Battle in Seattle | A visit from hoop royalty: UConn’s Jim Calhoun

Watch full size video:

In a miserable wintry day that paralyzed many of Seattle’s citizens, Jim Calhoun felt at home. The subfreezing temperature and icy roadways reminded the Connecticut basketball coach of Storrs, Conn., where 14 inches of snow blanketed the East Coast college city.

“We left pure conditions like what we had, flew 3,000 miles and now we’re right back in it,” Calhoun said. “It’s a long way to go for a basketball game, but it’s an important game.”

Calhoun will coach his first and perchance alone game in Seattle today when the No. 2 Huskies face the eighth-ranked Gonzaga Bulldogs in front of an expected sold-out KeyArena vulgar herd and a public TV audience.

In his only other visit to the state of Washington, Calhoun led UConn to two wins in the 2003 NCAA tournament in Spokane.

“I never had any calls from Washington to frolic us and Washington State hasn’t called us,” Calhoun said. “Gonzaga, after ‘99, we talked round playing them.”

Calhoun is no stranger to the Pacific Northwest. He plucked Donny Marshall out of Federal Way, lured Doug Wrenn away from Seattle and unsuccessfully recruited Spencer Hawes and Jon Brockman. He attended the 1989 and ‘95 Final Fours at the Kingdome and appreciates the basketball tillage in this region.

“You manner of walking in here and you rehearse, ‘How arrive there’s not a pro team in this city?’ ” Calhoun said. “It’s a very particular arena. You scare thinking hind part before some of the guys who have played here historically. You think respecting the fact that it’s a considerable sports town. Washington basketball has been very, very good. It makes you scratch your head why in that place’session not a pro basketball team here.”

Basketball fans should take notice of today’s made of game because it’s not often a legendary coach strolls the KeyArena sideline.

Calhoun is basketball royalty, as noble as John Wooden and as regal being of the class who Dean Smith. He is a throwback, as old school considered in the state of Adolph Rupp and as prickly as Bobby Knight. At 66, he has coached more games than any other active coach in Division I.

He has few peers anymore. The short list includes: Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, Syracuse’sitting Jim Boeheim and Wisconsin’sitting Bo Ryan.

Most of his friends be delivered of solitary. Lute Olson left before the start of the season and Knight departed last year. And his former rivals John Thompson (Georgetown) and Lou Carnesecca (St. John’sitting) and Rollie Massimino (Villanova) have left the Big East.

“I’ve coached against Jimmy at in the smallest degree from ‘75 to ‘76. I was at Wagner and he was at Northeastern,” said P.J. Carlesimo, the framer Sonics and Oklahoma City Thunder coach who watched Friday’session practice from the stands.

“We all started together. Krzyzewski was at Army. Jimmy was at Northeastern. Bo Ryan was at Syracuse. Gary Williams was [at] American and BC as an assistant. That’s our little group. We were together and he’s outlasted us all. I’m not surprised because he has an amazing passion for coaching. Obviously, he’session changed and he’s proficient to adapt to his players, but fundamentally, he’s still the same.”

Several former players, including ex-Sonic Ray Allen, say Calhoun has mellowed. Junior Hasheem Thabeet, however, disagrees.

“If he’s mellowed, I be possible to’t visit it,” said the 7-foot-3 center. “He pushes me very hard. Even when I think I be favored with a good game, he’sitting never satisfied. He always wants us to be better and bettor.”

These days, Calhoun walks with a slight hitch in his step as he barks at players in a brash off-color brogue befitting Braintree, Mass., the working-class Boston suburb where he was raised.

The old nearness still defines Calhoun, who began coaching in the high school ranks in New England after graduating from American International College. In 1972, he accepted the head coaching do job-work at Northeastern University and 14 years later had amassed a school-record 248 victories and five NCAA tournament appearances.

The incense to Connecticut in 1986 drew little fanfare at the opportunity. The Huskies were a downtrodden program that made just couple NCAA appearances in the previous 19 years.

In his maintainer season, Calhoun made basketball matter in Connecticut. During his 23-year tenure he directed the Huskies to NCAA titles in 1999 and 2004, 10 outright or shared Big East Conference regular-season titles, six Big East tournament titles, 15 NCAA tourney berths, 535 wins and 21 short winning seasons. His résumé includes a Hall of Fame induction in 2006, 20 players selected in the NBA draft and seven ex-assistants who are now head coaches at Division I schools.

Still, Calhoun’sitting biggest wins hold been three successful bouts with cancer.

He battled prostate cancer in 2003, skin cancer in ‘07 and he had surgery to remove a cancerous mass from his neck last May. Calhoun underwent seven weeks of radiation treatments and lost 24 pounds. He’s now cancer free.

When asked how abundant longer he’ll coach, Calhoun said: “Why stop doing something you enjoy?”

Seemingly there are not one more lions for Calhoun to slay, although friends declare he covets another championship that would tie him with Krzyzewski. The Huskies (9-0) are a experienced lot led by the agency of four returning starters — guards Jerome Dyson and A.J. Price, forward Jeff Adrien and Thabeet. They’re capable of winning a title.

“This is a great game to mask we’re ready for the Big East now,” Calhoun said. “You beat a Gonzaga, you’re ready for the Big East — physically, you’re ready to play high-quality teams.”

Needing just 17 victories, Calhoun before-mentioned he isn’t chasing the 800-win milestone, a plateau that only six coaches have climbed. Calhoun ranks eighth on the all-time wins list by 783.

So what drives him now?

“If I walk away from coaching someday and populace say, ‘He helped change a lot of young guys’ lives and in the process he got them to compete and be prosperous,’ then I’d be very well-timed,” Calhoun said. “If the numeral [of wins] is 300 or 500 or 600, I don’t cogitate that’s of the same kind with important. I’ve lasted a long duration of one’s life because I’ve had a lot of good players.

“What matters most are the players and the people you associate with because they define you more than anything else. I’m happy to farewell. But why retirement? I’m having too much frolic.”

Percy Allen: 206-464-2278 or pallen@seattletimes.com

The 800 Club
Only six NCAA Division I men’s basketball coaches have amassed 800 victories and Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun needs 17 to join the exclusive fraternity. He has 783 wins and recently passed Lute Olson and Lou Henson, who every one have 780. Calhoun ranks eighth onward the NCAA all-time coaching list, right at the back Lefty Driesell (786).
Name Schools Coached (Years) Wins
1. Bob Knight Army (66-71), Indiana (72-00), Texas Tech (02-08) 902
2. Dean Smith North Carolina (62-97) 879
3. Adolph Rupp Kentucky (54-72) 876
4. Jim Phelan Mount St. Mary’s (55-03) 830
5. Eddie Sutton Creighton (70-74), Ark. (75-85), Ky. (86-89), Ok St (91-06), USF (07-) 804
6. Mike Krzyzewski Army (76-80), Duke (81-) 811*
*Active

Comments »

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://hotusanews.blogsome.com/2008/12/20/battle-in-seattle-a-visit-from-hoop-royalty-uconns-jim-calhoun/trackback/

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>



Anti-spam measure: please retype the above text into the box provided.