. I’ve had good teams here. I’ve had good teams at UMass. I’ve had good teams at Memphis. Like really, really good teams.
This team’s a good team. This may be one of the deeper teams I’ve had. I’m doing stuff, platooning and doing stuff I’ve never done before. This is a good group.
Thank you.
FastScripts by ASAP Sports
Kentucky Student-Athletes
#15, Willie Cauley-Stein, F
On his progress from his freshman season to now …
“Words can’t describe it, I guess. It’s one of those things that you look back on later in life and realize you made history. Now, you’re living it. It’s not really history yet. I feel like, myself, I’m just now reaching the surface. I still have a lot left to show or to give.”
On what fuels him more, going to the NIT or sitting out last year …
“Probably sitting out. The NIT thing was bad…just bad. I didn’t really have any control over it. Last year, just to see everybody have fun and in the tournament and stuff was worse than losing.”
On the advantage of having fans at SEC Tournament …
“I mean, it’s for them. We’re not really worried about the SEC Tournament. It’s more like we’re playing for the fans there. They’re going to travel everywhere anyway but especially there. That’s really what we’re playing for when we go there is for the fans and everything.”
On playing basketball for Kentucky …
“It’s probably one of the best things you’ll probably do in your life is playing here. Having the fans enjoy seeing you play and enjoy learning about you as a person. That never leaves here. You’re going to always be part of that family here, so it’s a great feeling.”
#12, Karl-Anthony Towns, F
On the importance of a perfect season …
“For us, the perfect season doesn’t matter to us. A national championship is what matters to us. That’s what our goal is.
On his thoughts of how they won every game …
“We’ve been having a lot of tribulations, you know, and special trials, too. To make a feat like this is amazing. It’s a school record, I think but also for us it doesn’t matter about all that. It’s about getting better every day as individuals and as a team. We’re coming closer every day, and I know for a lot of people we look so close, but we’re actually getting closer, and thats a scary thought.”
On the play of Trey Lyles today …
“Today is just another showing of how great he is, how great of a player he is and how talented he is. You can talk about a game, you can talk about a season, but I think everyone knows how special Trey Lyles is.”
#41, Trey Lyles, F
On the reflecting on a 31-0 regular season …
“We take pride in it but our journey is not done. We have a lot of work to do and we only have two guaranteed games left in our season so we have to make sure we go out there and play hard and together. It just shows how great these guys are on the team, and how much we care for one another and how much we want to win. We share the ball and a lot of teams wouldn’t be able to say if they share the ball or not, but we have a lot of great guys on the team that are sharing with one other and thats what makes us good.”
On being 31-0 …
“We’re not done yet and there is still a lot of basketball we have left to play. We all knew that we would make some noise and do something historical. We just have to go out there and if it’s our day to win then we’re going to win.”
On Calipari saying he’s as good as any player in the country …
“I just have to go out there and perform, play as hard as I can and to the best of my ability.”
Florida Head Coach Billy Donovan
Opening statement …
“Well, the first thing I want to say is congratulations to John (Calipari) and his team. What they’ve done may not happen again for a long, long time. For people that have covered their team, I think it’s really important that people at least reflect in a real positive way of what they’ve accomplished this season. I felt like for 30 minutes, we played pretty good basketball. I didn’t think we got dominated on the backboard. I thought we had really, really good offensive possessions. One of the things that really helped us, I think we really had a pretty significant advantage there in the first half on points off turnovers. We were able to score and get out in transition some. Then, I think at the 10-minute point, their offensive rebounding started to affect us some. I think we had 12 of our 17 turnovers in the last 22 minutes. I thought the turnovers hurt us. I thought we got down the lane with our guards. We made some poor decisions that enabled them to kind of maybe get out on the break. I thought the reason the game was close— at least for a good portion of the game— was we didn’t get crushed by the three-point line, and we didn’t get killed on the backboard. Our three-point shooting maybe kept us close, and them not taking and making a lot of threes helped, too. I also thought in the first half we did a good job on their frontcourt guys, doubling them from different areas of the floor. But, I thought over a period of time, we had too many lapses on offense. We had also a struggle, I think, up front there in the second half on their put-backs, offensive rebounding, those kinds of plays.”
On contending with Trey Lyles …
“It wasn’t bad, because I was much, much more concerned about them posting him. I felt like going into the game, we needed to play small. I just wanted to make him guard one of our guards, and have to run around at 6-foot-10 and do some of that. We felt like we could double-team in the post. Most of his points were really on jump shots. He had one low-post move there at the end of the game where he scored on a jump hook. But, most of his stuff was all jump shots. A lot of that was us trying to provide some help in on the post on (Karl-Anthony) Towns and (Willie) Cauley-Stein. So, he made a lot of tough 2-point shots. He’s really, really a good player. The game in Gainesville was very, very close. I thought, at least from a matchup standpoint against our team, him being out really, really helped us because they had to play with three traditional perimeter guards, which we probably matched up a little bit better with.”
On whether this is the best Kentucky team he has seen …
“I’ll let John comment about that. I mean, it’s hard. I’ve obviously competed against a lot of really good teams. It’s hard to say that they’re the best. I think the team that won the national championship with Anthony Davis – people will compare them to that team. But, I don’t think there’s anybody on this team in Anthony Davis’ league, in my opinion. They’ve got outstanding talent, they’re really good players, don’t get me wrong. But, John’s probably better. When you look at a team, so much of the team is based on chemistry, how connected they are, how they play for each other, share the ball, all those kinds of things. I think this team definitely does it, but John’s got more of an internal insight into how he would rank his teams from a coaching perspective.”
Florida Student-Athletes
#0, Kasey Hill
On UF turning the ball over late …
“It is frustrating, I think we had maybe 25 turnovers. Coach told us coming into the game you can’t turn the ball over that much, and turning the ball over got them out on runs and scored easy buckets.”
On the difficulty of finishing over the big bodies of Kentucky…
“It is very hard. They have like three or four seven-footers. It’s hard to finish over guys like that. You have to get them to foul you and get them in foul trouble.”
#10, Dorian Finney-Smith
On cutting the lead to one and then feeling the tides turn…
“I think we turned the ball over (on) consecutive possessions. You can’t have that many turnovers and expect to win.”
On Michael Frazier’s return…
“He tried to give what he could give. You could tell his ankle was still bothering him. He is not the Michael Frazier that we have seen in the first couple of games but I’m happy to see him out there.”