by NovaBall » Tue Apr 26, 2016 6:44 pm
I never even raised this issue in the past because I thought this was an easy choice. Has to be Big John Thompson, right?
But I am looking at Al McGuire's run from from 1968-1977, that's absurd.
I just broke down teams involvement in the polls, and from there I will now rank as I see the top coaches from Big East programs. I think Thompson still takes it though
1. John Thompson, Georgetown, 1973-1999
1 National Championship
3 Final Fours
7 Elite 8
8 Sweet 16
Georgetown was ranked as high as 16 in every season from 1978-1996 (19 years)
In that 19 year stretch, Georgetown was ranked in the top 10 thirteen times, and in the top 5 five times.
2. Al McGuire, Marquette 1965-1977
1 National Championship
2 final Fours
4 Elite 8
8 Sweet 16s
From 1968-1977: 12 year period
Ranked in the top 15 every year, and the top 10 all but one year
Ranked in the top 5 in eight consecutive seasons
3. Jay Wright, Villanova 2002-Present
1 National Championship
2 Final Fours
3 Elite 8
5 Sweet 16's
Has had ranked teams in 9 of the past 12 seasons, with five of those teams being in the top 3 in the polls at some point, and two others also in the top 10
4. Dave Gavitt, Providence, 1970-1979
1 Final Four
1 Elite 8
2 Sweet 16s
Had a top 15 team in 7 of his 10 years
5. Louie, St. John's, 1966-1970; 1974-1992
1 Final Four
3 Elite 8
6 Sweet 16
Surprised by the lack of tournament runs, but spent most of his career with top 20 teams, many of which were top 10 teams.
6. Rey Meyer, DePaul, 1943-1984
2 Final Fours
3 Elite 8
8 Sweet 16 (many of these were first round games)
Good NIT success back when that tournament mattered
In 6 of his last 7 years they were ranked in the top 6 or better, with most of those years being in the 1-3 range.
The longevity here is crazy. And the respect for the program is very high. Tourney results were not all that spectacular though.
6. Rollie, Villanova 1974-1992
1 National Championship
1 Final 4
5 Elite 8
8. PJ, 1983-1994
1 National Championship* (we all know that wasn't a foul)
1 Final 4
2 Elite
8
3 Sweet 16
12 years, the second half was great. Always wondered why PJ didn't consider coming back to NJ. He wasn't that old and Kevin Willard and Bobby Gonzalez were making more money than he was. Usually you can't return back home and have it be the same, but PJ was that rare exception where I would have liked to see them try
9. Brad, Butler 2008-2013
2 Final Fours
Ranked in the top 15 pretty much every year. Took over for Lickliter and took the program to the next level.
10. Joseph Mullaney, Providence 1958-1969
1 Elite 8, but a bunch of NIT Glory with a couple of wins and trips to the finals (back when the NIT mattered)
11. JT3, Goergetown, 2006-Present
1 Final Four
2 Sweet 16
Ranked in the top 10 every year from 2007-2013. I know, early exits, lost to Shaka Smart and Steph Curry. But still...
Also receiving consideration:
Rick Pitino, Providence
Tom Crean, Marquette
Jack Kraft, Villanova
Al Severance, Villanova
Joe Lapchic, St. John's
Oliver Purnell, DePaul
Frank McGuire, St. John's
Todd Lickliter, Butler
Tony Hinkle, Butler (just for the name)
Jay Meyer, DePaul
Couldn't even think of someone to consider for Xavier. Seems like their history has been have a guy for half a decade, be a ranked team that makes the dance, but never a protected seed and then make a Cinderella run to the sweet 16. Of course I think Chris Mack is the guy who changes that and makes Xavier a destination job.