Baylor's Scott Drew turns down offer to replace John Calipari at Kentucky

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Just days after the surprising departure of former head coach John Calipari, who leaves Lexington to head to Fayetteville to coach the University of Arkansas Razorbacks, the University of Kentucky moved quickly to narrow their coaching search to just one initial candidate. And the one candidate the Wildcats had closed in on was someone who knows both how to win a championship, and how to raise a program from its ashes.

Baylor Bears head coach Scott Drew is one of the longest-tenured coaches in the NCAA. For twenty years, Drew has been the man in charge at Baylor. He’s oversaw the rebirth of the Baylor Bears basketball program, helping the school come out of the darkest period in program history at the time of his arrival, and less than two decades later, winning the program’s first National Title. Even though Drew is by far the most successful coach in program history, the idea that he’d eventually leave Waco, Texas has been one that was long-assumed to be a foregone conclusion. And as soon as the Kentucky job opened up, Drew was considered the most likely candidate to replace John Calipari.

As early as this morning, the assumption was that Drew would be the next head coach of the Kentucky Wildcats, but you know what they say about what happens when you assume something…

… CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander makes an “ass” out of “u” and “me.”

Given the illustrious history of the University of Kentucky men’s basketball program, one would expect that the offer that Kentucky AD Mitch Barnhart was an attractive one that would give Drew a chance to build a coaching legacy in a way that perhaps isn’t a possibility at Baylor. But the prestige of a program such as Kentucky wasn’t enough to lure Drew away from the place he and his family have called home for the last 22 years.

What Scott Drew has done at Baylor

Scott Drew took over the Baylor Bears basketball program in 2003 in the aftermath of the murder of forward Patrick Dennehy at the hands of teammate Carlton Dotson, and if that weren’t enough for Drew to deal with, the murder of Dennehy led the NCAA to open an investigation into the program, and what they found was damning. The result was Baylor being placed on probation and the program being severely restricted when it came to recruiting high school prospects and potentially signing them to scholarships. But throughout the entire ordeal, Scott Drew continued to prove he was the right man for the job.

“I’m more encouraged than when I first got here,” Drew said in February 2004, after the school sent their report of major program violations to the NCAA, per Jim Vertuno of The Associated Press. “The community and this school have been so supportive of this team it just makes you want to work harder.”

Drew kept his promise and continued to work hard, and by 2008 he had led the program to their first NCAA Tournament appearance in twenty years. Baylor would go on to appear in seven of the next eleven NCAA Tournament’s, and finally, in 2021, the Baylor Bears capped off what was undoubtedly the best season in program history, knocking off the previously undefeated Gonzaga Bulldogs in the National Championship Game, cutting down the nets for the first time in program history.

Since Baylor won the National Title three years ago, they haven’t advanced beyond the 2nd round of the NCAA Tournament, but you won’t soon find anyone within Baylor University looking to move on from Scott Drew. In fact, the school appears to be fully behind the man who saved their basketball program from two-plus decades of irrelevancy.

 

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