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Coach Calipari’s Comments Following Win Over Mississippi State

Posted at 12:22 AM, Jan 23, 2019
and last updated 2019-01-23 00:22:06-05
Kentucky head coach John Calipari draws up a play prior to the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against Mississippi State in Lexington, Ky., Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. Kentucky won 76-55. (AP Photo/James Crisp)

Kentucky picked up it’s fifth straight win Tuesday by beating Mississippi State, 77-56. Coach Calipari talked about the Wildcats following the game against the Bulldogs. Here are the questions and answers from his session with the media.

Q. How concerned or curious were you how your team was going to play, coming off the big emotional win at Auburn?
JOHN CALIPARI: Every game we play, there’s emotion to it, so it’s a different feel for this program. Because whether it’s at Auburn or at Vanderbilt, they are all sold out and it’s a huge game, and so, we need to be more steady in how we do this, and we are.

I said the next, the Kansas game, is really, really big, because it’s the next game. I mean, we weren’t worried — I have not watched one thing on Kansas. I watched a little bit of maybe Iowa State, maybe. I think I watched maybe four minutes of them, live TV. I can’t tell you one thing about how they play.

This was about beating a top 20 team, a team that’s played well all year. A team that makes nine threes per game, missed some shots today, thank goodness, and then they rebounded like crazy. They are one of the best rebounding teams in the country. They missed a lot of shots that they normally make.

Q. Ben and one of his players was talking about your defense and how it sped them up, got them out of their rhythm. What did you think of your defense tonight?
JOHN CALIPARI: I thought Ashton (Hagans), when you’re on the ball, playing like he plays, it bleeds into everybody else. If your guy at the point is getting beat on a dribble and can’t control the guy a little bit, you’re in jeopardy.

That’s why when we recruit point guards, if we have a guy, I tell them: How are we going to start our defense if he can’t stay in front of the ball? The stats don’t matter to me; can he do it. Last year, we had – Shai (Gilgeous-Alexander) did it, and now Ashton does it.

I tell you who else did it, and he was sick today, and we don’t know if he had a flu or a virus, was Jemarl Baker. So when I went back to him, he said, “Coach, I can’t feel my legs right now,” so that’s why I didn’t go back to him in the second half and he’s another one that’s really — and the guy that’s really improved is Tyler (Herro). Tyler went from not being able to stay in front of anybody to like he’s not bad. Now, he leaves his feet, at times, but he’s not bad.

How about EJ (Montgomery) today? Aren’t we all waiting for him to go do that. You say: Well, if you just play him more. Well, if the other kid is playing well, it’s hard.

But today we had a stretch where our two bigs were going through the motions, couldn’t fight. OK, bang, you’re out. We’ll play these two. Now you become the backups to them.

And I told those two, play as many minutes as you can play, you need a break, let me know and we’ll sub a guy off the bench and when you want to go back in, you go back in.

Nick (Richards) was good again today. I thought Nick did some good things. And I like the fact that (Reid) Travis had 12 rebounds, but still, missing some baskets you’ve got to make.

Q. You beat me to the punch on EJ but how significant, if it was, was it for him to see a jump shot go down? He’s had — obviously he’s a good shooter. Just doesn’t look like it so far. You talked about Tyler earlier in the season.
JOHN CALIPARI: I told him, “It’s the first one he made all year. It’s good that you made one finally.”

I keep telling him, he’s going to break through and everybody is going to say, oh, my gosh, who is this guy.

I mean, did you see him block that shot? It changed the game. If we had another big guy in, and he just acted like, well, it’s not my man and didn’t block that shot and that ball goes in, we could have lost the game.

That changed the game. Those kind of plays, one, they make it so guards won’t drive in there, but two, they changed the game because you get breakouts down the other end. And he and Nick are able to do that for us. PJ (Washington) had some blocks today.

PJ played four blocks, 21 points and six rebounds and I still think he played without that motor parts of the game and that’s what was making me angry. Come on, man. Battle. But that’s how good I think he is.

Q. When you talk about PJ, what is it that you see when he gets that motor going or why does he not get it going all the time?
JOHN CALIPARI: Because he’ll dunk on you. He’ll go get a rebound in traffic. He’ll go block, and when he doesn’t, he posts up and the guy runs around him and tips it away. You try to throw it to him at the elbow; the guy runs around and tips it away, instead of fighting the guy.

Getting open, the same deal. Blocking out, on free throws, like you could step in and — or, your motor is running and you’re just blasting a guy, making sure you can get it.

He has that game, but he also has that other game and we’ve just got to tell him, it’s not acceptable. That’s why if EJ plays the way he is, it’s easy. You just go to EJ.

