The transfer portal for major college basketball coaches is closed.
Well, not really.
That never happens.
If a coach wants to up and leave for the NBA this Friday, that can happen, so long as there’s an NBA team eager to make a change. It’s always been this way. They can depart despite signed contracts, but players who have no such arrangement are excoriated for seeking out better deals.
That’s the way of college athletics for the near future, apparently.
But we have seen every major position that had been open this spring filled as of last Friday. And there’s one tradition you can count on: The Sporting News grading the coaching hires at big-time basketball programs. It’s as dependable a rite of spring as a crocus plant busting through the thawing Earth.
MORE: If coaches can bolt programs, why not players?
New coaching hires at major programs
Arkansas
Hired: John Calipari
Record: 855-263
Overview: The Razorbacks are getting Calipari at the close of the toughest four-year stretch of his college career – which included three March Madness appearances, two top-3 NCAA seeds and three top-3 finishes in the SEC. That should tell you something about the talent and accomplishment of the man Arkansas just hired to run its program. They also are getting Calipari at age 65. That doesn’t mean he is short on energy, but it does mean the Razorbacks won’t be getting 15 years out of him, like Kentucky did. There have been plenty of theories about why Calipari won just a single NCAA Tournament game the past three years, and most have them have been proven to be bunk. He supposedly was behind the offensive curve, then produced a 2023-24 attack ranked No. 7 in efficiency at KenPom.com. He supposedly was too wedded to five-star freshmen, but lost twice in the first round as a high seed with multiple upperclassmen in his rotation. No one’s likely to believe it was anything as mundane as bad injury luck. But Arkansas seems convinced it made the right hire. The Razorbacks are correct. How many times do you get the opportunity to land a Hall of Famer at any age?
Grade: A+
MORE: Calipari on new squad: There is no team
BYU
Hired: Kevin Young
Record: 0-0
Overview: For every Fred Hoiberg, there are about a dozen guys like Chris Mullin, Eddie Jordan, Avery Johnson, Mike Dunleavy and, most recently, Juwan Howard and Jerry Stackhouse. Each accepted command of a Division I basketball program with little to no college coaching experience but most often extensive backgrounds playing and coaching professional basketball. Coaches who arrive from professional basketball without having worked extensively in college have about a 9 percent success rate. The problem isn’t whether they know and teach basketball strategy; it’s that knowing and teaching basketball strategy is about 35 percent of the job. One of the few who made this transition successfully: Fred Hoiberg, who now has reached March Madness in half of his 10 seasons as head coach at Iowa State and Nebraska. Young might want to get Hoiberg on the phone.
Grade: C-
DePaul
Hired: Chris Holtmann
Record: 251-171
Overview: It is a measure of DeWayne Peevy’s promise as an athletic director that he could get Holtmann to consider accepting a job that has produced 12 last-place finishes in the past 16 Big East seasons – with four different coaches involved in that struggle. Holtmann received an eight-figure buyout when he departed Ohio State, so he could have waited to see if a less daunting challenge was presented to him. There’s no guarantee he’ll turn around the Blue Demons. Many have tried and failed, and the likes of Jerry Wainwright and Oliver Purnell had demonstrated elsewhere they were capable coaches. Holtmann has, as well.
Grade: B+
Kentucky
Hired: Mark Pope
Record: 187-108
Overview: So many who were invested in Kentucky basketball over the past half-decade were eager for a change in the head coaching position. Was it to punish the coach for failing to advance in recent NCAA Tournaments? Or was it a genuine belief there was a better coach out there, or a coach with a better chance to reach the Sweet 16 and beyond? Mark Pope has a demonstrated ability to design offensive attacks around 3-point shooters, something essential to success in modern college basketball. He only has been a high-major coach for a single season, but four of his five BYU teams won at least 20 games. He will need to navigate the recruiting process at a higher level than he’s been required at any point in his career.
Grade: B
DECOURCY: Kentucky is still a blueblood, but what does that mean in the NIL era?
Louisville
Hired: Pat Kelsey
Record: 261-122
Overview: It’s hard to imagine anyone on this list hired someone with a greater degree of energy and enthusiasm than Kelsey, and his record as a head coach nearly is immaculate. One losing season in a dozen years at the mid/low-major level, only two finishes outside the top three of his league, five NCAA Tournament bids – is that impressive or amazing? It remains puzzling, though, why it took this long to climb to a big-time job.
Grade: B+