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Billy Gillispie Ousted at Kentucky
Posted Mar 27, 2009 4:03 PM
 By WILL GRAVES
(AP)
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LEXINGTON, Ky. (March 27) - Billy Gillispie thought winning at Kentucky would be enough, that adding a Final Four banner to the rafters at Rupp Arena would endear him to one of college basketball's most ardent fan bases more than any handshake, autograph or toothy grin ever could.
He won, but not enough. He shook hands, but not enough.

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After just two years, Kentucky had had enough.
The school fired Gillispie on Friday, citing philosophical differences between the hard-scrabble coach and an administration that views its head coaching position as more than just another job.
"There is a clear gap in how the rules and responsibilities overseeing the program are viewed," said athletic director Mitch Barnhart. "It is a gap I do not believe can be solved by just winning games."
Losing too many games during Gillispie's brief two-year tenure certainly didn't help.
The Wildcats went 40-27 under Gillispie, including a 22-14 mark this year that tied for the second-most in the program's 106-year history and forced them to miss the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1991.
After enduring a rocky 18-13 season in 2007-08, the Wildcats appeared to have turned a corner two months ago.
Kentucky roared to a 5-0 start in the Southeastern Conference behind the play of star Jodie Meeks, who poured in a school-record 54 points in a victory over Tennessee in January.
Things started to unravel shortly thereafter. Kentucky dropped eight of its final 11 regular season games, including a deflating home loss to woeful Georgia on Senior Night. The Wildcats couldn't make it out of the SEC tournament quarterfinals, relegating them to the National Invitation Tournament for the first time in 30 years.
The Wildcats fought valiantly in the NIT, edging UNLV at Memorial Coliseum, the same place where a pep rally was held on the day of Gillispie's hiring two years ago. A victory at Creighton followed, and Kentucky hung tough with Notre Dame until the final moments.
He admitted on his radio show Thursday that winning 40 games in two years is good at a lot of places. Those places, however, aren't Kentucky.
"A lot of teams would be happy with 22 (wins) but not always around here when it's not the right 22," Gillispie said.
In a state where basketball is religion and its most successful coaches and players are treated with reverence long after they've moved on, Gillispie could never quite fit in.
"This is a complete job that requires a lot more than just coaching and recruiting," university president Lee T. Todd Jr. said.
Gillispie signed a memorandum of understanding in Barnhart's house following a whirlwind courtship that lasted less than a day. Yet he never signed a formal contract as his lawyer and the university fought over the wording.
In the end, that decision may end up costing him millions. Barnhart said the university did not plan to pay Gillispie a $6 million buyout that was to be part of his seven-year deal that remains unsigned.
"Suffice it to say it will be less than that," Barnhart said.
Barnhart said the school would abide by the memorandum of understanding, but he considers it to be a year-to-year contract. Gillispie made $2.3 million annually.
Even as the program suffered embarrassing losses to schools like Gardner-Webb and VMI, Gillispie stubbornly refused to change his coaching strategy. And he continued to hold draining two-hour practices on game day, a move Gillispie said was designed to toughen the players up but sometimes left them spent at the end of close contests.
It's unclear which players will stick around for another rebuilding effort.
Meeks has been noncommittal about his future, though forward Patrick Patterson said on Wednesday he plans on sticking around for his junior season. Gillispie inked two high-profile signees, center Daniel Orton and forward Jon Hood, though they would have options to go elsewhere if they choose.
The Wildcats also have a number of options at coach, so long as they're not set on Florida coach Billy Donovan.
Kentucky actively pursued Donovan two years ago before Donovan decided to stay with the Gators. He said he isn't going anywhere this time either.
"In response to the rumors circulating about my interest in other jobs, I wanted to address this as quickly as possible," Donovan said in a statement. "I am committed to the University of Florida and look forward to continuing to build our program here."
Other candidates could include Memphis coach John Calipari, Oklahoma State coach and former Kentucky star Travis Ford, Michigan State coach Tom Izzo and Louisville coach Rick Pitino.
