Jim Calhoun
Jim Calhoun
James A. Calhoun is the former head coach of the University of Connecticut men's basketball team. His teams won three NCAA national championships, played in four Final Fours, won the 1988 NIT title, and seven Big East tournament championships. With his team's 2011 NCAA title win, the 68-year-old Calhoun became the oldest coach to win a Division I men's basketball title. He won his 800th game in 2009 and finished his career with 873 victories, ranking 12th all-time as of...
basketball complete control question teams
I don't have any question that was a very well-coached basketball team. He's got complete control of the way that teams runs.
control entirely fighting game kentucky kept sudden thrust
Sometimes you're thrust into a game that all of a sudden evolves entirely differently than all your game plans. I thought we could take control of this game, and Kentucky kept fighting back. And that was not in the game plan.
control easy eventually fighting kentucky kept routes
There are no easy routes in this tournament. I thought we could eventually take control of this game, but Kentucky kept fighting back.
bracket city control family good honest people rather sunday thinking wrong york
I'll be honest with you that on Sunday all I'll look at is the bracket and see if it's a good bracket. But I'd rather go West. I think New York City is not good for us. There's too much family around. I like having control and not have other people thinking about the wrong thing.
ball carried college control controlled dominated final game good great guard guys inside men name teams terrific
The college game is controlled by guards, has been and will be. You guys are going to try to name all the great big men who have carried their teams to Final Fours recently. You're not going to come up with any. You're going to come up with teams that are dominated by good inside play and terrific guard play. In the college game, guys that control the ball control the game.
control eventually fighting game kentucky kept
I thought we would eventually take control of the game, and Kentucky kept fighting back. That was not in the game plan.
bit quite respond tested
I thought they tested us. I was a little bit disappointed that we didn't respond quite as well.
believed great shot truly
I thought the shot was going to go in. He had a great angle, great shot at the end to go in and I truly believed it was going to go in. But it didn't. We got the shot we wanted.
finally players wore
I think we finally wore them down. They didn't have any more players to play.
difference dominated game kids
I thought our big kids dominated the game. The difference in the game was our power.
beat beaten both cares minutes playing point record saw seed syracuse team today whether
I think we showed up like a team that had glanced at our record and saw we had beaten Syracuse handily both times. My point is that in a tournament, no one really cares what seed you are or whether you beat someone before. It's the 40 minutes you're playing today that's important.
ball credit gets leader louisville offense people runner sure time worked
I think a lot of credit has to go to Louisville when you have a leader out. I'm not sure how well our offense would have been if we didn't have Marcus Williams. Marcus is not the scorer, but he is the runner of the team. He gets the ball to the right people in the right time at the right spots. They didn't have that tonight. They worked like crazy.
attached believe charm charming everybody exactly natural phoenix played tournament truly
I think it's the very charm of exactly what this tournament is about and I truly believe that. We played Gonzaga in 1999 and everybody in Phoenix was attached to them. That's a very natural thing.
anyone basketball clearly great help knows move opportunity support talent
I think this is really a great opportunity for Ed. He clearly has the talent to play basketball at the professional level, but if anyone can make this transition, it is him. He knows he has our support and we will do anything we can to help him make this move successfully.