Even when Richard Pitino was a young man in 1997 watching his dad's Kentucky team beat Clem Haskins' Gophers in the Final Four, the new Gophers coach saw a program he knew could be great.
"I think of it as business. This is like my eighth time moving since 2005," recalled Richard Pitino, nearly two months into his new job. "I told my wife when we were at FIU, she said, 'Where are you going to go next?' I said, 'You're never going to guess it. You'll never be able to guess.'
"When Minnesota approached me I knew, when Minnesota played Kentucky in '97, I was at that game and they were really good, and I saw the fan base. I know about the city just from when I was coming here. When there was ever a chance to do it [come to Minnesota] I jumped at it pretty quick."
What impressed him about the Gophers basketball program?
"Well I just had a little familiarity because of it," he said. "They were physical. And I would watch Minnesota because of Tubby [Smith], when they were on TV. I always saw the Barn was packed, so I knew if you get an opportunity to do that, you have to do it."
Yes, Pitino knew and admired Smith, who was on his father's Kentucky staff from 1989 to 1991 and then took over the Wildcats program after Rick Pitino left for the Boston Celtics.
Asked if there were other reasons why the Gophers job was attractive, Pitino didn't hesitate to point out the positives of selling the program.
"I think this place is unique. It's different than any place I've ever been, because it's the only Division I school in the state," he said. "I think people grow up, living in Minnesota, dreaming of going to this university. That's very unique. To have a whole state supporting you is something special."