Some Louisville Cardinal fans won’t give it up.
Rick Pitino was once Big Blue. And once a Cat always a Cat is a mantra for many.
So, in some red & black households, the U of L’s coach remains unloved, his coaching prowess in question. Especially when he’s compared with his beloved predecessor Denny Crum. The Rick’s strategic bench art — or lack thereof, according to this segment of Cardinaldom — remains a sore point.
When I challenged a fellow fan who holds that strident opinion before the Cards opening tourney tilt, he responded, “Please sit next to the court tonight and help Coach Genius with the final three minutes. Simply increasing the fouling and calling more and more time-outs is not a good tactic. Especially when you run out.”
That purported hole in the coach’s resume hasn’t been a problem yet in this year’s tournament.
Louisville jumped on Boise State, 10-1. Midway through the opening half, the margin was cut to three. Within 90 seconds, the steely Cards were up 11. The potato staters never got closer than 10, trailed by 13 at the half and were fried, salted, dipped in ketchup and served up with a burger by 18 at the buzzer.
Guess that coach without game had his guys ready and didn’t need help at crunch time.
On Sunday against the Okies, the Cards fell behind 7-9 because of three David Godbold treys. Then the coach who can’t coach must have said something beneficial during the TV timeout that followed. That particular Sooner was only able to launch three more shots in the half. Closely guarded, he missed them all.
Godbold did net one more from Treyville. It cut Louisville’s lead to 20 with 18:03 to play. From there, the U of L sweated out a 78-48 victory.
Guess that coach without game had his guys ready and didn’t need help at crunch time.
Truth: Louisville still hasn’t one a close one this season. Whether that will hurt against Bruce Pearl’s loosey goosey Tennessee Vols will play out Thursday night.
I’ll give those naysaying Cardinal fans this. Pitino isn’t the bench coach that Denny Crum was. Then again, nobody else was or is. Cool Hand Luke was the master. Period.
But it’s way past time to move on.
Rick Pitino’s skills are manifest. He adds value at tournament time. More than any coach anywhere today. The stats don’t lie. His teams are the best at exceeding seeding expectations.
During the season, U of L shot 46% from the field, 35% from behind the arc. Coming into the NCAAs off two consecutive losses, the squad proceeded to hit 29-52 against Boise, 32-54 against Oklahoma. They connected on half their treys in both tilts.
Call it what you will. This guy’s opinion is coaching has a lot to do with it.
In the opener, Terrence Williams hit the first seven points, then morphed into Evil TWill. He jacked up off balance shots outside the offensive scheme, refused to drive it all the way to the basket and generally did his best to sabotage the game plan. Two days later, Williams only showed up as Evil TWill one trip down the court.
Call it what you will. This guy’s opinion is coaching has a lot to do with it.
Rick Pitino has four days to prepare U of L for Tennessee. You tell me another active coach you’d rather have doing it.