Being a private person from a small town, Kim Caldwell keeps her business to herself.
That's why she ducked and dodged questions for months about her first pregnancy.
Then the woman who announced with a social media post on Sept. 3 that ''Baby Caldwell'' was on the way realized that being the first-year coach of the historic Tennessee Lady Vols' women's basketball program allows her to help other working mothers not stress out or feel alone.
''I have an opportunity here to help the next person that is going to get pregnant during basketball season or anyone that's going to get pregnant during a time of their life that's stressful," Caldwell told The Associated Press on Tuesday. ''And for most women, that's all the time.''
Caldwell is dealing with plenty of stress herself. The coach who turned 36 in November is due to give birth any day now with the 15th-ranked Lady Vols (14-2) in the meat of the Southeastern Conference schedule.
It doesn't help Caldwell that those two losses came by a combined three points to teams that were ranked in the top 10.
''Those three points haunt me every day," Caldwell said. "They haunt me in practice. They hopefully haunt our players of just how can we get those back? How can we improve? So we've tried to tighten things up on them a little bit and learn from these losses.''
Athletic director Danny White went outside the Lady Vols' pipeline when hiring Caldwell last April as the third coach since Pat Summitt retired from the program she built while barnstorming for women's basketball.