Most people get excited about games, but I've got to be excited about practice, because that's my classroom.
Our philosophy has always been you better pack your defense and your board work on the road. Because those ugly nights and those poor shooting nights you just have to grind games out. Today, we just had to grind it out.
Our team responded coming out of halftime. I never even imagined coaching 900 games and it is just wonderful.
This team should not have lost back-to-back games. Kentucky was better tonight. This team has to understand that they just can't go out there and play. They have to execute a game plan and be mindful of one possession at a time on offense and defense.
They know as a team they have to get better. We've been talking about this now for four games going into the Duke game as a staff and just basically trying to send out a warning signal to this team.
I learned so much from Sue about the Xs and Os of the game of basketball.
You spend more of the game preparing to win in the final seconds. And that is what separates winners from losers.
If you want to be in the game you better shoot 75% from the line.
Class is more important than a game.
Offense sells tickets, defense wins games, rebounding wins championships.
I won 1,098 games, and eight national championships, and coached in four different decades. But what I see are not the numbers. I see their faces.
You can't win games in the first half but you certainly can lose them. We just dug ourselves too deep a hole in that first half. In the second half we played them even but in that first half we were not comfortable.