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Louisville, not Michigan, got Rick Pitino because of a game of squash

Rick Pitino

Louisville coach Rick Pitino listens to a reporter’s question during a news conference, Tuesday, March 27, 2012 in Louisville, Ky. Louisville will be facing Kentucky in the national semifinals of the NCAA college basketball tournament at the Final Four on Saturday in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)

AP

Rick Pitino went on SiriusXM Radio this week and told a terrific story about how he ended up at Louisville. James Jahnke of the Detroit Free Press did the heavy-lifting of transcribing the interview:

“The day that I committed to Louisville (in 2001), I signed an agreement to be the next head coach of Michigan, and I was fired up to be the coach at Michigan,” Pitino said during an interview on SiriusXM radio this week. The athletic director at the time, who’s no longer there, was playing squash, and my wife came up, she just didn’t want me to go to the West Coast, UNLV, and be away from the children. She agreed, ‘OK, let’s go to Michigan.’”

“I was living right on Thom Avenue in Boston, and she came up and threw her book at me, and said, ‘You know, you’re afraid to go tot Kentucky.’ It’s once every two years, what’s the big deal? They’re going to boo you, they’re going to yell things, for one game. What is the big deal? You don’t know anybody at Michigan, you’ve never been there, and now you’re going to pass on all your friends and your children, you’re older son, who’s settled down there, why would you do that?’

“‘You always say in this book you wrote that you’d rather live one day as a lion than 1,000 as a lamb.’ She said, ‘I didn’t know I was married to a curse word, and a lamb.’ She went down the stairs. She said, ‘I don’t understand any of this. The game of life is more important than the game of basketball. Your children are (in Kentucky), they grew up there. We need to go back to Louisville, and (athletic director) Tom Jurich is the guy you need to work for.

“I tried to call the AD at Michigan between 12 and 1. I had a false name I would give him, a fake name, and he would call me back. I couldn’t get a hold of him because he was playing squash. The secretary said he demands that he doesn’t get interrupted unless it’s an emergency, and if you want, you can leave a voicemail. I left a voicemail and went to Louisville, and I’m really happy I did.”

Michigan fans are probably quite happy about the way things have worked out for their program under John Beilein, but I can’t help but wonder if they would have enjoyed Pitino more than Tommy Amaker.

Rob Dauster is the editor of the college basketball website Ballin’ is a Habit. You can find him on twitter @robdauster.