Barnes says buyout likely kept him from taking UCLA job
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee coach Rick Barnes believes he would be settling in as UCLA's coach right about now if buyout negotiations hadn't broken down.
Barnes' contract requires Tennessee to receive approximately $5 million if he leaves for another job with five years remaining on his deal.
An agreement couldn't be worked out. Tennessee announced on April 8 that Barnes was staying in Knoxville.
"When you get down to a situation like that, it has to make sense from a financial standpoint," Barnes said at a news conference Tuesday. "It does have to. The bottom line is we just really couldn't work it out with the buyout."
When asked what would have happened if the Bruins had covered his buyout, Barnes said: "I think I would have been the coach at UCLA."
UCLA hired Mick Cronin from Cincinnati on April 9 to replace Steve Alford, who was fired Dec. 31. Murry Bartow had served as UCLA's interim coach the remainder of the season.
Barnes has gone 88-50 in four seasons at Tennessee, including a 57-15 mark the last two years. The 64-year-old Barnes owns an overall coaching record of 692-364. He helped Tennessee own the No. 1 ranking for nearly a month and finish 31-6 this season with an NCAA regional semifinal overtime loss to Purdue.
He said his flirtation with UCLA wasn't a result of any dissatisfaction with Tennessee. Barnes said he was intrigued by UCLA because of his admiration for that program's rich history.
Barnes said he paid to attend a basketball camp as an eighth-grader specifically because former UCLA coach John Wooden and Pete Maravich were guest speakers.
"I've got pictures of myself sitting in John Wooden's house," Barnes said. "I've got pictures of me in restaurants with him. I got to know coach Wooden in the latter part of his life, and I got to meet his daughter at dinner with him. There was a relationship there."
Barnes said there were times early last week when he thought he would end up at UCLA. Barnes said he prayed over his future and considered the breakdown in buyout negotiations a sign from above.
"I asked God for total clarity," Barnes said. "And when they came back with their decision, I knew that I'm not supposed to be the coach UCLA. As soon as that happened, I'm like, 'OK, I'm good with this,' because I felt like again, that God had made it crystal clear that I needed to be at the University of Tennessee."
In the university news release that announced Barnes is staying, athletic director Phillip Fulmer said Tennessee's leadership "stepped up to show Rick how much he is valued and appreciated" without offering further details. Tennessee hasn't yet released Barnes' new contract, and the coach says he still hasn't signed it.
"We weren't going to let somebody come in here and buy our coach without putting up a fight," Fulmer said Tuesday.
Barnes also dismissed what he brushed off as "rumors" about problems in his relationship with the athletic director. Barnes said "coach Fulmer has taught me a lot" and noted they're in a Bible study together.
"For anybody to think he hasn't supported me since I've been here, they are crazy," Barnes said. "Where that would come from, I don't get it."
Barnes said he lost more than five pounds and didn't leave his house for two days as he pondered his future during the negotiations with UCLA.
"Those situations, they get tough because they probably felt like they went as far as they could go (and) I felt I went as far as I could go," Barnes said. "But the fact is I'm here because I feel like God wants me here. And I believe that with all my heart."