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Williams And Minutemen Are Good To The Last Shot
By Joe Burris, Boston Globe Staff, 2/14/1994
AMHERST – University of Massachusetts Medical Center 1, Temple 0.
Doctors at the Worcester-based institution provided a big assist in one the flagship school's most thrilling wins of the season, a 56-55 decision over Temple yesterday, when they gave guard Mike Williams medical clearance to rejoin the team Wednesday. Williams had collapsed on the court during a Jan. 27 game against Cincinnati.
Williams' return at midweek gave him one game and a few practices to prepare for the most important Atlantic 10 Conference showdown of the year. In the closing seconds, he made his presence felt, hitting a pumping, 10-foot scoop shot with three seconds left that gave the 11th-ranked Minutemen the victory over eighth-ranked Temple before a sellout Mullins Center crowd. The win, UMass' fourth over Temple in the last five games, extended the Minutemen's on-campus winning streak to 28 games.
Williams, who looked winded and a step slow in Thursday night's game against Rhode Island, had a team-high 17 points and two steals yesterday. That included a 3-point basket that cut Temple's lead to 49-46 with 4:45 left, and a steal and layup with 3:29 left, making it 49-48.
“Coach John Calipari wanted me to go one-on-one and get a shot off,” said Williams, who went through extensive testing in Worcester and at University Hospital in Cincinnati before being cleared. “I put all the stuff that happened to me in Cincinnati behind, because I needed to stay focused in the game.”
His winning jumper capped a dramatic rally for the Minutemen (19-4, 10-0), who trailed, 47-39, with 7:47 left and looked done for.
“It was good to have Mike at crunch time,” said Calipari. “Everyone knew who was going to get the ball. Mike was to go out and create a play, and, if he was covered, Derek Kellogg was alone in the corner, so he could pass it to him. And the others were to crash the boards hard.
“Mike has been pretty good in practice. It's just that the intensity level of the team has been raised since he's been gone, and he has to continue to raise his intensity level.”
Williams managed to raise Calipari's blood pressure at halftime yesterday and during a practice last week, when he jokingly faked a setback in front of his coach. “Mike doesn't realize that I almost had a heart attack,” said Calipari.
Williams' winning shot also spoiled Temple's bid to claim its first win on UMass' campus since the 1990-91 season. The Owls (17-4, 10-3) held the Minutemen to 32-percent shooting in the second half, limited UMass' leading scorer, Lou Roe, to 9 points and led most of the way.
“They made sure Lou wasn't going to be a factor. I kept telling my players that when you play Temple you have to pass the ball inside to draw the defense, then pass it back out for the shot,” said Calipari.
“They were passing it around on the perimeter, and when you do that, they get in your face.”
But the Owls suffered from several miscues down the stretch, one with 39.2 seconds left, as Rick Brunson, inbounding from the Temple end of the floor, attempted a pass over the halfcourt line to teammate Chris Ozment, who was standing around the UMass 3-point line. UMass forward Donta Bright intercepted the pass, was fouled by Ozment and hit two free throws, giving UMass a 54-53 lead.
Temple forward Eddie Jones (19 points) then hit two free throws with 11.1 seconds left, setting up Williams' heroics. After Williams' jumper, Temple guard Aaron McKie (20 points) attempted a 3-pointer in the final second, but wasn't close.
“I think there were a couple of times in the game when we usually stop a team and we were beat on the boards,” said Temple coach John Chaney. “On Williams' game-winner Rick Brunson went after the big play. He went after the steal. When he left his feet, he created a crease and Williams just went through it.”
Chaney, Calipari In Confrontation
By Joe Burris, Boston Globe Staff, 2/14/1994
Yesterday's UMass-Temple game had plenty of tension and fireworks. But not nearly as many as the postgame news conference.
Temple coach John Chaney, who calmly spoke to the media about the game and then left, returned moments later while UMass coach John Calipari was speaking and initiated a verbal confrontation. Then Chaney charged the podium where Calipari was standing, and the two had to be restrained by UMass players, Temple players and assistant coaches and a Mullins Center events staff person.
While Calipari spoke about his team's 56-55 victory, Chaney entered the news conference room from the back door and said, “Can I please say something? Coach, you don't say expletive to officials without me being involved in it. I'm not going to be a party to that. Against George Washington you won with three expletive calls down the stretch. You had the best guys out there today. Three class guys.”
“You weren't out there coach,” Calipari answered. “You don't know a thing about it.”
Apparently the two were referring to a disussion witnesses said they saw Calipari having with officials after the game.
