Former Memphis coach Josh Pastner describes the pressure of replacing John Calipari

Former Memphis coach Josh Pastner describes the pressure of replacing John Calipari

Published Feb. 23, 2017 2:55 p.m. ET

At some point in the not too distant future, some crazy person is going to try to do the impossible and replace John Calipari at Kentucky. At 58-years-old, Coach Cal won’t be around Lexington forever and when he does step aside (either through retirement, or by going to the NBA), someone will have massive shoes to fill.



It’s a situation that one man already knows well: Josh Pastner. The current Georgia Tech coach replaced Calipari at his last stop in Memphis, before leaving for Atlanta last spring. Despite his success – Pastner won over 70 percent of his games at the school – he never could match Calipari, who went to the Sweet 16 or beyond in each of his final four years at Memphis.

This week, Pastner joined “The Sidelines Podcast” with FS1 insider Evan Daniels to discuss the pressure that comes with following Calipari. Pastner’s story begins before Cal even announced he was going to Lexington, when speculation ran wild throughout Memphis:

“Do you recognize that when he was deciding whether or not to take the Kentucky job or stay at Memphis, did you know there was, from the local news station, the helicopter swirling his house. [It] was hovering over his house trying to get an inside peek into his house. And I told people ‘this wasn’t for a hostage negotiation.’ This was for whether he was taking the Kentucky job or not. That is how much Memphis basketball means to that city. And that’s what it was like to follow that guy, John Calipari.

I’ll never forget that when he said he was taking the Kentucky job the city was in absolute mourning. The people were so depressed, upset. There was anger, there was resentment, there was depression. And it was going on for like seven days. And I’m telling you, not for one second did I think about being the Memphis coach. Who wanted to follow that guy? He won over 90 percent of his games his last four years there. It was the most wins ever over a four-year period in the NCAA.”

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“I say this, that in the basketball world, the seven years… following him was the most intense, debated, scrutinized, debated situation. Especially in a 50-mile radius, because of what basketball meant in that city. People from the outside or that haven’t been there don’t understand it. I tell people that Memphis Tigers’ basketball is like you’re the Green Bay Packers or the New York Yankees or Alabama football in the SEC. People are so emotionally invested.

So for seven years I couldn’t hide. There was no chance to grow and build. Everything we did was debated. It was 24/7/365. Even my halftime interviews people didn’t like sometimes.”

“I felt pressure from the day I got the job. And I would tell you that for seven years every win was such a relief... Not only the thrill of victory, but the relief that the next couple days I could have like sanity in my mind.

And that every loss, it ate at me. Like, I wouldn’t go outside. I would be internally depressed after a loss because I felt like I let the city down. Like I let everybody down. And it ate at me like you wouldn’t believe. For seven years. For seven years it was like that. Every game, I lived and died by every game. It wasn’t healthy, it wasn’t smart.”

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