Kenny Payne made it clear that he will need help as he begins a huge mission with his first head-coaching job at Louisville.
Payne was introduced Friday as the Cardinals' men's basketball coach and received a six-year contract through 2027-28 to lead the program. The University of Louisville Athletic Association approved the contract Friday morning. Financial terms were not immediately available.
Payne, a former Cardinals player, was among familiar faces at a crowded news conference at the KFC Yum! Center that included Hall of Fame coach Denny Crum and several former teammates whom he called his "brothers."
Flanked by his family, including son Zan, a Kentucky player, Payne asked those in attendance to stand and emphasized that he will seek their input.
"I don't have all the answers," Payne said, "but I know what I have to take this job and try to help build the answers. I'm one person. I'm not standing here by myself again. I'm not standing here by myself."
Payne, 55, is Louisville's first Black head coach and returns to his alma mater after nearly two seasons as a New York Knicks assistant. He also spent 10 seasons on John Calipari's staff at Kentucky and another five at Oregon.
The school conducted a national search through an outside firm, and interim athletic director Josh Heird said he talked with a number of coaches, who emphasized that Payne was the one the school needed.
"What surprised me was the support outside the community was even greater," Heird said.
Payne replaces Mike Pegues, who served two stints as interim coach, going 7-11 overall. Pegues took over when Chris Mack departed in late January after three-plus seasons as coach.
As a player, Payne scored 1,089 points from 1985 to 1989 under Crum. He was a freshman reserve on the Cardinals' 1986 national championship squad.
Payne's immediate priority is leading the program back from a 13-19 finish. He will also have to deal with possible NCAA penalties resulting from a 2017 federal corruption investigation of college basketball. Louisville is awaiting an outcome from the Independent Accountability Resolution Process, which was created out of proposals from the commission led by former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in 2018 to reform college basketball.
Payne said he grasped the magnitude of what could happen and asked Heird about it during the interview process.
"To accept the job at the University of Louisville, it took a lot to get to this point," Payne said. "I say, give me the worst-case scenario. Don't give it your best [case]. I know what the best is. Give me the worst. I understand what that means."
Payne said he talked with numerous people, including Calipari, about taking the high-profile job considered to be one of the best in the nation. All the responses were positive -- that he was capable of handling it.
Calipari said Wednesday that Louisville couldn't hire anyone capable of doing a better job than Payne and added, "I may say he should have been hired before there, but you know what, they get him, they got the best of the best."
Congratulations soon followed upon word of Payne's hiring, including an early-morning text from University of Kentucky president Eli Capilouto. Even though it will now put Payne on the opposite sideline when the Bluegrass rivalry resumes next season, both schools understand the importance of him being there.
"What they said to me was, in order for this state to be great, the University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky have to be great," Payne said. "How powerful is that?"