“You send your kids out there pushing and shoving,” Chaney continued. “I get my expletive blasted at West Virginia and . . . ”
“Coach, let me tell you something,” said Calipari, at which time Chaney ran toward him. He was restrained and carried out by UMass guard Mike Williams, Temple forward Eddie Jones, Temple assistant Dean Demopoulos and the Mullins Center event staff person. UMass guard Derek Kellogg restrained Calipari.
Before Chaney left the room, he said, “I'm going to kick your ass. You remember that. When I see you, I'm going to kick your ass. You've got a good team. You don't need that kind of edge. That's why I told my kid to knock your kid in the expletive mouth.”
“Just keep talking coach,” said Calipari. “Just keep talking.” After Chaney left, Calipari paused, said he wouldn't comment on the incident, asked the media not to question his players about it, and left the news conference.
UMass athletic director Bob Marcum was not at the news conference, but said he would speak to Atlantic 10 commissioner Ron Bertovich about the matter. The confrontation brought back memories of the 1990 UMass-Temple game at Curry Hicks Cage, during which Chaney and Calipari got into a shoving match at the scorer's table.
Twenty years later, memories of Calipari-Chaney feud live on
By Stephen Hewitt, Daily Collegian, 2/13/2014
The story of the historic coaching feud between John Calipari and John Chaney – one of the most talked about in college basketball history – starts well before their famous confrontation in the Mullins Center press room 20 years ago on this date.
It started before Chaney’s Temple teams set a standard for dominance that seemingly couldn’t be matched or topped. Before Calipari’s UMass squads, unfazed by the challenge, matched and then topped it.
Even before the Owls and Minutemen regularly battled in one instant classic after another and morphed into not only the Atlantic 10’s, but the country’s fiercest rivalry.
It starts in Philadelphia, where a young UMass assistant coach by the name of Bruiser Flint constantly traded barbs with Temple assistant Dean Demopoulos on Philly’s summer league circuit, the two exchanging back-and-forths whenever they ran into each other. The fiery assistants – one with the team that had already staked its claim as a national powerhouse versus the other with the team just beginning to search for its identity – were setting the table for what was to come between their bosses.
“Dean always had something to say,” said Flint, who is now the head coach at Drexel. “We would go at it a little bit with trash talk. So I think in a way that started it a little bit.”
It started before Lou Roe, who would become one of UMass’ all-time greats, even put on the Maroon and White for the first time, when the power forward from Atlantic City, N.J. developed his own mini-rivalry growing up and playing with guys like Aaron McKie, a shooting guard from Philadelphia who went on to play for Temple.
“Any of those guys from the Philadelphia area that went to those schools, they were like my brothers,” Roe said. “I saw them all the time. It was always a special matchup playing those guys, because I didn’t want to hear their s*!# during the summertime.
“So for me, it was big to beat them so I could walk around with my shoulders pumped out and feeling good during the summer.”
Little did they know that they were laying the foundation, putting the puzzle pieces together for something that blew up bigger than they ever could have imagined.
The build-up
Chaney’s famous charge at Calipari in February 1994 has received so much play over the years that few realize it wasn’t the first time the former Temple coach, who retired in 2006, had gone after an opposing coach.
Flint was a player at Saint Joseph’s in 1984 when he recalled the first time seeing Chaney lose his cool. In those days, it was common for college basketball double-headers to take place at the Palestra in Philadelphia, and on Jan. 14, the historic arena hosted games between St. Joe’s and Penn followed by Temple and George Washington.
After playing, Flint sat down to watch the Owls-Colonials game, and witnessed Chaney attack and grab the throat of GW coach Gerry Gimelstob.
It wasn’t the first time – Chaney actually tried choking former Stanford coach Tom Davis in 1982 – nor would it be the last.
The 1994 episode wasn’t even the first time he went after Calipari.
In February 1990, Temple beat UMass 83-82 in triple overtime at Curry Hicks Cage, but it was what happened late in regulation that grabbed headlines. Chaney was meeting with officials about a shot clock error that negated the Owls a basket, and Calipari tried stepping in to be part of the discussion. Chaney then shoved Calipari and the two had to be separated by their assistants.
“You’re talking about two fiery guys,” Flint said. “And with Coach Chaney, it wasn’t his first time going after somebody.
“He was known for doing that kind of stuff from time to time.”
Beyond his here-and-there temper tantrums, Chaney was one of the best coaches college basketball has ever seen. From 1983 to 2001, Chaney guided the Owls to 17 NCAA Tournament appearances, including 12 straight from 1990 to 2001.
