That’s only why anyone thinks it’s Cal. Ricks entire tenure was special, Cals was fun, then frustrating.Cal by a mile. Too young to remember Pitino.
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That’s only why anyone thinks it’s Cal. Ricks entire tenure was special, Cals was fun, then frustrating.Cal by a mile. Too young to remember Pitino.
Actually Sutton did it before Rick.What the youngers need to understand is that Pitino was not only a great coach, but he was absolutely on the cutting edge of where basketball was headed. Pitino was really the first guy who did the math on the 3 point shot and actually accepted it. Then he set about designing a way to take advantage of that, and he succeeded.
The idea of a player driving towards the basket and then passing the ball 20+ feet away from the basket was ridiculous in 1988. The idea of not doing that is ridiculous now. And Rick Pitno started that.
lol. No he didn’t. Good lord.Actually Sutton did it before Rick.
For pure coaching.. Pitino era hands downA lot of the answers will be based on the age of the poster and how many coaches they seen in their lifetime but my personal favorite era is the Pitino era. That was the golden age before guys to jumped to the NBA after their freshman season. I remember me and my father listening to games on the radio together during the probation season when we not permitted to be on TV. It was just great memories for me from start to finish during Pitino's time here.
No. Not at all. Sutton was a fairly conservative half-court coach.Actually Sutton did it before Rick.
He did. His first season at UK was the first season for the 3 point shot.lol. No he didn’t. Good lord.
The 1998 Kentucky Wildcats were a 2-seed, but did win it all.then the team he left Tubby with was a two seed that won it all. Absolutely unreal run.
Wrong. Sutton’s first UK season had no three pt line. It didn’t come in until his second year, and he did not make use of it in NEARLY the same way Pitino did. Not even close.He did. His first season at UK was the first season for the 3 point shot.
He designed the whole offense around it.
Every action started outside the line.
There were countless stories at the time about how Sutton was the first to fully embrace the 3 point shot and adapted to it.
That team took 14 a game. And went 18-11. They were 228th out of 290 D1 teams that year in terms of PPG. If the stories you're talking about existed, they were wrong.He did. His first season at UK was the first season for the 3 point shot.
He designed the whole offense around it.
Every action started outside the line.
There were countless stories at the time about how Sutton was the first to fully embrace the 3 point shot and adapted to it.
I agree with your point about Smith from 2003-2005. That is an underrated run with the huge winning streak, #1 overall seed, and Sparks/Rondo in back to back years. Those were the first years I was old enough to remember watching the season start to finish. I have scattered memories of the Tayshaun Prince teams but nothing compared to 03-05.All the recent coaches in my lifetime other than Pope/BG had a strong run at some point that was fun as a fan:
Pitino - 1995-1997 was peak Kentucky basketball IMO
Smith - 2003-2005 was an underrated era. Kentucky was best program in the country over that 3 year span IMO
Calipari - 2010-2015 was incredible, but it did have low points that get glossed over i.e. mediocre regular season in 2011, really really bad regular season in 2013 and 2014, but amazing tournament runs and all-time teams.