It makes him the greatest college basketball coach of all time. Including Wooden. Smith. Et al.
That's an awful lot of wins for an awful long time to be at that level and quality of play. Quite amazing it is.
He is an icon at any managerial top level.
How does the accomplishment compare to, e.g., Don Shula's 328 wins or the the achievements of the NBA's winningest coaches?
It's not fair to compare professional teams to collegiate teams. College must recruit where the pros have to develop and draft. It's close but not the same. A great college coach can cherry pick players when they are winning national championships and/or going to the NCAA tourney every year. Pros have a limited number of draft picks and are limited(thankfully) by a salary cap. Who wants to see the NFL become like the MLB where the have teams buy up all the talent.
Interesting observation about Gene Shue with roughly a .500 career win percentage. Just like Reggie Jackson with 563 career home runs and 2,584 total hits but he also had 2,597 career strikeouts.
Oh, gosh.
The interesting thing, and the real lesson here, if there is one, is this; A Don Shula, a Mike Kzsheshefsskkfjdsfgfiiii would have no chance, were they starting out today given how they started their careers; numerous bad years to get the thing going. So, are we losing out on the next Shula, the next Coach K because of the immediacy of today or does that sort of person simply not even exist anymore as whatever developed them then is no longer in evidence today for a young up and coming coach? I think the former more than the later.
So, short story long, I'd put those two in the same Rushmore of coaching as they both have been integral and not just some sort of Bear Bryant figure head with assistants who did everything in the latter years.
I have a hard time counting the NBA. It's just this weird thing where a Gene Shue is a legend and has 154,875 wins but also has 154,874 losses.
Including these other stats might give a greater insight into how he has developed as a coach and his impact on his players.
And to think there were actually quite a few that wanted him fired after just a couple seasons back in the mid 80's.
Yup.
In any event, I learned, or was reminded, Boeheim and Knight are also in the 900 win club, Jim some 40 wins back and Knight nearly 100 and retired.
I always liked Knight, too. Boeheim has to be a good coach too, but, he tended to always find amazing talent. To that end, Knight has a place in the debate because he seemed to get the most out of good players but not the level of talented kids those other guys always seemed to have.
Maybe the master is better than the pupil?