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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Aaron Beard | Associated Press

Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski hopes final road trip stops in Chicago

Mike Krzyzewski’s unparalleled coaching career is down to a few basketball games, with no more than a month left before the retiring Duke Hall of Famer walks off the sideline for the last time.

His influence on the sport will remain long past that final farewell. The fingerprints of the man known simply as “Coach K” are all over the highest levels of the game as he winds down his nearly five-decade head-coaching career.

Nearly two dozen of his former players currently are on NBA rosters. Another dozen or so are coaching or working for NBA teams. There are others who lead their own Division I college programs. And some of the NBA’s biggest stars of the past two decades have won Olympic gold medals under his direction.

“He’s got a small army of people that are working in basketball that believe in his values and things that he felt were important,” said Arizona State coach Bobby Hurley, the point guard on Krzyzewski’s first two NCAA championship teams in 1991 and 1992. “That’s regardless of whether you coached with him or if you were a player, because they’ll have such incredible experiences and memories of things that he did that you still use in your own situations.

“His legacy is going to continue to grow through others that he’s had an impact on in their lives, and I’m definitely one of those people.”

The 75-year-old Krzyzewski coaches his final home game at Cameron Indoor Stadium on Saturday, fittingly against rival North Carolina. At most, he has 10 games left in a career that began with five seasons at Army followed by 42 at Duke, assuming the Blue Devils reach both next week’s Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament final in New York and the NCAA championship game in New Orleans on April 4.

Should Duke get a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, Krzyzewski would like to play part of his final March Madness in his hometown of Chicago.

The Athletic and ESPN reported that Duke has requested placement in the Midwest Regional. That would let the Blue Devils play at the United Center should Duke advance to the Sweet 16.

Regardless of when or how the end comes, Krzyzewski’s place is unquestioned among the greatest coaches in the history of American sports.

He has a 1,196 career victories, more than any coach in men’s or women’s college history. His five NCAA titles rank second to late UCLA great John Wooden on the men’s side, while his resume includes a record-tying 12 Final Fours and a record 127 weeks with teams ranked at No. 1 in The Associated Press men’s college basketball poll.

“He’s the best that’s ever done that in the modern basketball world,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. “John Wooden won 10 championships, you can never say anything but that. But it’s a different world today. There have been a lot of great coaches — there’s nobody close to what Mike has done.

“He has given everything to the game and helped make the game what it is today without any question.”

The numbers back up Boeheim’s conviction.

Krzyzewski had 21 players as of February on NBA rosters — including current or former All-Stars Jayson Tatum, Kyrie Irving, Zion Williamson and Brandon Ingram – and an ACC-record 27 players last season.

Go back further, and NBA teams have drafted 68 of Krzyzewski’s Blue Devils, with 42 as first-round picks and three — Elton Brand in 1999, Irving in 2011 and Williamson in 2019 — going No. 1 overall.

Duke notes that Krzyzewski has coached 113 NBA players between the school and USA Basketball, where Krzyzewski partnered with former managing director Jerry Colangelo to restructure the men’s national team program. The result: he managed egos and meshed star talent like LeBron James and the late Kobe Bryant to thrice produce Olympic gold.

Some former Krzyzewski players are now in NBA leadership positions, such as Quin Snyder as head coach of the Utah Jazz, Brand as the general manager of the Philadelphia 76ers, Trajan Langdon as GM of the New Orleans Pelicans, and Grant Hill as co-owner of the Atlanta Hawks.

The same is true in college, with Krzyzewski’s tree spawning 10 former players or staffers as head coaches — a number that will grow next season when Jon Scheyer moves over one seat on Duke’s bench as Krzyzewski’s designated successor.

For all, Krzyzewski’s lessons linger.

Former Duke guard Grayson Allen, now with the NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks, noted how Krzyzewski studied film after games well into the night, then beat players to meetings early the following morning.

“I always tell people that I’ve never been around someone more dedicated to the game of basketball,” Allen said, adding: “He’s fully committed to every little detail.”

Longtime Notre Dame coach Mike Brey studied Krzyzewski’s competitiveness during eight years as his assistant.

“He still wakes up wanting to fight somebody and beat somebody,” Brey said.

As for Hurley, he has a greater appreciation for Krzyzewski’s decade-after-decade run of sustained success after nine seasons as a head coach at Buffalo and Arizona State. He recalled a vivid memory: the end of the classic 1992 NCAA regional final against Kentucky, right before Duke won on Hill’s fullcourt pass to Christian Laettner for a buzzer-beating turnaround.

“I’ve seen him be so poised at some of the darkest moments where people would lose hope,” Hurley said. “Like our Kentucky game and just how he handled that huddle. You just look back now that you’re a coach and you say, ‘Wow, could I have been that poised? Could I have convinced this group that we were going to win this game?’”

It was one of many memorable wins for Krzyzewski, though his impact on the game extends beyond victories.

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