WHY DUKE UNIVERSITY'S BASKETBALL TEAM IS THIS USC GRAD'S FAVORITE TEAM
2:30 PM December 30, 2010
My second job in TV news was as a Greensboro bureau reporter for a Winston-Salem, North Carolina TV station. It was a great experience both professionally and personally. I became a better reporter because I worked with some terrific, experienced news photographers who helped me grow as a story teller. I made some friends with whom I am still close. I grew to appreciate a part of the country I didn't know very well. And, I was introduced to Duke basketball.
One of the stories I covered while I was in North Carolina was the victory celebration at Duke University after the basketball team won the 1991 NCAA National Championship. I was there to see a team that included the likes of Christian Laettner, Grant Hill and Bobby Hurley. They were feted by their fellow students in a packed and LOUD Cameron Indoor Stadium. It was a thrill and it was the beginning of my great affection for Duke basketball. The team's leader then and now was and is Coach K--Mike Krzyzewski.
This week, Coach K reached a milestone in the North Carolina city which I once called home--Greensboro. Duke beat UNC Greensboro 108-62, giving Mike Krzyzewski his 880th career win and moving him past his former rival Dean Smith (another great) from the University of North Carolina into second place on the Division 1 men's basketball wins list. It's a milestone all college basketball fans should celebrate because Coach K stands for much more than basketball.
If winning was everything, Coach K would certainly qualify as one of the best ever. But neither he nor the student-athletes who have played for the coach would ever say winning was everything. I so admire the coach and the Duke basketball program because the coach is also about winning with grace, about leadership, and about developing young men to be more than basketball players and preparing them for life.
There's no doubt some players go to Duke to just get the exposure and move on to the NBA. But those players are the exception at Duke. According to the University of Central Florida's Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, Duke has a 92-percent graduation success rate among its basketball players. That means nine out of 10 players on Duke's national championship caliber teams actually graduate with a degree. That's huge among top programs. For perspective, Kansas has a graduation rate of 73-percent. Cal is way down at 20-percent.
So while this 'SC grad will continue to cheer for all things USC. I will also be supporting Duke and Coach K. I just hope USC and Duke never meet in the national championship. It'd be tough to root against Coach K.
Posted by Frank Buckley | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

