Kentucky looks a little bit different than usual in the 2024-25 season.
John Calipari, the Wildcats’ head coach for 15 seasons, is no longer on the bench for Kentucky’s squad, having left the program for Arkansas in April. Now, it’s Mark Pope in charge of the Wildcats.
Even with the lack of postseason success from Kentucky over recent seasons, Calipari’s move left the college basketball world in shock, as one of the most well-known figures in the sport departed from the program he made 12 NCAA Tournaments with.
Not too long after Kentucky’s loss to Oakland in the first round of the 2024 NCAA Tournament, Calipari made the move to join the Razorbacks.
Why did Calipari leave Kentucky? The Sporting News revisits the major head coaching change at Kentucky and how the Wildcats performed under Calipari over the years.
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Why did John Calipari leave Kentucky?
Just as the NCAA Tournament was wrapping up in April, reports surfaced that Calipari was leaving Kentucky and finalizing a five-year deal at Arkansas.
Despite owning one of the most desirable head coaching positions in the country, Calipari’s decision to leave came down to a few factors. On one hand, it had been years since Kentucky reached the heights the program annually sets its aim for, having last made the Final Four in 2015. Since 2019, the Wildcats have only one win in the NCAA Tournament.
With the postseason disappointments mounting over time, questions about Calipari’s job security grew. According to The Athletic, the relationship between Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart and Calipari “steadily deteriorated” over time, and the head coach calling his university a “basketball school” in 2022 didn’t go over well with Barnhart and others in Kentucky’s athletic department.
The story from The Athletic also detailed that there were many disagreements and a clear disconnect between Calipari and Kentucky’s athletic department regarding the school’s facilities and NIL, all aspects of why the 65-year-old coach made the move to Arkansas.
“Calipari and Barnhart found themselves in something of a cold war, with the coaching staff believing they needed more support to win big and Barnhart expecting to see a bigger return on his original (and massive) investment before he’d pay any more into the program under Calipari’s watch,” the story in The Athletic said. “But then an old friend called and made him an offer he couldn’t refuse: Come to Arkansas and feel loved again, feel supported again, feel like anything is possible again