AT THE TOP AND STEPPING
DOWN
"Good men
plan"
Smith broke Rupp's record on
March 15, 1997, with his 877th career victory, a second-round
NCAA tournament defeat of Colorado in
Winston-Salem. He deflected credit, choosing instead to dedicate the
achievement to those who had come through his program. When
he retired the following fall, he did so in a way just as
mindful of his basketball family, waiting until the eve of
fall practice to
ensure that the job would go to his aide of 30 years, Bill
Guthridge.
In the end a true measure of Smith's greatness can be found in the enduring relationships he enjoys with former players.
photograph by Bob Donnan
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Smith is left with a wealth of memories, which, given his
astonishing powers of recall and nearly 67 years to cull
from, will serve him
well.
MARILYN TOWLER
ROBERTS:
I talked to him a few months ago, and he said, "You
sound just like your mother." And I thought to myself,
How could he remember what my mother sounded like? She's
been gone for more than 20 years. Before he hung up he
said, "Your birthday's on the
29th. Happy
birthday."
BILL GUTHRIDGE,
assistant,
1967-97:
One of our recruits my first year was Steve Previs, a guard
from Bethel Park, right outside Pittsburgh. Dean and I had
been there once in the fall to visit Steve, who lived in
this subdivision with a maze of streets. We went back in
the spring, and Dean
made 10 or 15 turns, right to the house. There were five
guys in that recruiting class, and I have no doubt he could
drive back to the homes of any of them
today.
LARRY BROWN,
former player (1961-63) and assistant coach
(1965-67):
A few years ago, during one of those times when we all come
back to visit him over the summer, he talked to [former Tar
Heels assistant coach] Eddie [Fogler] and Roy [Williams]
and me about the possibility that he might step down before
he broke the
record. He knew there'd be all the media attention, and he
didn't want it. All of us made a pact that we wouldn't let
him step
down.
KRISTEN SMITH,
daughter and a North Carolina
freshman:
Last spring I was enrolled in an advanced placement
American history course. My mom [Chapel Hill psychiatrist
Linnea Smith] and dad weren't going to let me go down to
Winston-Salem [for the record-breaking game] unless I
brought my homework with me. It
became this big deal in the newspaper: Coach Smith's
daughter was reading her history book before the
game.
Everybody was teasing me about it at school. It's not that
I was bored, just that this was a Thursday night, a school
night, and that was the rule before a game. Even that
game.
CHARLIE SHAFFER:
When I got back to Atlanta the night he broke the record,
watching his press conference on the news, I heard him say,
"I want to recognize all the assistants who coached
with me and all the players who played for me. I don't have
time to name them all,
but I could do it." Which I don't doubt. And then he
said, "They all share in this moment, if indeed it is
a moment." I thought, You've broken the alltime
record. You can at least call it a
moment.
REVEREND ROBERT
SEYMOUR:
When I retired, he and others chided me for leaving. But I
told them I'd rather leave when people want me to stay than
have them dance in the streets when I left. And I think
that was part of his
thinking.
My phone rang in January. It was Dean. He said, "Bob,
before each practice I give my team some brief words of
wisdom. Today is Martin Luther King's birthday. Can you
give me something he said?" I thought for a moment and
said, "When evil men plot, good
men
plan."
MIKE KRZYZEWSKI:
He had a style that no one's ever going to copy. To be that
smart, that psychologically aware, that good with X's and
O'swith that system, and to always take the high
roadthat just isn't going to happen
again.
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