Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

Video/Transcript: UK Coach Calipari Pre-Tennessee Press Conference Comments

Tags: shot playing
Video courtesy of kywildcatstv

COACH CALIPARI

On the team coming together …
“They’re becoming empowered. The guys that listen to anything I say in this group know every year that I’m talking about empowering the team and it being about them. They’re getting there. I think you’re seeing each guy flow into a role that suits him, and that’s what this is about.”

On if NCAA Tournament seeding is more important this year because it’s a wide-open year …
“It’s always important. The history (shows) the higher seeds win more than the lower seeds. It’s just how it is. And very rarely, every 10 years, you’ll have a No. 10 seed or No. 11 seed pop through – every 10 years. And you can say, ‘Well, is this one of those years?’ We won’t know till the stuff starts, but I will tell you that it’s starting to group. The disappointing thing for us is, in our league if you lose a road game, it’s like devastating. It was only a couple of weeks ago we lost at Auburn. And Auburn hasn’t won a whole lot since then, but so? OK, we lost a road game. And we’re fine. I just hope like a game like South Carolina played (Tuesday at Missouri), they just played bad. These kids, they’re not machines they’re, not computers. They play bad at times and you lose a game. And it happens in every single league, except our league it becomes like this big issue, which is just disappointing. But I think at the end of the day we’ll get five to six teams in and then we’ll have teams advance like we always do.”

On pushing to improve NCAA Tournament seeding now with a few weeks left in the season …
“For all of us. You know, when we walk into the conference tournament that’s all I talk about. It’s about seeding more than anything else. My concern right now, and I’m focused on this team, we’ve got three weeks left. The season has blown by. There have been ups and downs, but the greatest thing is you see the progress. You see that guys are doing it. And we’re still not where we need to be, but we’re moving in that direction.”

On Alex Poythress …
“He did some stuff yesterday. I don’t know exactly what he did, but I saw him stretch and I heard he went out on the court and did some stuff. So he won’t play, I doubt this week.”

On if Poythress is on track for his original return prognosis of a few weeks ….
“I don’t know. You’d have to talk to (athletic trainer) Chris (Simmons), but you know, when a guy gets hurt for me sometimes I forget their name. I’m like focused on the guys that are Playing and just OK. And then when he comes back, ‘Hey man, what’s your name, by the way?’ ”

On UK shooting well from the perimeter recently …
“We’ve been doing stuff in practice to get them to in transition to let balls go. We’ve done that. The main thing is what we’re doing on defense: scrambling it up and playing better schemes and playing a little bit different. Doing the things we’re doing, I think that’s helped us and that’s gotten us easy baskets and transition baskets and jump shots that are open. Guys are making them. We’ve got a good shooting team. We do. I think Derek Willis being a stretch four changes what we do and how teams have to play us. So that makes us different.”

On if making shots helping defense …
“Yeah, probably. You miss one-footers, you miss free throws, it’s deflating. So when you’re making shots and guys are playing well – but you know this team plays off Tyler Ulis. It’s just obvious. Everybody sees it and knows it. (They) say, ‘Oh, they’re playing confident.’ Well, he’s building everybody’s confidence. That’s what he does. He’s shooting the ball better. He’s getting guys balls where they can make plays. He’s controlling the tempo. We play fast when he wants to play fast. We scrum up the game when he wants to scrum it up. He’s helping. I would like to see (us) throw the ball down in the post a little bit more, see if any of these guys can give us anything down in there. Maybe throw it to Isaac (Humphries), maybe throw it to Skal (Labissiere) a little bit more and see. As we move on in the season, it would be nice to get a couple easy baskets by throwing it in there.”

On who steps up when Tyler Ulis has an off game …
“Probably the other guards. They’ll step up and probably a frontline guy. They’d cover for him if he was not playing well. But here’s the biggest thing: He’s playing way better than he was a month ago. You can’t say well he was playing this well earlier in the year. No, he wasn’t. He is way better as a player right now. One of the things he’s figured out, there are games that we walk into and I say it’s a 15-assist game because they’re going to crowd the lane. You’re not going to go split it and have nothing there. You’re going to be an assist guy. Last game he had 12 assists and he still scored because he had shots and he knocked down shots. He’s way better as a player and he’s way better as a leader than he was a month or two ago.”

