MSUwolverine1989

July 1st, 2009 at 12:11 AM ^

Sampson at Indiana..these guys just dont know any better, all they know how to do is cheat and when they get caught they just move on, leaving the program they left in shambles. At least with Sampson, he will not be allowed to coach in college again for 4 years, I mean its somewhat of a punishment but he should never be allowed to coach in college again.

JimBobTressel-0

July 1st, 2009 at 5:28 AM ^

if this comes to pass, Calipari will have assembled a class so talented that the Fab Five would pale in comparison. Oh my god, this is like USC-level recruiting in basketball, except even less space to play all those kids. The idea of MULTIPLE one and dones at one school is frightening. Ohio State made it to the 2007 NCAA Championship Game with just Oden and Conley, like we made it back in 1991 and 92. Kentucky will roll through college basketball on a tear this winter.

Sandler For 3

July 1st, 2009 at 8:58 AM ^

Wow. I agree, this class is absolutely ridiculous. This is like Video-game level recruiting. He's GOT to be doing something illegal right? If not the man makes Zook look like a child in recruiting. How does a coach get the top 2 PG's in a class and convince them that there will be playing time for both. His backup PG is one of the best in the class. His BACKUP. They might as well not waste their time hanging banners for whatever accomplishments they achieve, they'll just be taking them down in a few years. Given all that, I'm sure Calipari is upset with this class. He's been getting a lot of heat because Middle Kentucky State has been dominating the in-state recruiting as of late. He's gotta step it up.

Tater

July 1st, 2009 at 9:34 AM ^

I agree that Calipari has cheated pretty much everywhere he has gone, and the tendency of the rabid Kentucky fanbase to "help" players once they get to Lexington pretty much speaks for itself. After all, you can't spell "Bunko Squad" without UK. That being said, Calipari the salesman is still pretty talented. And he does have one edge that is legitimate. His main pitch seems to be that his street ball offense doesn't really lack structure, but is purposely designed to allow the player to best use his individual talents. So, while every other coach in the country appeals to a player's parents and "higher" instincts saying "it's all about the team" and "it's all one big family here," Calipari is saying "in my offense, if you've got the talent, it's all about you." If I were a seventeen year-old, I would tell my parents Duke or Kansas or UNC or whoever was a great program, but my heart would be pulling me to the coach who told me it would be "all about me" when I got there. So, it gets him a lot of great players who win a lot of games for him, but when they run into a team with talent close to theirs that plays like a team, they look rudderless and lose. I think Calipari will do great at UK, but will eventually leave: six months before the violations are uncovered. For me, though, it is intriguing to wonder if he can finally put so much talent on the court that his street ball offense can figure out a way to win the title without self-destructing in the Final Four. I would love to see matchups with Duke, UNC, and Kansas. Eventually, I would love to see UM be one of "those" teams that would give him trouble, too. Basically, matchups like the ones I mentioned above will make for great theatre: discipline versus playground, teamwork versus individuality. I hope he doesn't get caught for a few years. I also hope coaches like Williams, Self, Coach K, and even Billy Donavan are able to frustrate him when it counts.

jmblue

July 1st, 2009 at 2:43 PM ^

Basketball badly needs a rule like baseball has. Either you go pro straight out of high school or you wait until after your junior year. The guys who have zero academic interest wouldn't have to waste schools' (and their own) time going through this charade for a year.