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Mike Miller

Mike Miller has been NBCSports.com's college basketball editor since 2003. It's a position he relishes; no wonder considering he transferred to Kansas to watch Paul Pierce play. Most of his favorite sports memories involve college hoops, usually during March, when every waking moment is spent thinking about March Madness.



Could more active coaches be the greatest?

Posted: Wednesday, July 29, 2009 10:51 PM
Filed Under: ,

Everyone knows John Wooden is the greatest coach who ever lived. But Sporting News made it official.

UCLA’s legendary coach was honored during a luncheon Tuesday, where a packed room toasted him – and that mind-boggling run of 10 NCAA tournament titles in 12 seasons (still the most remarkable run in all of sports).

Wooden, of course, kept his remarks humble. What else would he do?


AP file
Wooden celebrates his final NCAA title

“No one can really honestly be the very best, no one ... (but) these youngsters that have spoken — and some of them aren’t so young anymore — they’re the ones that make the coaches.”

The rest of Sporting News’ list of the 50 greatest coaches – selected by a panel of 118 Hall of Famers, championship coaches and other experts – was kind to college hoops as well. Nine more coaches (two women’s coaches) were honored, most of the people you’d expect:

Dean Smith (No. 8), Pat Summitt (11), Bob Knight (16), Mike Krzyzewski (19), Adolph Rupp (21), Pete Newell (31), Geno Auriemma (42) and Hank Iba (47).

Not bad. Krzyzewski’s the only active men’s coach on the list, while Summitt and Auriemma are still busy duking it out for annual bragging rights in the women’s game.

So who’s most likely to eventually break into this list? To my mind, there are three who could eventually make the cut – Roy Williams, Billy Donovan and Jim Calhoun.

All three have two NCAA titles. Williams wins games at a higher rate than nearly any coach in history. Donovan and Coach K are the only coaches who’ve won back-to-back titles in the last 35 years. Calhoun’s racked up wins while building UConn into a national powerhouse.

But any of ‘em probably needs another title (or two) to make that 50 list.

UPDATE: Caulton Tudor of the Raleigh News & Observer says Williams was No. 51 on this list. Give it five more years, and Roy's a shoe-in.

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Comments

after John Calipari wins several titles with UK. He will definitly be on the list!
While i probably agree that Wooden should be #1, I don't agree that his 10 in 12 is the "most remarkable run in all of sports". What about the UNC women's soccer dominance? 16 NCAA titles in 19 years and 19 of the 27 total NCAA titles.
Women's sports count for nothing Phil. "Soocer underwater" is a joke and should never be compared with a men's championship. The competiton in men's sports is simply on a diff level. Don't you find it funny that only a couple of schools ever win anything in women's basketball and soccer? I don't think this is a conicidence.


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