Back in April, while the college basketball coaching carousel was spinning at an all-time high, Texas Tech basketball coach Grant McCasland was reported to be part of the chaos.
While looking for a new coach to replace John Calipari, who left for Arkansas, Kentucky went through several big-time names. Before settling on BYUās Mark Pope, the Wildcats made a strong push to pry Scott Drew away from Baylor.
Several prominent media members reported Drew and Kentucky were in negotiations. While that was going on, insider Trilly Donovan reported on his Discord that Baylor was already in talks with McCasland to replace Drew.
The hard part about all this is thereās just more speculation when it gets to anything,ā McCasland told the Avalanche-Journal. āAnd I talked to Coach Drew specifically, and everybody, I think, tries to make contingency plans, but it never got to any point where it was specific.ā
All of it was eventually rendered moot. Drew decided to stay at Baylor, making any potential decision by McCasland for him. McCasland said he spoke with Drew and never got the impression he was about to leave Waco.
And even if the Bears did need a new leading man, McCasland said it wasnāt going to be him.
āThe honest part is I just didnāt see any way, shape or form there would be a way we would leave Texas Tech,ā McCasland said, āand I donāt think it would have mattered what the school was in the world.ā
Connecting McCasland to Baylor wouldnāt have been hard for even the novice fan. He spent five years as an assistant under Drew before beginning his head coaching career in 2016. McCasland continues to speak highly of his time at Baylor and his relationship with Drew ā as well as Kansas Stateās Jerome Tang, who was also on Drewās staff at Baylor. McCasland was also a player at Baylor. The ties are certainly there in Waco.
McCasland also has plenty of ties to Texas Tech, though, serving as director of operations from 1999 to 2001 and meeting his wife Cece, beginning both his coaching career and family in Lubbock.
In his first year leading the Red Raiders, Texas Tech tied Baylor for third in the Big 12 standings after being picked to finish eighth before the season. Heās rejuvenated a program flirting with a fall from relevancy in the wake of Mark Adamsā departure ā evidenced by the swarm of fans at Sundayās team autograph signing at the 19th Street Market Street grocery store.
McCasland now intends to continue that upward trajectory
āI just feel like this is the right time,ā McCasland said, āand weāre at the right place and weāve got a roster that I believe in and a place that I feel like we can win a national championship. And weāve never done that in menās basketball, and thatās honestly something that really sticks with me.
āI believe in this place and I believe that we can do it here, and thereās no place Iād rather be.ā