updates | March 25, 2026

Report: John Calipari's Future as Kentucky HC to Be Decided Soon After Oakland Upset | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 21: Head coach John Calipari of the Kentucky Wildcats walks off the court after losing to the Oakland Golden Grizzlies during the second half in the first round of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 21, 2024 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Oakland Golden Grizzlies won, 80-76. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images)Joe Sargent/Getty Images

A resolution on the short-term future of Kentucky men's basketball coach John Calipari could come relatively quickly, according to Matt Jones of Kentucky Sports Radio.

Jones provided an update Saturday—two days after the third-seeded Wildcats were upset by Oakland in the first round of the 2024 NCAA tournament—referencing Kentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart:

Matt Jones @KySportsRadio

Here is where the UK Basketball situation stands right now:<br><br>The decision is all in Barnhart's hands. I get the sense that if he decides he wants to move on, the money will be there for reasons <a href="">@Andy_Staples</a> described in his video yesterday. <br><br>There is a sense of nervousness with…

The pressure on Calipari has steadily been building.

Going 9-16 and missing the NCAA tournament altogether in 2020-21 was bad but could be chalked up as a bit of a fluke under exceptional circumstances created by the COVID-19 pandemic. The fact that Kentucky has suffered two first-round exits in the last three years—the first coming as a No. 2 seed—represents a worrying trend.

Not to mention, the time since the Wildcats' last Final Four appearance (2015) continues to grow.

To some degree, Calipari is a victim of his own success. Kentucky was a national champion in his third year at the helm and a national runner-up two seasons later. He turned the program into an assembly line for players with NBA aspirations.

But Wildcats fans aren't wrong for expecting more relative both to where the team was early in the 2010s and the talent Calipari continues to attract.

Kentucky assembled the No. 1 class in 247Sports' composite team rankings for 2023. This was supposed to be the year Calipari silenced his increasing number of skeptics. Instead, the discourse is hitting a fever pitch.

The school would be facing a nearly $35 million buyout were Calipari to be fired without cause. Andy Staples of On3 explained why that may not be an impediment to making a coaching change

Andy Staples @Andy_Staples

I don't know if Kentucky will pull the trigger and fire John Calipari, but the $33 million-plus buyout is not as daunting as it sounds.<br><br>My college football people know all buyout math is not equal. <a href="">

Looking at the bigger picture, things can undoubtedly be worse for Kentucky.

The Billy Gillispie era was brief but disastrous. Tubby Smith's first year set a high bar he was unable to match in any of his subsequent nine seasons. Older fans will recall the state of things before Rick Pitino took over in 1989.

Maybe the administration continues to believe in Calipari and isn't swayed by the recent March Madness results. That's probably not an opinion shared by many within the fanbase, and it wouldn't be unreasonable to conclude that Calipari's tenure has simply run its course.