On finishing games defensively …
“I mean, everyone has taken on that responsibility. You know when you have a new team like we do, one, the stuff we are asking them to do is very hard. They’d rather do something else because it’s easier, and defensively is one of those. ‘I’d rather let someone else defend and I’ll kind of mess around over here and hope my guy doesn’t get the ball.’ Well, they’ve all taken on the challenge now of defending and rebounding. But again, I told you guys a couple of weeks ago, we’re going game to game. We’re worried about Tennessee. We’re not worried about anyone after that. We’re worried about what we’re doing in this game and how we’ll play. This team beat us last time. We had a nice lead and they came back and basically just ran us over. Beat us by 30 in a 25-minute stretch. So we’ve got our hands full in what we’re doing. And again, how we’re preparing we’re just trying to say we’re not backing up. Let’s keep going forward.”

On what has clicked for Jamal Murray over the past few games…
“Well, he’s getting the ball by the man and he’s not messing around with it as much, which means he’s not turning it over as much. His shot selection has gotten better week by week by week. He’s getting to the rim instead of settling for all jump shots, step-backs and fades. When he has shots, he takes them. His decision-making as a basketball player has gotten better and better.”

On Murray taking a backseat to Ulis …
“It’s not really a backseat. The kid is probably one of the leading scorers in the country. That’s a heck of a backseat. Can I jump in there with you? He’s playing a lot like Eric Bledsoe played, when he played with John Wall. I can remember Eric hitting 32 against Wake Forest in the NCAA Tournament, just going crazy. I remember 27-28 down on the road at Florida. They play off each other. One game one does it, the other game the other does it. He’s still playing in pick-and-rolls. He’s playing as a scoring guard, which is helping him. The whole thing is not the position; it’s your decision-making. And that’s what’s improving for him and making him a better player and us a better team.”

On how much blowing a 21-point lead to Tennessee the first time got guys’ attention …
“That’s so long ago I can’t even remember what happened. Stuff happens. You don’t get a big lead and lose, but sometimes you do. Somebody gets hot. Somebody misses free throws. A play here, a play there, all of a sudden it’s six and it’s a different game on the road. But we’re by that. We’re worried about this game. Rick’s (Barnes) is doing a great job like he always does. They’ve taken on his personality. They’re defending. They’re tough. They’re packing it in defensively. They’re playing you, but everyone else is in the lane. They’re rebounding like crazy. They’ve got some guards that can score. They’re scoring – even with their size – they’re scoring around the basket. Playing man, playing some zone. Will press you a little bit. He’s doing a heck of a job with his team.”

On how Ulis’ performance this year compare with other point guards he’s had in the past …
“Your point guard is always important. I mean, it’s always (important). I’ve had some really, really good ones, and they’re important. It’s like anything else: There are 25 teams in the country, right now if something happens to that player, their team, they’re not the same. They’re done. And so, his importance to this team is obvious. I think he’s playing like a player of the year in the nation. And a lot of it will be how we finish and how we do, but when you look at what he’s done and how he’s doing it and how our team just now coming together and him being the leader and the things he’s doing with the Breakfast Club and all the other stuff, he should be a candidate for player of the year.”

On Jamal Murray having the definition of settling for a shot change for him because of how well he’s shot it lately …
“He has the green light. He has to respect that. He knows what a good shot is. He knows the kind of shot we don’t want him to take: a bailout 3 when he can create. Look, when you’re bleeding, you have to stop the bleeding. You can’t take a bailout shot because you will not get fouled. A bailout shot has about a 25 percent chance of going in, especially when you’re bleeding. So to stop the bleeding you’ve gotta create a shot that you can either make or get fouled, or do it for your teammate. You cannot shoot a bailout 3. And that’s the only thing. He has the ultimate greenlight – and he does. Early in the year he didn’t handle it as well, and that’s why everybody said shot selection, decision making, duh duh duh duh. Now he respects it and he’s doing fine.”

On what did Marcus Lee do to stay out of foul trouble …
“He was really active. He was really alert. He was playing before the ball hit the rim. He wasn’t waiting for stuff to happen and then try to react to it. He was the initiator, and some of the other games he’s not. He’s on his heels. But he’s doing good. He’s doing good.”

On if a zone can stop the bleeding during runs …
“Yeah, yeah. And we work on the zone. Tony (Barbee) has coached a lot more zone than I have, but we work on it. We work on it every day, and when we get in foul trouble, we went to it. And even the kids said, ‘Let’s go zone. They’re trying to foul out our whole team.’ So they went zone and all of a sudden it slowed them down in their tracks. So yeah, we have that. I just, the history for me, when they go zone, we cannot make a shot, and when we go zone, they make every shot. I don’t know why that is, but I’ve done this 30 years and that’s just a feeling.”


This post first appeared on Wildcats Thunder, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

Video/Transcript: UK Coach Calipari Pre-Tennessee Press Conference Comments

×

Subscribe to Wildcats Thunder

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×