LEXINGTON, Ky.(AP)
Kentucky's restless two weeks are over. The Wildcats have a
new coach in Billy Gillispie, who will try to restore some of the
luster to college basketball's winningest school.
Athletic department spokesman Scott Stricklin said Friday the
hiring of the former Texas A&M coach will be announced at an
afternoon pep rally, followed by a news conference.
Gillispie agreed to a seven-year contract to succeed Tubby
Smith, university spokesman Jay Blanton said. Financial terms
weren't immediately available. The school's Athletics
Association Board scheduled an afternoon meeting to make the hire
official.
Gillispie becomes Kentucky's sixth coach in the last 76
years and follows Smith, who spent a decade in the glare of the
sport's brightest spotlight before bolting to Minnesota.
Gillispie led the Aggies to the NCAA tournament's round of 16
this year for the first time since 1980.
The Wildcats turned to Gillispie after another Billy _
Florida's Billy Donovan _ decided Thursday to stay with the
Gators. Texas' Rick Barnes also indicated Thursday he
wasn't interested, but the job was never formally offered to
anyone other than Gillispie.
Smith left the Wildcats after 10 seasons to coach Minnesota last
month, with four years left on his contract.
Gillispie is 100-58 in five seasons as a coach. He spent the
last three years with the Aggies, molding the longtime also-ran
into a Big 12 power. Texas A&M went 27-7 this season.
His success made him a hot commodity. He was approached by
Arkansas after Stan Heath was fired, but decided to stay with the
Aggies, agreeing to a contract worth $1.75 million.
The 47-year-old coach, however, never signed, and he didn't
hesitate when Kentucky came calling. Texas A&M athletic
director Bill Byrne gave Barnhart permission to speak to Gillispie
on Thursday night. By Friday morning the job was his.
Gillispie was an assistant under Bill Self at Tulsa and Illinois
before coaching UTEP in 2002. He coached the Miners for two
seasons, surviving a 6-24 season in 2002-03, then producing a 24-8
record the next year.
Texas A&M lured him in 2004, and Gillispie didn't waste
time turning around a program that went winless in Big 12 play the
year before his arrival. The Aggies made it to the NIT his first
season and the NCAA tournament the next two.
Behind senior point guard Acie Law, the Aggies spent most of the
2006-07 season ranked in the top 10. They finished 13-3 in the Big
12.
Gillispie's finest moment came at Rupp Arena, guiding the
Aggies to wins over Penn and Louisville in the opening rounds of
this year's NCAA tournament. The Louisville game featured
Smith's predecessor, Rick Pitino, coaching against Smith's
successor, Gillispie, on Kentucky's home court.
Gillispie is the sixth Kentucky coach since 1931, when Hall of
Famer Adolph Rupp began a 42-year reign that turned the Wildcats
into a national power. Rupp won four national titles, with Joe
Hall, Pitino and Smith adding one each.
Kentucky's failure to return to the Final Four since winning
the title in Smith's debut season of 1997-98 was a sore spot
for Wildcats fans accustomed to success.
Smith compiled a 263-83 record as the Wildcats' coach and
his teams advanced at least to the second round of the NCAA
tournament in each of his 10 seasons. But because the program lost
10 or more games under Smith five times, some critics labeled him
"10-loss Tubby."
Kentucky went 22-12 this season and was seeded No. 8 for the
second straight year, with the tournament outcome the same as well.
Last year, top-seeded Connecticut knocked off the Wildcats in round
two. This year, it was top-seeded Kansas.
Gillispie inherits a team facing a number of questions. Star
center Randolph Morris, who played perhaps his best ball in the SEC
and NCAA tournaments, signed with the New York Knicks.
Morris' top backup, Lukasz Obrzut, was a departing senior,
as was starting power forward Bobby Perry and his backup, Sheray
Thomas. The top center now appears to be Jared Carter, who missed
almost the entire season after shoulder surgery. Seldom-used
freshman Perry Stevenson could start at power forward.
The team returns three starting guards _ freshman Derrick Jasper
and juniors Joe Crawford and Ramel Bradley _ as well as freshman
Jodie Meeks.
Smith's departure leaves Kentucky's recruiting class in
limbo. Smith had concentrated on forward Patrick Patterson, a
teammate of O.J. Mayo's in Huntington, W.Va., and guard Jai
Lucas of Houston, son of former NBA player and coach John Lucas.
The players have yet to sign letters of intent.
___
AP Sports Writer Will Graves in Louisville, Ky., contributed to
this report.
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