Two coaches. Two losses. Two press conferences.
Same signal.
Villanova's Kevin Willard threatened to fire his staff on live television, doubled down in the post-game press conference, then called it a joke when the backlash hit. UCLA's Mick Cronin dismissed a reporter's question, called it the worst he'd ever been asked, then accused him of raising his voice — on camera — in front of a room full of people. Neither apologized. Both made the questioner the problem. That's not frustration. That's contempt.
Here's what these press conferences actually reveal: crises don't start with headlines. They start with tone, word choice, and the instinct that kicks in before you've had time to think. Reputations don't collapse overnight. They erode slowly, one moment of contempt at a time.
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