For Calipari, perhaps it's not quite comfortable. He's no longer the outsider. He's no longer the rebel, as much as he sees himself in that mode. He's Apple. He's Ford. He's the establishment. He's a finalist for the Naismith Hall of Fame. All those criticisms of the past, people can bring them up all they want, but that's the past.
Think ESPN isn't celebrating? The Worldwide Leader is promoting UK games like they are prize fights. They're running every Calipari postgame news conference live. Jay Bilas gave the team a locker room pep talk before the season. ESPN is all in, and it is the largest megaphone in sports. He's no longer an outsider.
When Calipari was hired at Kentucky, I wrote that his legacy - for good or ill - would be whatever he accomplishes at Kentucky, not what happened at UMass, or at Memphis, or in the NBA.
So what has Calipari done? He's won a higher percentage of his games than even Adolph Rupp. He's won one national title and played for another. He's put enough guys into the NBA to start his own summer league. And now he has completed an undefeated regular season - and maybe more. He has the first team since UNLV to start the season at No. 1 and never leave that spot.....
But for Kentucky basketball right now, this is as good as it gets. More than that, it might be as good as it has ever been - and this is a program which has known some pretty good times - and as good as it ever will be.