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It’s in the same sort of what-if category as the Kobe article. Under Mike Krzyzewski, Duke won national titles in 1991, 1992, ...
While Mike Krzyzewski has been a fixture of the sports landscape for longer than I have been alive, he has always existed at a bit of a remove – successful, yes, but also intentionally distant.
On the eve of the last of his 36 NCAA tournaments as a coach, the defining characteristic of Mike Krzyzewski is that he fits no mold. He doesn’t have Dean Smith’s four corners offense, Bobby ...
If you missed it, the WNBA’s Seattle Storm unveiled a statue of their recently retired point guard Sue Bird on Sunday. Bird ...
DURHAM, N.C. -- Mike Krzyzewski knew he couldn't script the ending to his storied career, but still, this one stung. In what was supposed to be a celebration of Krzyzewski's 42 years coaching at ...
I first met Mike Krzyzewski in 1976 when he was the coach at Army and I was a Duke undergraduate. He and Jim Valvano — then the coach at Iona — thought I did a pretty good Dean Smith imitation.
Duke Blue Devils college basketball’s Mike Krzyzewski, AKA Coach K, will retire at the end of the 2021-22 ACC hoops season. Jon Scheyer is likely to replace him ...
Duke University’s Mike Krzyzewski, the all-time winningest coach in men’s Division I college basketball, is set to retire following the Blue Devils upcoming 2021-2022 season, according to a ...
When Krzyzewski walks off the floor at Cameron Indoor Arena one last time next March after a farewell tour in his 42nd season as Duke’s head coach, he will do so as the greatest college ...
Mike is by far the best in his very competitive era.” Coach K and Wooden are tied with 12 Final Fours apiece, but with 1,170 career Division I victories, Krzyzewski has 506 more than Wooden had.
Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski feels the time is right to step away from a Hall of Fame coaching career. He’s also eager to get back on the court for a final run after a bumpy year.
Mike Krzyzewski is the greatest? Only since John Wooden retired UCLA basketball coach John Wooden talks to his players during a time-out against Notre Dame on Jan. 19, 1974, in South Bend, Ind.
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