He also set a standard of triumph in the Atlantic 10 that seemed impossible to replicate.
By the time Calipari stepped in as UMass coach in 1988, Chaney had already led Temple to two 18-0 conference seasons, one 17-1 season, an Elite Eight appearance and back-to-back 30-win seasons.
With Chaney and Calipari – at first – it was very much a tale of the wily, proven veteran versus the inexperienced rookie who was hell-bent on making a name for himself.
That disparity in coaching skill and experience showed in the first years of the Chaney-Calipari series, as Calipari lost his first nine meetings against Chaney.
Little by little, year by year, however, that disparity narrowed. The Minutemen’s aforementioned 1990 triple-overtime loss was a sign that Calipari’s program had arrived, but it wasn’t until 1992 that UMass finally broke through with a 67-52 win at the Cage in which the paint fell from the ceiling because the crowd was so loud.
By the time Roe arrived in 1991, the rivalry had already become one to pay attention to. And it was his dominating presence, along with the arrival of Marcus Camby in 1993, which began to spark a changing of the guard in a rivalry that was quickly becoming intense and regularly nationally-televised.
“It was one of those things where the rivalry started getting a little heated,” Flint said. “We were coming up and knocking them off their pedestal a little bit.
“They were really heated battles,” he continued. “John Calipari, the up-and-coming youngster, and John Chaney, the established old guy, Hall-of-Famer. No one really challenged Temple like we did in those days.”
And there was no confrontation quite as big as the one that followed in those days.
The confrontation
Sunday, Feb. 13, 1994. Mullins Center. 2 p.m.. No. 8 Temple at No. 13 UMass.
It was even nationally-televised on ABC, a network that didn’t often air college basketball showcase games.
Nothing else mattered. No game was bigger.
“There was a lot of hype,” said Art Stapleton, who was one of the Massachusetts Daily Collegian’s men’s basketball beat reporters at the time.
It lived up to the hype, too.
With seconds left in a highly competitive, highly physical game, UMass junior guard Mike Williams’ game-winner – in his first game back after collapsing on the court two weeks prior at Cincinnati – lifted the Minutemen to a thrilling 56-55 win over the Owls in front of a jam-packed crowd.
But the biggest headline came after the game.
As Calipari answered questions during his postgame press conference, Chaney barreled through the doors of the Mullins Center press room and started yelling at the UMass coach standing at the podium.
Legend has it that after the game was over, after the students had rushed the floor, Calipari went to the back and waited for the game’s officials in the hallway outside the press room. He didn’t like some of the calls they had made against his team, and he wanted to let them know.
“(He) starts berating them for calls that they missed in the game,” Stapleton said. “An AP reporter overheard him say, ‘You’ll never work in this gym again.’”
Somehow, Chaney, who conducted his press conference before Calipari and went back to the Temple locker room, caught wind of what the UMass coach was saying to the refs and stormed back to the press room.
He opened the doors and started screaming.
Video clips of the confrontation:
“Can I please say something, Coach?” Chaney barked from the back of the room.
“We all just looked around and said, ‘What’s Chaney doing here?’” recalled Joe Burris, then a UMass reporter for the Boston Globe.
“Coach, you don’t say (expletive) to officials without me being involved in it. I’m not going to be a party to that,” Chaney continued. “Against George Washington you won with three (expletive) calls down the stretch. You had the best (referees) out there today. Three class guys.”
“You weren’t out there, Coach,” Calipari responded. “You don’t know a thing about it.”
“You send your kids out there pushing and shoving,” Chaney blasted back. “I get my (expletive) blasted at West Virginia and…”
“Coach, let me tell you something,” Calipari said as he pointed his finger at Chaney.
“Shut up,” Chaney said, at which point he charged the podium.
Williams and UMass point guard Derek Kellogg, who were both in the press conference, stood up and restrained the two from each other.
“I didn’t know what to expect,” recalled Kellogg, now the head coach at UMass. “Obviously it’s a little strange seeing a coach going after another coach, but I didn’t think he was ever going to take it to the next level to be honest.
“I don’t think he was going to throw any blows or punches or anything. Maybe a little wrestling or jostling, but he’s an emotional guy, emotional coach. He’s always been, and he’s going to stick up for his team and program when things aren’t going the way they’re supposed to.”
The shouting match wasn’t over.
“I’ll kill you!” Chaney yelled, being restrained. “You remember that. When I see you, I’m going to kick your ass.
“You’ve got a good team. You don’t need that kind of edge. That’s why I told my kid to knock your kid in the (expletive) mouth.”
