Current:Home > NewsKentucky gets early signature win at Champions Classic against Duke | Opinion -Quantum Capital Pro
Kentucky gets early signature win at Champions Classic against Duke | Opinion
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 04:15:45
ATLANTA — We’re going to have plenty of time, like maybe a decade or two, to talk about Cooper Flagg. And in the aftermath of Tuesday’s Champions Classic, the presumptive No. 1 pick is going to get his first real taste of what the world of sports takes is all about.
That’s how it works when you live up to the hype for 39 minutes but mishandle a ball in a crowd and then dribble it off your foot with the game on the line. Better get used to it.
But Flagg is 17 years old and Duke is still Final Four caliber team. It’s way too soon to start nitpicking.
It is not, however, too early to render a judgment on the other big storyline from a remarkable night of college basketball.
Mark Pope? Yeah, he’s the real deal, too. Just a couple weeks into the college basketball season, he’s already made Kentucky basketball fun again.
It’s been awhile.
“This group is special,” Pope said after Kentucky’s 77-72 victory, giving him a signature win right out of the gates and at a time when there was — and probably still is — some uncertainty about whether he's up to this mammoth job.
Time will tell. But one thing you can already see: There’s a major vibe shift around Kentucky basketball.
Freed from the tension of John Calipari’s stubbornness, his deteriorating relationship with Kentucky’s administration and his antagonistic posture toward a fan base that cares like no other in sports, Big Blue Nation will not find this kind of basketball difficult to embrace.
It’s beautiful, it’s energetic, and most of all its drama-free.
Yeah, Kentucky needed a change. They got it. And it looks as if they’re really, really going to like it.
Nothing against Calipari, a Hall of Fame coach whose first 10 years there were phenomenal. But the whole operation got stale, it got contentious, and his last four seasons were a slow-motion train wreck that ended with some embarrassing NCAA tournament defeats.
Still, when Calipari left for Arkansas, there were no guarantees about how it would go for Big Blue Nation. After all the big names said no, the initial reaction to Pope was strongly negative.
Despite being part of Kentucky’s 1996 national title team, he was still a coach with no NCAA tournament victories in nine years at Utah Valley and BYU.
Kentucky fans, of course, quickly embraced Pope because there was really no other choice. He wasn’t just one of theirs, he reminded them what that actually meant. For 15 years, the program was about the Calipari brand. From the first moment he got the job, Pope was determined to flip that back around and make Kentucky the star of the show.
That’s a great way to start a honeymoon, but you also have to show it on the floor. And with a roster that Pope pulled together largely from the transfer portal, there was a scenario where Year 1 was basically a write-off.
“Nobody knew each other,” Pope said.
But you can already see that Pope is really good at three things that will serve him well as Kentucky’s coach.
The first is that he is incredibly dialed in to how players interact with each other and feed off each other. He talked, for instance, about the human nature for people to pull away from problems and the intentionality it takes to do the opposite. You saw that Tuesday when Kentucky got down 10 points in the first half and just kept hanging in the game until the experience and physicality of its older players took over in the final minutes
“I felt like it was really special for us,” said senior Andrew Carr, a forward who transferred from Wake Forest and scored 17 points with two huge and-1 finishes in the final minutes. “Not everything was going our way, and coach talks about turning into each other, the people that matter, and the closer we get it's harder to beat us.”
The second big trait of a Pope team is the offense. It just flows. For years, one of the big frustrations fans had with Calipari is that the ball didn’t move enough, there wasn’t enough spacing and he didn’t emphasize 3-point shooting until his final season. With Pope, that’s not an issue. The ball zips around, guys move off the ball and everyone has the green light to shoot when open. This was the ballgame: Kentucky made 10-of-25 threes to Duke’s 4-of-23.
And the third thing is that Kentucky just plays really, really hard, which it will need to do against most teams. The Wildcats have some good pieces, but they won’t have a huge talent advantage in most of their big games — and they certainly didn't against a Duke team with multiple future NBA draft picks. That's arguably the biggest reason why Kentucky’s effort just wore down Duke to the point where Flagg was too exhausted to execute down the stretch after scoring 26 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in 32 minutes.
“Guys went and sat in the locker room (at halftime) and it was constructive,” Pope said. "Guys do most of the fixing before I get in the locker room. It was just sheer resolve and determination. There was a lot of ebb and flow, and the game almost swung away from us, and the guys reeled it in.”
It’s still too early in the college basketball season to draw a whole lot of conclusions about where either Kentucky or Duke is going to end up. But for Pope, a man who arguably has the best but toughest job in college basketball, it was a validating night.
He said after the game that he'd have felt the same way about his team whether they won or lost, and that’s probably true. But beating Duke is no small thing, and the amount of belief and credibility Kentucky will get from this win will have a cascading effect on the fan base, on recruiting and on the confidence of a team that believes it might have something special.
All in all, Big Blue Nation couldn't have asked for anything more.
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- West Texas county bans travel on its roads to help someone seeking an abortion
- Why Jason Kelce Has Some Alarms Going Off About Travis Kelce & Taylor Swift's Highly-Publicized Romance
- Pilot who police say tried to cut the engines on a jet midflight now faces a federal charge
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- McDonald's giving away free fries every Friday through the end of 2023: How to get yours
- A'ja Wilson mocks, then thanks, critics while Aces celebrate second consecutive WNBA title
- Montana man gets 18 months in prison for racist phone calls to Black woman employed at church
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Bodies of 17 recovered after Bangladesh train crash that may have been due to disregarded red light
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Next ‘Mission: Impossible’ delayed a year as actors strike drags on
- Man stopped in August outside Michigan governor’s summer mansion worked for anti-Democrat PAC
- Bond markets are being hit hard — and it's likely to impact you
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Sharna Burgess Reveals If She'd Ever Return to Dancing With the Stars After Snub
- The Best Work-Appropriate Halloween Costume Ideas for 2023 to Wear to Your Office Party
- 4th defendant takes plea deal in Georgia election interference case
Recommendation
McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
Everything John Stamos Revealed About Mary-Kate Olsen and Ashley Olsen in His New Memoir
Migrant bus conditions 'disgusting and inhuman,' says former vet who escorted convoys
Haitian gang leader charged with ordering kidnapping of US couple that left woman dead
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
1 killed, 4 injured in fountain electrocution incident at Florida shopping center
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's Winning Date Nights Continue in Kansas City
Gaza has oil markets on edge. That could build more urgency to shift to renewables, IEA head says