Pitino remains beloved across much of the state more than a decade after leaving the Wildcats for the NBA. He angered some when he decided to coach arch rival Louisville, though his eight years in Lexington are still considered among the best in the program's long history.
Gillispie's may be remembered as something entirely different, a two-year mistake for a coach and a program ill-suited for one another.
AP Sports Writer Mark Long in Gainesville, Fla., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-03-27 16:35:43

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COMMENTS ( 20 )
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Sdave7596
3:07AM Mar 28 2009 
He has trashed the Kentucky brand......he needs to go...
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Dytimmys
2:00AM Mar 28 2009 
ALSO BTW AS AN ILLINOIS FAN ...MAYBE THEY COULD TAKE BRUCE WEBER..................!
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Dytimmys
1:53AM Mar 28 2009 
AS AN ILLINOIS FAN I WOULD LOVE TO SEE BOBBY KNIGHT GO THERE....THE 2 OF THEM DESERVE EACH OTHER..................HOWEVER THEY WILL HAVE PATINO BACK NO MATTER WHAT LOISVILLE DOES THIS YR
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Chaunceyjr
12:50AM Mar 28 2009 
It would be interesting to know what the "philosophical" differences might be when, in reality, if he would have taken the team to another final four he would still be the coach! ... and with a bonus and contract extension at that! What a bunch of hypocritical liars!
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Diehard9635
12:10AM Mar 28 2009 
Bobby Knight is still available. Now that would bring the fans back.
And the NCAA.
UK retiree
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Brownjb116
11:55PM Mar 27 2009 
They should have given him another year at least
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MMllewis01
9:13PM Mar 27 2009 
The coaching situation at KY is an impossible situation. The fans and alumni are spoiled by past success. Adolph Rupp or Joe B Hall are not going to walk through the door. The school will need to hire a master recruiter to get blue chip players to go to Lexington, and in this era of the one and doners, don't expect to keep them. The program supprters need face reality and lower their expectations and be satisfied with a team that is competitive and represents the school well. There is no messiah out there to lead them back to past glory.
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Wcmorri25
8:40PM Mar 27 2009 
WOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOO he is gone. Billy G should have never been hired for UK to start with. He doesnt fit the mold that a team like UK needs. As far as coaching ability. It has yet to be seen. He had 2 great players at A & M and he played a weaker schedule than he did here. UTEP was an average job at best. Billy D shouldnt be hired either. Yeah he won two championships at Florida but like Tubby he did it with somone elses recruits Look at him now. What is all this about look what Tubby left him to win with. Tubby left Joe Crawford, Meeks, Patterson. My god those are good players. Even Azibuke hadnt decided to leave when Tubby left. Now they need to get a real coach. Someone that has a personna that demands respect to get these young stars to listen. Give him another year??? Look at the recruits he already wasted scholarships on. Miller was the lowest recruit and is the best player he brought in. Look at the recruits he has signed for next year. Nothing special in them. I am a true cat fan, but it will take alot of money to bring in what we need. It will take some one that undestand tradition. Calipari maybe, Bring Larry Brown back to the college ranks. Pat Riley. Only a big time coach is going to fight the ship at UK or Meeks and Patterson will be gone. Then what will we have. Cant wait to see this play out. It would be highly ironic, but what about Bobby Knight or Steve Lavin. Darren Horn going to be more fun watching the coaching situation than games this year. But we needed a change.
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EDFKYBLUE
8:37PM Mar 27 2009 
KY.BASKETBALL FANS ARE WORST THAN AL.FOOTBALL FANS.Y Y Y WHAT DID YOU EXPECT IN TWO YEARS WITH TUBBYS MESS HE LEFT?
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DBVKY59
7:34PM Mar 27 2009 
one had not been to a final 4 in 10 yrs,one started his son at point guard and was the laughing stock of the sec,the other will not be paid 6 mill because he never signed a contract,one left on his own because the heat was hot in the kitchen but what do you expect if you are the highest paid college coach so get your facts right..
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