Chaney then left, and the press conference continued.
Afterwards, down the hall, those who weren’t in the press room started catching wind of what happened.
Flint was waiting for Calipari in the locker room when he walked in.
“(Calipari) was like, ‘Chaney went after me,’” Flint recalled. “And actually, I busted out laughing and then I realized, he’s dead serious. I was like, ‘Oh man, he’s serious, what happened?’ So he told me what happened.
“And actually at that point I talked to him about Gimelstob. And I was like, ‘Cal this isn’t the first time he went after you in the Cage,’ and he said, ‘But not like this though.’”
The aftermath
Eventually, the frenzy that night at Mullins Center died down.
But the media firestorm was just getting started.
The Minutemen’s next game was two days later at Saint Joseph’s, in Philadelphia of all places, and said firestorm awaited.
“It was absolutely nuts,” Flint said. “They had cameras waiting for us when we got off the plane. I mean, going to St. Joe’s and playing that next game, it was absolutely crazy. The media was absolutely nuts.”
It got even nuttier a week later. On Feb. 24, UMass visited McGonigle Hall in Philadelphia to face none other than the Owls.
“The media couldn’t wait to feast on it,” Burris said.
Stapleton said there were rumors that UMass wouldn’t go to Temple unless Chaney came out and apologized, and in a tear-filled news conference, he did just that.
Still, naturally, there was escalated media presence for the game. Roe said the team needed police escorts from the hotel to the arena and anywhere else they went.
“It was really hard to focus on each and every game,” Roe said. “Every time we went to Philadelphia we had a police escort at the hotel or on the bus or even to escort us into the arena, because that’s just how big that rivalry had become at that time. It was almost like soccer overseas or something. Somebody could have gotten really killed, that’s how bad the blood was.”
Naturally, McGonigle Hall’s small gym filled out. It was standing-room only attendance, and Spike Lee even made an appearance.
Calipari and Chaney even hugged before the game started.
The Minutemen ended up winning the game 51-50, naturally, as Williams banked in a 3-pointer to win it.
Calipari 2, Chaney 0.
Looking back
Those involved and those who were there for the famous confrontation can’t believe it’s been 20 years.
“I thought it was about 18 or 19, not 20,” Roe joked.
Twenty years later, a lot has changed, but people’s memories of the incident haven’t.
Calipari, who now coaches at Kentucky, and Chaney have become good friends. In 1994, after the confrontation, the two got together for a fundraising event for diabetes, Flint said. Calipari was asked to roast Chaney at it.
Roe said the rivalry between Calipari and Chaney was simply natural.
“It’s just like any player, like Karl Malone and David Robinson, those heated rivalries: Sometimes there is bad blood because both sides want to win so bad,” Roe said. “I think that’s what had taken place with Chaney. He’s a hell of a competitor and he chose Cal. Any time when you have two bulls knocking heads, there’s going to be some kind of explosion from the impact.”
Stapleton, two decades later, said as the years have passed, he’s grown to understand where Chaney was coming from when he decided to barge through the Mullins Center press room doors and create a scene that would live on forever in memories.
“Chaney’s point was that you just won a huge game at home on national television and you’re already setting it up the next time you see the referees, that they’re maybe going to give you a call that can help you win,” Stapleton said. “And that was always Calipari’s mindset at UMass. It was always, ‘What’s my next move?’ He never took appreciation for the move he just made; he was always looking one step ahead, and I think that’s where Chaney was trying to cut it off right at the point of attack.
“Now you kind of understand where he was coming from.”
And it was all born out of an unrivaled, passionate and competitive drive that both coaches used to fuel their collective fire.
It was the classic matchup of the veteran versus the prodigy and old school meets new school, one of the best rivalries college basketball has seen and will ever see.
“You get that all together with the right mix,” Burris said. “Intense game, national TV, a lot at stake. It was just a perfect recipe for that.”
Last year, Flint said that Chaney came to visit him at Drexel. They sat around and chatted, and at one point joked about the incident.
“It’s still funny,” Flint said, “because (Chaney) said, ‘I would have kicked Cal’s butt.’”
Some things just never change.
Stephen Hewitt can be reached at [email protected] and followed on Twitter @steve_hewitt.
February 2019: ‘I’ll Kill You!’ An oral history of the John Calipari-John Chaney feud, 25 years later
From the Mass Daily Collegian, 2/13/2019
https://dailycollegian.com/2019/02/ill-kill-you-an-oral-history-of-the-john-calipari-john-chaney-feud-25-years-later/