15,355 days

Mickie (left) and Mike ride off postgame on a golf cart. 
© Provided by Sports Illustrated

With a Torch Passed and Destiny Denied, 
Mike Krzyzewski Rides into the Sunset Pat Forde- Brynn Anderson/AP
His arrival at this moment, this opportunity has been an exercise in patience and perseverance because, in this day and age of the NCAA Transfer Portal
offering the fastest path to a fresh start, Coach K has stayed the course.

Duke basketball: Why is Coach K limping?

When was Mike Krzyzewski’s first game as Duke coach?
March 18, 1980 — Mike Krzyzewski is introduced as Duke’s head basketball coach.
Nov. 29, 1980 — Krzyzewski wins his first game as Duke’s coach, 67-49 over Stetson.
Jan. 21, 1981 — A 56-47 win at N.C. State gives Krzyzewski his first victory against
ACC competition. There were 15,356 days between March 18, 1980, to April 2, 2022.

Michael William Krzyzewski (/ʃɪˈʒɛfski/ shih-ZHEF-skee;[1] nicknamed “Coach K“; born February 13, 1947) is an American former college basketball coach. He served as the head coach at Duke University from 1980 to 2022, during which he led the Blue Devils to five national titles, 13 Final Fours, 15 ACC tournament championships, and 13 ACC regular season titles. Among men’s college basketball coaches, only UCLA‘s John Wooden has won more NCAA championships, with a total of ten. Krzyzewski is widely regarded as one of the greatest college basketball coaches of all time.[2][3][4]
Krzyzewski has also coached the United States national team, which he has led to three gold medals at the 20082012, and 2016 Olympics. He was the head coach of the U.S. team that won gold medals at the 2010 and the 2014 FIBA World Cup, and an assistant coach for the “Dream Team” at the 1992 Olympics.

Krzyzewski was a point guard at Army from 1966 to 1969 under coach Bob Knight.
From 1975 to 1980, he was the head coach for his alma mater.[5] He is a two-time
inductee into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, in 2001 for his individual coaching career and in 2010 as part of the collective induction of the “Dream Team.”[6] 
He was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006, and the United States Olympic Hall of Fame in 2009 (with the “Dream Team”).[6]
On November 15, 2011, Krzyzewski led Duke to a 74–69 victory over Michigan State at Madison Square Garden to become the coach with the most wins in NCAA Division I men’s basketball history. Krzyzewski’s 903rd victory set a new record,
breaking that held by his former coach, Bob Knight.
On January 25, 2015, Duke defeated St. John’s, 77–68, at Madison Square Garden,
as Krzyzewski also became the first Division I men’s coach to reach 1,000 wins.[7]
On June 2, 2021, Krzyzewski announced that he would retire at the conclusion of the 2021–22 season.[8] He reached the NCAA Final Four in his final game, losing a semifinal to the University of North Carolina 81-77.

Head coaching record
Overall
1,202–368 (.766)
Tournaments
101–30 (NCAA Division I)
2–2 (NIT

Championships
NCAA Tournament (19911992200120102015)
13 NCAA Regional – Final Four (1986, 1988–1992, 1994, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2010, 2015, 2022)
15 ACC Tournament (1986, 1988, 1992, 1999–2003, 2005, 2006, 2009–2011, 2017, 2019)
13 ACC regular season (1986, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1997–2001, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2022)
Awards
3× Naismith College Coach of the Year (1989, 1992, 1999)
5× ACC Coach of the Year (1984, 1986, 1997, 1999, 2000)
NABC Coach of the Year (1991)
Clair Bee Coach of the Year (2004)
UPI Coach of the Year (1986)

Coach K’s last game: Mike Krzyzewski’s we’ll never see another like him again – CBSSports.com

NEW ORLEANS — There was no Hollywood ending for Krzyzewski, whose career clock ran out to give rise to a new king of Tobacco Road.   The last Duke shot had caromed off the rim, the rebound cradled by North Carolina. It was, suddenly and swiftly, over. As the Tar Heels launched into celebratory orbit, bounding all over the Caesars Superdome court, Mike Krzyzewski folded his arms across his chest and waited for the final horn to signal the end of his life’s work.

