Enterprise Journalism Release – December 30, 2009

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Enterprise Journalism Release – December 30, 2009

Coach Cal Cleans House at Kentucky – Former Wildcats Describe What Happened

Outside the Lines (Sunday, 9 a.m. ET, ESPN)

When John Calipari became Kentucky basketball coach this summer, he inherited a roster put together by his predecessor, Billy Gillispie. But Calipari needed roster room for his own recruits, including sensational freshman John Wall, and six of Gillispie’s players say they were encouraged to leave. Since athletic scholarships are renewed on an annual basis, the players had little recourse but to leave if they actually wanted to play, so they left. Some players tell Outside the Lines Calipari told them that they were unlikely to get much playing time in his system if they stayed. Several players said the dramatic roster turnover at Kentucky is an example of how coaches have little loyalty to returning student-athletes, especially when a new coach is hired. Kentucky officials say Calipari just wanted players who fit his style of play. Outside the Lines‘ Tom Farrey examines Kentucky’s roster turnover under John Calipari.

“I thought I was going to finish my career there, graduate from UK.” — Kevin Galloway, guard, who left Kentucky after meeting with new coach John Calipari

“It hurt because I abided by the rules. I did everything I was supposed to. … Kept up a good GPA, went to class every day, didn’t fail any tests. …. I feel like just for following my part of the contract, they should follow theirs.” — Matt Pilgrim, forward, on feeling pressured to leave UK

“He was very clear and very honest that (some) may not fit this dribble-drive approach. …It’s a decision that they jointly made, that they might find more playing time elsewhere.” — Dr. Lee Todd Jr., president of the University of Kentucky, on what Calipari told players who eventually left

“If you talk to the average scholarship athlete, they believe they’re on a four-year scholarship or maybe a five-year scholarship. …. But the reality is, there’s no such thing as a four or five-year scholarship. There’s only a one-year renewable.” — Ramogi Huma, head of an advocacy group that lobbies the NCAA and government on behalf of athletes

The View from Up High

College Gameday (Friday’s Rose Bowl coverage)

It’s been the most spectacular shot in sports for a half century — not Kobe’s jumper, or Federer’s forehand — but the “blimp shot,” the wide-and-wonderful view from above that turns any game into a panoramic feast for the eyes. And according to the man who first made it happen, legendary CBS Sports producer Frank Chirkinian, January 1, 2010, will mark the 50th anniversary of the blimp shot’s first use at a college football game: the 1960 Orange Bowl between Georgia and Missouri. Chris Connelly will revisit some of the greatest moments in five decades of blimp-shot history, and share stories of the calls its beauty and news-gathering inspired, from Howard Cosell’s “Ladies and gentlemen, The Bronx is burning,” to Brent Musberger’s iconic “You are looking live…”

“You don’t need a single word, not a single word uttered with a picture like that from above. It says it all” — Frank Chirkinian, CBS Sports producer

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