Nice reply, makes sense, but to continue: Does a great coach see the brand and want to be here now ??? I will assume so, but am not sure. For the record, I wanted Sean Williams from day 1 and thought he would come and win big here.
I personally don’t think it’s unlike any other profession or any other sports. When the Yankees poach the Marlins, Marlins lose their coach.
My personal view is Kentucky just offers more than most coaches can pass up. Regardless of what it is humans want fame. It’s a human condition. We had 30K show up to a press conference. No team in any sport has come close to something like that. You had high level football coaches tweeting about it. It’s unbelievable. You also get immortality here, more so than anywhere in this sport. You get history, fame (more popular than the governor in ways), there’s just nowhere like that in basketball. It’s a special place and even people who hate Kentucky have to acknowledge that. You just can’t get passed it. That will always be an incredibly strong pull in a semi niche sport like this. Even places like Alabama, Oats can walk into any place and there’s a chance nobody even notices him in Tuscaloosa. Think about the difference in that. Calipari was statewide having to be cautious about where he and his family went like he’s Tom Cruise. It’s a neat element that only happens at UK to this degree. And only even happens in this sport to a very few, although not to this degree.
Then add the money, the brand, the national recognition, the tradition that all coaches dream of being labeled with.
That stuff isn’t going away. Now not every coach has a family that’s wants to deal with it (Drew), some coaches are too ingrained where they are (Olson), but most would crawl over glass to have that (Calipari). And ones like Drew and Olson flirted heavily and wanted it still.
Most basketball coaches are guys that want challenges, and got into coaching to get to those places. It’s why they leave FAU for Michigan, it’s why Barnes wanted to leave TN for UCLA. They climb. So is it like it was in the 70’s no, there’s a lot of factors now. But will anything I said above change for the majority? No, that’s always going to be there.