The 75-year-old legend stood and made his way toward triumphant Carolina coach Hubert Davis. They shook hands, and Krzyzewski offered the congratulations he’d received from losing coaches 1,129 times—more than any men’s basketball coach in NCAA Division I history. Davis is exactly 1,100 career victories behind Coach K, but in that postgame handshake the torch was passed. There’s a new king of Tobacco Road now.
As the Heels rejoiced, the Blue Devils left the court in emotional shambles. They had participated in a brilliant contest, one of the best in Final Four history, but there was no consolation in that after an 81–77 defeat at the hands of their bitter rivals. Center Mark Williams, who had played just 16 minutes due to foul trouble and missed two huge free throws in the final minute, tugged his white jersey up over his eyes. Guard Trevor Keels, who scored 19 points, walked just out of public viewing in the tunnel to the locker room and doubled over sobbing.
The players walked past Mickie Krzyzewski, Mike’s wife, as she stood still as a statue, facing the court, a stricken look on her face. Mike did a short interview with CBS’s Tracy Wolfson, then walked off and met Mickie. This had been the familiar scene as Duke reeled off four NCAA tournament victories, walking off together as Coach K’s career kept being extended, round by round. The last walk was somber, her left hand in his right, as they followed the players to the locker room.

Coach Krzyzewski had seen a lot of playing and coaching careers end in this glorious but ruthless tournament throughout 47 years as a college basketball head coach, 42 of them at Duke. Now it was his turn.
Then the Heels exited the court through the same tunnel, their locker room across the hall from Duke’s, the emotions diametrically opposed. Boisterous, exuberant, they almost floated. Guard RJ Davis and forward Brady Manek came up the ramp with their arms wrapped around each other, faces beaming. Davis was less outwardly giddy, but he did smile and point at someone as he walked by.
This game will be remembered forever on Tobacco Road, and in any other locale where college basketball matters. “I think it reached a level that you would expect,” Krzyzewski said. “Those kids from both teams played their hearts out. I mean, the crowd was standing most of the game, I think. It was a heck of a game.”
Indeed, it was an instant classic, 40 minutes of either held breath or dropped jaws depending on the moment. The hype for this first-ever Duke-Carolina matchup in the tournament had been immense, and then the actual play exceeded it.

Neither team ever led by more than seven points. Every mini-run was answered by another mini-run. Davis was wildly animated coaching his team, while Krzyzewski was more reserved while directing his team from a stool on the elevated court.
There were soaring dunks and spectacular streaks of shot-making, including a late spate
of three three-pointers in a span of 46 seconds—with the lead changing hands on each of them. Then Carolina gunner Caleb Love closed the thing down with a three at the 28-second mark, giving his team enough points to win.
The final score was a near-identical callback to the other all-time classic Final Four semifinal Krzyzewski coached, but that time his team was on the winning side: Duke 79, UNLV 77, in 1991. He would go on to win his first of five national championships two days later, over Kansas. The perfect ending to his extraordinary career would have been title No. 6, of course, but sports defies scripting. Carolina wasn’t here to cooperate with a feel-good plotline, just as it failed to submit in Krzyzewski’s final home game four weeks ago.

Caleb Love acrobatically scores two of his 28 points on Saturday. Bob Donnan/USA TODAY Sports
Caleb Love acrobatically scores two of his 28 points on Saturday.
© Provided by Sports Illustrated

Krzyzewski wasn’t overly emotional postgame. There were no public tears from him. 
He was focused on gratitude to his players, and was appreciative of the nobility of great athletic competition.
“I’ll be fine,” K said. “I’ve been blessed to be in the arena. And when you’re in the arena, you’re either going to come out feeling great or you’re going to feel agony, but you always will feel great about being in the arena. “And I’m sure that that’s the thing when I’ll look back that I’ll miss. I won’t be in the arena anymore. But, damn, I was in the arena for a long time. And these kids made my last time in the arena an amazing one.”

