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Now 40 years into his tenure, Oakland basketball's Greg Kampe hopes for 'another 10 to 12'

PITTSBURGH — Greg Kampe is the longest tenured coach in college basketball, having spent 40 years at Oakland University.

When that residency began Ronald Reagan was president, the top grossing movie was "Beverly Hills Cop" and a gallon of gas cost $1.21.

Certainly, the landscape of college athletics is rapidly changing. That's why there has been a changing of the guard in college basketball, as coaching legends like Mike Krzyzewski, Roy Williams, Jim Boeheim and Jay Wright have all stepped away.

However on Wednesday, as he previewed Thursday's NCAA tournament game between No. 3-seed Kentucky and his No. 14-seed Oakland Golden Grizzlies (7:10 p.m., CBS), there was Kampe, 68, talking as if he were ready to turn back the clock.

"Being around those kids and watching them grow and develop is what my job is supposed to be, and it's what it's always been at in Oakland," he said. "Those are the things that motivate me. And as long as Oakland wants me, I'm going to do this. And I hope to get another 10 or 12 years because I love it."

TUNE IN: How to watch MSU, Oakland on Fubo (free trial)

Oakland coach Greg Kampe looks on during practice on Wednesday, March 20, 2024, in Pittsburgh, before their NCAA tournament first round game.
Oakland coach Greg Kampe looks on during practice on Wednesday, March 20, 2024, in Pittsburgh, before their NCAA tournament first round game.

Nobody can last across four decades, in any profession, without an ability to adapt. Kampe said in some ways it's happened naturally as the decades have passed; but one of his players, Blake Lampman, said he's has seen it also happen very intentionally in the past few years.

The fifth-year standout from Haslett still remembers his freshman year in 2019-20 when some of his older teammates would come in wearing socks that didn't match the team's colors of black and gold. They would get one of two punishments: kicked out of practice or run stairs for the duration of it.

"Now, we got DQ Cole pulling up in Jolly Rancher socks and stuff like that," Lampan laughed. "He's definitely adapted and that's kind of a testament to his success as a coach and how he's able to stay a Division I basketball college for 40 years because he adapts with the times."

When asked how and why he adapted, shortly before he oversaw his team's afternoon shoot-around at PPG Paint arena in downtown Pittsburgh, Kampe cited the same guy who's been credited — or blamed — for transforming the game of basketball.

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Golden State Warriors superstar Stephen Curry.

When Kampe began in the profession, coaches were drilled to make sure no player singled himself out above the team. Everyone stayed in uniform. Rules were strict. The concept was team-first.

Oakland coach Greg Kampe speaks at a pre-practice news conference on Wednesday, March 20, 2024, before the NCAA tournament game in Pittsburgh.
Oakland coach Greg Kampe speaks at a pre-practice news conference on Wednesday, March 20, 2024, before the NCAA tournament game in Pittsburgh.

But then?

"Curry goes out and is the MVP of the NBA finals wearing purple, green or some shoes and how am I going to sit there and tell our kids we can't do that?" Kampe said. "I think you have to change in this business, and over the 40 years there's been a lot of change. I just think the last three or four it's really, really been noticeable that you have to change if you're going to survive in this."

Of course, that doesn't mean losing identity. Players like Lampman say Kampe continues to use colorful language during practice, which he chose to describe as "PG-13." As Kampe described, that's the way it is with coaches of a certain age, and he continues to find a balance of new and old.

There remain three to four non-negotiables within his program, lifelong staples like respect and being on time to everything. While some things will change, those won't.

One would think Trey Townsend, a senior and legacy commit, can speak to as much. His father, Skip, played for Kampe and helped lead the program to its first 20-win season in 1987. He has been around Kampe since he could walk, however when asked last week if his coach had changed much, Townsend downplayed it.

A FOREVER MEMORY: Oakland basketball arrives at NCAA tournament with 'chance to change their lives'

That is until he got home to his father, who assured him how different things used to be.

"On the sideline, how he reacts to certain things," Townsend smiled this time. "He's definitely mellowed up."

The reason for mellowing and adapting with the times for Kampe is simple. For one, the results have followed. But for two, and more importantly, so has the happiness, and that's what it's always been about.

"I want to keep doing this for a long time," he said. "I don't want to be that grumpy old man."

What to know about Kentucky

Kentucky coach John Calipari and Kampe have been friends for decades, the two shared a hug in the hallway outside the media room in the bowels of PPG Paint arena, but will clash for the first time on the court.

The talent level is vintage Kentucky. True freshmen Reed Sheppard and Rod Dillingham are both seen as lottery locks in the upcoming NBA draft, while senior guard Antonio Reeves is another projected first round selection, who leads the team at more than 20 points per game.

The trio combines to shoot 46.9% from 3-point range on 14.6 attempts per game.

"Those are what keeps me up at night," Kampe said. "Trying to figure out how to stop that stuff."

There's also 6-foot-9 forward Tre Mitchell, the team's best big man who averaged 10 points and 7 rebounds and is coming back to his hometown of Pittsburgh. Kampe, always brutally honest, said he hopes the senior "presses" and tries to do too much in front of friends and family.

He admits he's wishing the same for Adou Thiero, the team's second leading rebounder, who is from nearby Leetsdale.

Beyond that, there's not much to it. Calipari knows OU will run a "kind of funky" zone and UK will do what it normally does to try and break zone pressure. "There's not going to be any tricks," Calipari said.

Nov 28, 2023; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats guard Rob Dillingham (0) talks with head coach John Calipari during the first half against the Miami (Fl) Hurricanes at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 28, 2023; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats guard Rob Dillingham (0) talks with head coach John Calipari during the first half against the Miami (Fl) Hurricanes at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-USA TODAY Sports

Normally, that would mean Oakland wouldn't have a chance. But in case it hasn't been said enough, this is March, where anything can happen.

"The NCAA basketball tournament, and please don't change it, please don't change it, but it is one of the three greatest sporting events in the world," Kampe said. "You could argue the World Cup, and you're probably right, the Super Bowl and this tournament are the three greatest sporting events in the world.

"And Oakland and my players are a part of it and they get to cherish that for the rest of their lives."

Tony Garcia's prediction

Oakland is a senior-led group; Townsend, Lampman and Chris Conway all average double-figures in scoring. Jack Gohlke, a Hillsdale transfer, can also light it up from outside and gives the team four legitimate scoring threats. In the first two months of this season, OU beat Xavier and was in a one-point game at Illinois with 8:48 left, a one-point game at Ohio State with 2:34 left and a two-point game at Drake with 4:56 left before losing each in tight fashion. But UK is a different level. There's no margin for error. The pick Kentucky 90, Oakland 77.

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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Can Greg Kampe, Oakland basketball pull off upset over Kentucky?