The following is Kentucky coach John Calipari’s statement regarding the cancellation of all NCAA winter and spring championships for the 2020 season due to coronavirus outbreak. These will be Calipari’s only comments at this time (as of Thursday night, March 12, 2020). His Kentucky Wildcats finished the 2019-20 campaign with a 25-6 mark, including 15-3 in SEC action, as well as capturing the school's 49th regular season SEC championship. Kentucky also ranked No. 8 in the Associated Press' Top 25 poll that was released on March 9.
“Today’s news has stunned all of us. It’s just now sinking in for me. As disappointed as we all are, this was the right decision for the health of our nation.

“I’m saddened for everyone. My heart is broken for our guys, but I’m equally as disappointed for the thousands of student-athletes across the country in all sports and at all levels who won’t have a chance to experience that shining moment that they’ve worked so hard for.
“It’s a tough situation. It was hard to tell my guys they won’t have a shot at what they’ve been working for all year – as I’m sure it was for so many other coaches across the country. But there are bigger things at stake here and I understand the decision. It’s no one’s fault.
“As for this team, I’m really going to miss this group. I’m so disappointed they didn’t get to experience a run in the NCAA Tournament because they’ve worked so hard and they deserve it. They were so good to each other.
“I don’t say this lightly: I think I had the national championship team, and this group should go down as one of the most loved teams in my tenure here.
“I want our fans to think in terms of, what if we had made it to the Final Four? What if we had won the whole thing? I hope our fans remember them like that. By winning the league by three games this year showed who they were.
“They had a chance win every game because they played hard, they played together and they pulled for one another. Every player was the best they had ever been as an individual.
“As I’ve said with my other teams that were Final Four teams and the national championship group, we never had a bad practice. Some of them may have been a little better than the others, but not once did I walk out and say, “That was awful.” Not once this year.
“I met with them as a team on the way back to Lexington and I’ll have individual meetings with them tomorrow so they can figure out what’s next. We’re still working through all that. Whatever that is for each individual player, we’ll be there every step of the way for them.
“I’m going to say it again: I’m going to miss coaching this group.”
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