This Duke team had played some exalted basketball in the NCAA tournament, rebounding impressively from the loss to Carolina in Cameron and an upset in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament final against Virginia Tech. After rolling past Cal State–Fullerton in the opening round, the Devils rallied from a late, five-point deficit to defeat Michigan State. Then they put together a dazzling late offensive stretch in the Sweet 16 to defeat Texas Tech and its No. 1 ranked defense. K’s last win was over Arkansas,
sending him to a record 13th Final Four.

“How these guys turned it around after we didn’t play well … was really one of the best things that’s happened for me as a coach in the last five, six years,” Krzyzewski said.
Leaving San Francisco after defeating Arkansas and headed to New Orleans, the stars seemed to have aligned for the Hollywood ending. Krzyzewski’s retirement, announced last June, had been a dominant storyline all season that took on increasing magnitude come March. The tension of a single-elimination tourney meant that every time Duke played, it could be K’s last game. And then his team kept on winning, extending his career, pumping oxygen into the hope that he would go out a champion.

“Smells like destiny,” former Duke great Grant Hill had said the day the Devils won the West Region.
But now the Tobacco Road team of destiny wears powder blue, not royal blue. A dozen games removed from an embarrassing home loss to Pittsburgh that threatened to knock the Heels out of NCAA tournament consideration, Carolina now is the first No. 8 seed to make the championship game in eight years.
The postgame pace of movement in the Superdome hallways was a study in contrast.
The Heels were in a hurry, happy to get to the interview room and talk about their biggest win ever over Duke, then briskly preparing to leave the building. There is one more game to rest up for, Monday night against Kansas, as Carolina tries to win its most improbable national title yet. For Duke, there was no urgency. It’s the offseason now.
After North Carolina’s press conference ended, Davis boarded a golf cart headed back to the locker room. Krzyzewski was on one headed the other way, toward the interview room. Two carts passing in the night, carrying a coach on the ascent in his career and one who had reached the end.

Davis (right) has been on the winning side twice out of his three games against Duke. David J. Phillip/AP
Davis (right) has been on the winning side twice out of his three games against Duke.
© David J. Phillip/AP

After the Duke press conference ended, Blue Devils Paolo Banchero, Keels and Wendell Moore Jr. got back on a cart for the ride to the locker room. Keels and Moore hung their heads. Banchero put his left hand on his forehead, the embodiment of tourney heartbreak.
Their coach came out a few minutes later and again climbed onto the back of the cart next to Mickie. Looking up, he saw a phalanx of media members taking pictures of the scene. Always possessing a quick wit, K said to the assemblage of reporters and photographers, “Maybe you can superimpose a sunset.”
The cart whisked Krzyzewski’s back to the locker room, where preparations were underway to head back to the team hotel. Golf carts kept rolling from the locker room to the loading dock, where tired Superdome employees were making their way out after a long day. The area smelled like stale beer and bus exhaust.
At 11:40 p.m., Krzyzewski and Mickie left on the 10th golf cart making trips from the locker room to the bus.
At 11:43, he climbed aboard the bus and sat next to his wife in the second row. He rubbed his face with his left hand, folded his arms across his chest, then stood up and went back a few rows to address his players one more time.
Outside the bus, a security guard signaled to the police motorcycle escort to start their engines and turn on their flashing lights. They took the lead and the Duke bus followed, driving off into the warm and breezy Louisiana night. Their time in this tournament was done. Mike Krzyzewski had left the building. Left the sport.
Left the sport at Duke and beyond better than he found it.

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Jon Scheyer is set to take over head coaching duties next season.

