Nolan Richardson: John Calipari Can Lead Arkansas to First Men's CBB Title Since 1994 | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors
Andrew Mccoy
Published Mar 25, 2026
The Arkansas men's basketball program's lone national championship came in 1994 when head coach Nolan Richardson led the team popularized by its 40 Minutes of Hell.
Three decades later, Richardson believes that new head coach John Calipari can deliver the program's long-awaited second national championship.
"I don't see why it wouldn't be a job where [Calipari] could come in and win a national championship," Richardson told ESPN's Myron Medcalf. "I can see that they can. I don't know another coach who could do it better than Calipari because of his recruiting."
Calipari has been a superstar recruiter during his coaching days, nevermore than at his last stop in Kentucky, when he brought in future NBA stars such as John Wall, DeMarcus Cousins, Anthony Davis, Karl-Anthony Towns, Devin Booker, Jamal Murray, De'Aaron Fox and many more.
Richardson expanded upon his thoughts on how Calipari's recruiting skills could benefit the program.
"It's all about recruiting," Richardson said on today's game. "It used to be recruiting and development, and now it's about recruiting the top players. I think [Calipari] is going to do that. I think he's already proven he's a tremendous recruiter by getting all of the one-and-dones. My advice is don't do anything different than what you've always done: go get the best players and you've got a chance to be the best."
Calipari's already put in the work at Arkansas despite being the program's coach for all of a month and a week.
He has three top-25 recruits coming in 2024 with Boogie Fland, Karter Knox and Billy Richmond all set to join the fold. Fland was an original UK commit who followed Calipari to Arkansas. Calipari also landed co-AAC Player of the Year and ex-FAU star Johnell Davis in the transfer portal.
We'll see how Calipari does soon enough, but he certainly is laying the foundation in Arkansas to compete for national titles in short order.