John Calipari just lost by 21 to Arizona, and he used his post-game press conference to take a thinly veiled shot at Mark Pope. After all, he wasn't going to let Pope's little jab go without a clap back.
Fans spend a lot of time analyzing John Calipari and Mark Pope. But the truth is, the coaches themselves are doing it too.
With both Kentucky and Arkansas suffering embarrassing exits in the NCAA Tournament, the media jabs have officially resumed. And the latest exchange proves exactly who is currently living in whose head.
Mark Pope uses the politician defense
It all started earlier this week when Mark Pope took to his final radio show of the season. He was hoping to convince frustrated fans that tangible progress has been made during his two-year reign.
It was all about how things are looking better now than they were 3 years ago.
"In the last two years, we lost to the No. 5 and the No. 6 team in the country to be put out of the SEC Tournament," Pope said. "In the four years previous, we lost to No. 9, No. 35, No. 67, and Number 81... In the last two years, we’ve won three games in the NCAA Tournament. In the previous four years, we won one game total."
Factually, he is absolutely right. The math checks out.
But then you take a step back. When you look at the totality of the situation, pairing 14 losses this season with 12 losses last year is not exactly a massive flex. But that also shows you how far Cal let things slide. That it could even be a discussion on if it's better is a story in itself.
Pope here comes across like a politician standing at a podium saying they might not be awesome, but they are certainly better than the last guy.
I guess it works for some, not for me.
John Calipari is the master of the subtle media jab
Never one to miss an opportunity to control a narrative, John Calipari perfectly executed his counter-punch after the blowout loss in the Sweet 16.
After Arkansas was absolutely hammered by Arizona, Calipari took a moment during his post-game press conference to talk about the harsh realities facing college basketball coaches right now.
"We're all in the same boat right now," Calipari noted. "How about this, you have no recruits, you have no idea who's coming back, you don't have the money you had a year ago. You do not. And now all of a sudden you're trying to keep guys, figure out who else out there wants to come and who wants to put like a bidding war, which we wouldn't be involved in."
Now you say may to yourself, Drew "how is that a shot at Mark Pope?" Well, let me explain it to you.
Starting with the recruiting bit. Arkansas already has 3 commitments, they don't have zero. But Kentucky does. Arkansas isn't having money issues, but Goose Givens said that he knew the money wasn't going to be there like last year.
Just a bit odd that these things come out like he said it. Because if you ask him, you can just say he is talking about everyone in general.
But nearly everyone will know what he did. He is awesome at it. But it does show he is still thinking about his old Kentucky home.
The ultimate rent free reality
Calipari is an elite showman, and he is arguably the best in the sport at skirting the facts when he wants to take a shot. When you break down his quote, he is very clearly talking about the situation brewing in Lexington.
But the real takeaway here is not what Calipari said. It is the fact that he felt the need to say it at all.
Just like Arkansas fan and radio host Bobby Bones, when he took to X:
The bad news. Arizona is a really good team.
— Bobby Bones (@mrBobbyBones) March 27, 2026
The good news. At least we aren’t Kentucky.
When your first thought after a loss is about another team, well now, we all know who is living in whose heads rent free.
Arkansas and Kentucky fans will be going at it for a while to come. But now both are in the same spot, sitting at home. And neither fanbase will be happy about that.