Photos: Meet the Wife Of Duke Coach Jon Scheyer
Caleb Love Hits The Dagger For UNC – Search (bing.com)
North Carolina defeats Duke in Final Four – Search (bing.com)
Mike Krzyzewski Is Proud of His Duke Team – Search (bing.com)
Video: Controversial Foul Called In Duke vs. UNC Tonight (msn.com)
Duke’s Scheyer ready for program’s ‘pivotal’ coaching change (msn.com)
Krzyzewski K-O’d: North Carolina takes out coach, Duke 81-77 (msn.com)
PHOTO GALLERY: Tar Heels take down Duke to advance to title game (msn.com)
UNC coach Hubert Davis greets Coach K’s wife in viral moment – Sports Illustrated
Coach K threw Mark Williams under the bus after missing critical free throws (msn.com)
March Sadness: The agony of defeat in the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournament.
Mike Krzyzewski got emotional as his family and players paid tribute in incredible video (msn.com)
Watch: Coach K walks off court one last time, delivers final press conference as Duke coach (msn.com)
Mike Krzyzewski’s final game as Duke coach: North Carolina defeats Blue Devils in Final Four (msn.com)
Listen to thrilling North Carolina radio call of Caleb Love’s clutch 3 that eventually took down Duke (msn.com)
Several people injured during celebrations in Chapel Hill following UNC’s Final Four win over Duke (msn.com)
WATCH: North Carolina fans storm court at Dean Smith Center after 2022 Final Four win over Duke (msn.com)
Caleb Love’s Dagger Three Helps UNC Down Duke in Instant Classic, Send Coach K Into Retirement (msn.com)
UNC sends Coach K packing, wins Final Four game and owns rivalry bragging rights forever | Opinion (msn.com)
March Madness 2022: Men’s NCAA Tournament schedule and results on the road to the national title (msn.com)
Final Four: Will UNC have another legendary performance against Kansas in the title game? – Search (bing.com)
Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski ends illustrious career with loss to UNC: ‘This team has been a joy for me to coach’ (msn.com)
After a Heartbreaking Loss In His Final Game, Coach Krzyzewski Only Needed 9 Words to Remind Everyone Why He’ll Always Be the Greatest (msn.com)
Final Four winners and losers: UNC and first-year coach Hubert Davis riding high; Duke and Coach K face cruel exit (msn.com)
Coach K’s Farewell Tour: The top 42 Duke players in Mike Krzyzewski’s 42 years as coach of the Blue Devils – CBSSports.com
Final Four 2022: UNC proves spoiling Coach K’s home finale was no fluke by ousting Duke from NCAA Tournament (msn.com)
Peyton Manning Says Tiger Woods In “Good Spirits” Before The Masters: Fans React.
Coach K dropped a truth bomb on the NCAA even Duke haters will respect (msn.com)
Coach K’s gift to his players after Duke’s Final Four loss: Easing their pain (msn.com)
This Coach K tribute video featuring Duke legends should win an Oscar.
Paolo Banchero: Mike Krzyzewski ‘Lived Up to Everything’ He Promised (msn.com)
College Basketball World Reacts To Postgame Handshake Controversy (msn.com)
North Carolina’s dream is Duke’s nightmare in epic Final Four game (msn.com)
Coach K’s FINAL postgame interview: ‘Both teams played their hearts out’.
Tiger Woods Announces Masters Plan: Golf World Reacts (msn.com)
Coach K Had A Message For Duke’s Students On Sunday (msn.com)
2022 NBA Mock Draft: Expert Predictions & Analysis – New Arena
Duke-UNC TV Ratings Are Out: Sports World Reacts (msn.com)
Duke-UNC handshake line garners strong reactions (msn.com)
Thanks, Coach K | JJ Redick – YouTube

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Jaymes Young – Stone (1 Hour Version) – YouTube
Jaymes Young – Stone [Official Audio] – YouTube

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