Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of college men's basketball coaches by number of career wins across all three divisions of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the two divisions of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA).
As a 5-foot-10-inch (1.78 m) guard [5] with the Purdue Boilermakers, Wooden was the first college basketball player to be named an All-American three times, and the 1932 Purdue team on which he played as a senior was retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA tournament national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta ...
Pat played at Indiana from 1991 to 1995 and was head coach at Lamar from the time of his father's retirement until he was dismissed in 2014. [175] [176] Pat Knight coached Texas Tech after his father's retirement before he moved to Lamar. [175] In 1988, Knight married his second wife, Karen Vieth Edgar, a former Oklahoma high school basketball ...
In high school he played basketball, baseball and football. The 6-foot-5 Knight went to Ohio State University and was a reserve on the 1960 national championship team that featured future Hall of ...
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's basketball tournament is a single-elimination tournament for men's college basketball teams in the United States. It determines the champion of Division I, the top level of play in the NCAA, [1] and the media often describes the winner as the national champion of college ...
Smith played college basketball at the University of Kansas, where he won a national championship in 1952 playing for Hall of fame coach Phog Allen. Smith was best known for running a clean program and having a high graduation rate, with 96.6% of his athletes receiving their degrees.
Charles Grice "Lefty" Driesell (December 25, 1931 – February 17, 2024) was an American college basketball coach. He was the first coach to win more than 100 games at four different NCAA Division I schools, Driesell led the programs of Davidson College, the University of Maryland, James Madison University, and Georgia State University.
The Tar Heels last won the ACC in football in 1980, and they have fewer ACC championships than the likes of Duke and N.C. State and Maryland (which left the conference a decade ago), let alone ...