And I told PJ today, I said, I let you out six minutes and you know what you came in and played as good as you played all year. Maybe I should leave you out six minutes. Maybe that gets you going. Maybe you need to rest (Grumbling as PJ’s response).

Q. You all seemed to struggle at times with double teams?
JOHN CALIPARI: Who?

Q. You guys seemed to struggle at times with double teams in the post.
JOHN CALIPARI: Spacing was just all of… And one, they double-team, Reid had PJ under the goal, and we’re not talking enough. You need to talk on offense, as well as defense, but our spacing was all of. We got work to do.

Q. At one point in the second half, the lead was cut down to two points, and I think around that same time you inserted Nick Richards to the game and everything changed. Talk about how he changed the game.
JOHN CALIPARI: Well, he and EJ both did and they blocked shots, and they changed what was going on but we made two or three plays, the last one where Ashton tried to shoot a ball with the 7-footer on him when two guys were open for threes.

I just said, “What are you doing? Those are the plays that you let teams back in it.” And then later, we come down and who makes the three that really mattered? Immanuel (Quickley), and then he makes the free throws and all of a sudden it’s back to nine, then you bang a three, PJ hits a three and all of a sudden. It’s 14-15 and it’s the ballgame.

But it could go the other way the same way. Those two, three plays we’re making them ourselves, they are self-inflicted that let’s teams be in the game when we should be good enough to be away from teams.

Let me say this: This is a top 20 team that did not shoot the ball well today. So what you saw, they usually make nine. They made three. They make their normal — say they make 7, this is a 5-, 6-point game and some of them were open.

Q. You talked a lot about becoming a player-driven team. What kind of strides have they made in that regard and what’s still left to do?
JOHN CALIPARI: They are getting better. Now I’ve just got to keep an eye on being humble and being hungry. Not, you know, getting carried away, because we’re just — we’re just beginning the climb of where we need to go.

We had 16 turnovers today. So we’re just beginning the climb. The last game against Auburn, we got up, whatever it was, 16, and I showed them the ten plays that we were self-inflicted that let them back in the game.

Now, I will say this: We made some plays that kept — they make a play, we made a play. But there were ten, two of them were free throw blockouts. Another one was just bouncing one off your foot because you’re not really alert. Two of them, not getting open. Why would you not get open? Why would you run from the guy? We work every day on getting into — all those kind of things, it only takes one or two things to change the whole complexion of a game.

And so we’re showing them, we’re talking about it. They are engaged. We had a coach come in the gym the other day and watch us practice and said, man, are they engaged. They are really locked into what you’re doing and what you’re trying to do as a team.

Q. If this team, if this group is a puzzle, how many pieces are still off to the side trying to figure out where to snap them in?
JOHN CALIPARI: Well, we are still trying to mess with offense. I did a couple different things today that you guys don’t know basketball, so you wouldn’t know, but there was some things I did offensively that were different because I wanted to try some stuff. And I kind of liked one, and the other, I wasn’t so sure of.

Defensively, you know, we’re — I don’t like going game-to-game, changing how you play pick-and-roll. I’d rather say: This is who we are; you force your will on them, even though they know it’s coming. The old Green Bay Packer, what did they call that play, the sweep. You knew it was coming. Sweep! Touchdown.

So I don’t like changing, but we’re doing some things, at times changing up how we’re playing some stuff. But this is a smart team, so we can go over it in two days, and they usually are pretty good about it.

Q. Your request for people to donate to the fund for federal workers, how is that going and what prompted you to make that request?
JOHN CALIPARI: I wasn’t going to do anything, but I’m afraid this thing is going to keep going, and this is the shutdown. We have about 500 federal workers not being paid in our city. They work at the jail, TSA, agriculture, sheriffs. There’s about 500 people.

And what we did, the initial thing was, let’s get them some — where they could go get gas.

Folks, it’s literally a grant. They don’t have to pay it back. You know what I asked them to do? Pay it forward when you get paid. Give it to somebody else, and my hope is that they will.

Now I’m seeing it’s going to keep going, and we had earmarked about $250,000 and we kind of blew through it.

Now I’m saying, if we have to do this again, does anybody want to be involved. It’s probably raised about 10,000. Eric said, “Do you want to put it out again?”

I said, “Not really. I mean, if we have to, Ellen and I will do it again.”

But I went over to REACH four different times. Probably go over tomorrow. And when you see the people, they are all the people I grew up with, and they don’t deserve to be the brunt of this. Some of them were struggling before in with child issues and some other things and health issues, and now this hits them, and it’s just — I don’t think it’s fair.

So you know, we’re going to continue to do it and like I said, it was about $10,000. But I hope cooler heads — did anything happen today? (Shrugs shoulders.)

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports
Rev #1 by #167 at 2019-01-23 02:56:00 GMT