Very cool article. Frank Martin seems like a likeable version of Gary Williams... if that makes any sense...
To all the rival fans out there who talk about Coach K being a fake and a phony this one article shows you what kind of a guy he really is. Most of the article is about K-State's program but one paragraph sticks out. Martin talks about how in 1998 he was an out-of-work HS coach and wrote hundreds of letters to programs all over America and only one person took the time to actually respond to him.
Congratulations to Coach Mike Krzyzewski on #800 at Duke! You couldn't be more deserving.
http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/basketb...dukeksu1124310
Last edited by ajgoodfella7; 11-24-2010 at 02:48 AM.
Very cool article. Frank Martin seems like a likeable version of Gary Williams... if that makes any sense...
^ K can like Gary all he wants, but it doesn't mean I have to!
Martin makes a point of saying that the note he got from K was handwritten and that he'll never forget it every time he tells the story.
“It was a hand-written note,” Martin said. “He was the only one I heard from. I’ll never forget that. It’s going to be a privilege to be able to tell my grandkids one day that I was fortunate to sit on the bench opposite Coach K.”
I heard a clip from Coach K on the radio this morning on his 800 victories at Duke. He, as usual, got it right. He thanked Duke for being the kind of school which can attract great kids of character with whom he could continually mold a team.
But let's get past Coach K's modesty and get real. He is the best coach the college game has ever had. I think occasionally of Tom Butters. It is possible that careers can be defined by a single stroke of genius. Butters knew whom he was hiring when others didn't, and stuck with him in some rough early years. Basketball is the public face of Duke University. And what a great public face it is. We can't thank Coach K enough.
2009 Duke Basketball was an unrivaled coaching job. With only an extremely raw Mason as lottery material (although Kyle certainly has a chance), he created defined roles and a team concept better than any college team I can remember, in my 30 years of watching.
I really think we are entering the third golden age of Coach K's tenure. The next decade will be fun to watch. (I would propose 1986-1994 as first golden age, then 1998-2002 as the second. The gaps in between are pretty impressive, too.)
Butters deserves mucho credit, no doubt.
One story I've heard several times is that Butters called Bobby Knight and asked him for advice during Duke's coaching search and Knight said to hire Coach K. Butters hemmed and hawed and talked about wanting a more established coach, so who with THOSE qualities should he go after? Apparently Knight said something about Coach K being the right guy and Butters needing to man up and just do it.
Knight can be a real horse's tarheel but he stands up for his guys and really did Duke a solid here. Coach K would have been a success wherever he went, but Knight's recommendation got him to us.
Thanks to RMK for the recommendation, and yes, thanks to Butters for listening AND for sticking to his guns when the criticism got serious.
So would the first be silver, the second gold, and the third platinum? Ha. I hope you're right! I am thrilled with our recruiting as of late, and K does seem to have gotten even better as a coach over the last several years. Thank you so much Colangelo (& even Dean Smith). Dean's choice when asked was K after all. Plus, when Dean was coaching it kept K at the top of his game. Going to be sweet to watch K pass him in victories.
Actually, as a number of my friends have pointed out, his greatest coaching job may have been acheiving top 10 rankings, NCAA tournaments and high expectations with the McBob/Paulus teams. Look at how ol' Roy has completely fallen apart when his team is not more talented than the opposition. Do you think coach K would have had an NIT team if he were coach Cryolina last year? No way.
I would suggest the dates of the "second golden age" should be 1998 to 2006. The years you omitted included rankings in the final Coaches' poll of #7, #4, #2, and #1 (#7, #6, #3, and #1 in the final AP poll), and three #1 seeds in the NCAAT, including a trip to the Final Four. Those years shouldn't be excluded just because we faltered in the Sweet 16 a couple of times. Plus, it makes both of the first two "golden ages" have a duration of exactly nine years. Hopefully Coach K will stick around long enough for this third one (which I actually predicted at the beginning of last season) to also last nine years.
You are correct. Here is the quote.
“There’s only one college coach up there who can get the job done — and that’s Coach K.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/19/sp.../19araton.html
There's some history here regarding Coach K's hiring that others may recall (or recall differently)
I was an undergraduate when K was hired, and most of us thought, "Who?" Bill Foster had brought the program back to prominence with a final four appearance in 1978. And we weren't too sure about this Krzequviskyrigiyi guy. We thought we'd get some superstar from another program of note. But K was so strongly recommended by Bob Knight... And Butters had a lot of respect, even among undergrads. So we though: Ok, worth a go.
When things didn't go well the first couple years, I don't remember ANY "K needs to go" sentiment. It was all about, "We like this guy's message; we like this guy; let's give him a chance; it's not his fault."
Coach K: I'm sorry we ever questioned the choice and glad we had faith in you during the lean times early on. Thanks for justifying that faith much more than we deserved.
Bob Knight: Thank you. You were spot on.
Tom Butters: You were right and had the stones to make a great call when it seemed questionable. Thanks.
Really, I don't think it diminishes what Dean said. No NBA coach was getting it done. The National Team needed a coach that had proven experience developing a "program". Outside of Phil Jackson and Popovich and maybe Pat Riley, who else are you going to turn to? And who is more passionate than K? Definitely not any of those guys, especially when it comes to being passionate about the US of A.
I was an undergrad then, too, and my recollection is the same. When he was hired we thought, well if Bobby Knight says this guy is all that then let's see what he can do. His first year we liked the way the team was playing and the second year it wasn't his fault because Bill Foster left the cupboard pretty much bare. And then the third year he had a great recruiting class but in those days the ACC was tough enough that a team starting four freshmen wasn't going to compete all that well. At least he was coaching for the future. And the rest, as they say, is history.
On the other hand, just because the students were on K's side doesn't mean the boosters were. I have no idea if they were on the same page with us or not.