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Pitino and Calipari used to spar when the Cardinals battled the Tigers in Conference USA. Having two of the nation's most high-profile coaches 70 miles apart could add another layer to one of the country's most bitter rivalries.
The two met in the 1996 Final Four when Pitino was at Kentucky and Calipari was at Massachusetts. The Wildcats won 81-74 on their way to a sixth national championship.
Pitino left for the NBA a year later, and Kentucky has been in a small but steady decline ever since.
Gillispie was hired to bring some of the swagger back and instead the Wildcats failed to make the NCAA tournament this year for the first time since 1991. He was let go last week after Barnhart said the match of coach and program wasn't a "good fit."
Barnhart knows he'll need to find a leader who can thrive under the unique spotlight coaching the Wildcats provides. Calipari doesn't lack for charm, though his past NCAA transgressions could be problematic for a program still sensitive of its image following the recruiting scandal left behind by Eddie Sutton in the late-1980s.
Massachusetts had to vacate its '96 Final Four appearance after star Marcus Camby admitted to accepting gifts from a sports agent.
Calipari moved on to the NBA before landing at Memphis in 2000. The Tigers have not had any troubles during his tenure while developing into a national powerhouse.
Kentucky, however, is hardly the first program to flirt with Calipari, who often has received a bigger paycheck from Memphis as a result of the interest.
He signed a contract extension in April 2008 that pushed his deal through the 2012-13 season giving him a $500,000 a year raise with a $5 million bonus if he finishes the contract. That pushed his annual salary to $2.35 million.
He got that deal after taking Memphis to an NCAA Division I record 38 wins and the national championship game -- the program's first Final Four since 1985 and first NCAA final since 1973. The Tigers lost 75-68 in overtime to Kansas.
"What this contract has done is wiped out 99 percent of that stuff, and I told them that I appreciate that. It's not only the base salary, but it's also the longevity bonus which wipes out the others. There are no other places. This is the place," Calipari said at a news conference when the contract was signed.
AP Sports Writer Teresa M. Walker in Nashville, Tenn., and AP writer Beth Rucker in Memphis, Tenn., contributed to this report
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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