Last week, the Sporting News released their list of the top 50 coaches of all time ( you can read their list here: http://www.sportingnews.com/college-basketball/article/2009-07-29/sporting-news-50-greatest-coaches-all-time)
A good list, but not very relevant to the young people like myself who follow sports today. Most of us have no clue as to what Toe Blake did in the NHL, or Hank Iba in college basketball, and I’m guessing a big majority of us don’t care. What we do know is what’s happened in major sports recently, and that’s what I aim to address here.
Below you’ll find my Top Ten Coaches of the Decade list. Love it, hate it, question it, whatever. Just read it and leave your thoughts. I know you’ve got some.
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Pete Carroll, Football Head Coach, USC
2 National Titles are nice. 7 straight Pac-10 titles are pretty sweet. But when you start talking about 3 Heisman winners and 25 All-American first team players, that’s impressive. Carroll consistently has the Trojans in the BCS Title hunt, not to mention constant attention on his players from NFL scouts.

Haters unite: Carroll is better than your team's coach, no question. (Photo courtesy of tigerrag.com)
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Bill Belichick, Head Coach, New England Patriots
When you win on a regular basis in a sports league that seems to have more parity than any other, that’s the essence of high-caliber coaching. Cut off hoodies and emotionless faces be damned, Bill Belichick has been the epitome of dominance in the NFL in the 2000’s. He’s led the Pats to 3 Super Bowl wins and 4 AFC titles. He’s had only one losing season this decade (2000), but the kicker may be his playoff record: 14-3.
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Urban Meyer, Football Head Coach, Utah/Florida
He’s largely thought of as the man reinventing the college football wheel, making opposing defenses look downright silly with his spread offense. It’s been good enough to win 2 of the last 3 BCS titles, not to mention winning the toughest conference in the land those 2 years as well. However, we’ve got to include Meyer’s full body of work from the decade. He won the Mountain West conference as the coach at Utah, where he went on to win his first BCS game against Pitt in dominating fashion.
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Geno Auriemma, Women’s Basketball Coach, UConn
I’m not sure what’s more surprising: seeing a women’s basketball coach this high on the list, or seeing a women’s basketball coach NOT named Pat Summitt this high on the list. However, when you break down the numbers from this decade alone, Auriemma’s have been downright outstanding. He’s led UConn to 5 NCAA titles, 7 Final Fours, and 8 Big East titles. During the 2000’s, he’s lost only 7 Big East games.

Geno cuts more nets than an over-eager fisherman. (Photo courtesy of fansonly.com)
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Phil Jackson, Head Coach, Los Angeles Lakers
One of the biggest (and lamest) knocks on Jackson is that his titles are based more on the players he’s coached (Jordan, Pippen, Shaq, Kobe) than his actual coaching talent. Whatever the case, the man has more hardware than Home Depot and more rings than Marks and Morgan. He’s had 4 NBA titles this decade, with 5 1st place finishes in the Pacific Division. Not a year that he’s coached has he NOT made the playoffs, boasting a 98-50 post season record.
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Roy Williams, Basketball Head Coach, North Carolina
Like Urban Meyer in football, Williams has managed success at two separate schools in this decade. Starting it off at Kansas where he managed to win two Big 12 titles, to 2003 when he left for his home state of North Carolina, leading the Tarheels to 2 NCAA titles, 4 ACC titles, and 2 ACC tourney titles. Not once this decade has Roy Williams failed to make it past the first round of the NCAA tourney.
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Billy Donovan, Basketball Head Coach, Florida
In a day where most young talents leave college early (if they go to college at all) for the NBA, Donovan managed the near impossible: keeping together his core of players to win back-to-back titles in 2006 and 2007. Donovan had 8 straight NCAA tournament appearances, winning 3 SEC titles during that span.

Like his stars from 2006, Donovan resisted the lure of the NBA himself a few years ago. (Photo courtesy of projo.com)
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Tony LaRussa, Manager, St. Louis Cardinals
Most baseball fans don’t think LaRussa right away when they consider great baseball managers this decade. However, LaRussa has definitely proved his worth, leading the Cards to 2 World Series’, winning one of them. He’s had 8 playoff appearances, winning the NL Central 6 of those seasons.
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Gregg Popovich, Head Coach, San Antonio Spurs
A true model of consistency, Popovich has turned one of the lesser known NBA cities into a title town. The Spurs have won 3 NBA titles playing fundamental basketball using role players instead of a lineup of superstars. They’ve had 6 1st place finishes in the Midwest Division, and have only made the playoffs one year where they didn’t get out of the first round.
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Mike Krzyzewski, Basketball Head Coach, Duke
While certainly not experiencing the splash of success this decade his rival Roy Williams has, Coach K has definitely shown he’s not about to play second fiddle to anyone. Duke has 1 NCAA title this decade, with 8 Sweet Sixteens and 6 ACC tournament titles. The key sidebar for Coach K is his success with NBA players. He led the USA’s “Redeem Team” to the 2008 Gold Medal last year in Beijing.

It wasn't so much his work at Duke, but his work in the Olympics that got Coach K on this list. (Photo courtesy of butthegameison.com)
Honorable Mention: (Joe Torre (Yankees/Dodgers), Terry Francona (Red Sox), Nick Saban (LSU/Alabama/Dolphins), Tony Dungy (Colts), Pat Summitt (Tennessee Women’s Basketball), Larry Robinson (New Jersey Devils), Mike Babcock (Ducks/Red Wings), Jim Tressel (Ohio State), Bob Stoops (Oklahoma), Larry Brown (76ers/Pistons)


