Rick Pitino

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Rick Pitino
Pitino in the 2007 Big East Tournament
Pitino in the 2007 Big East Tournament
Title Head coach
College Louisville
Sport Basketball
Born September 18, 1952 (1952-09-18) (age 55)
Place of birth New York, New York, U.S.
Career highlights
Championships
NCAA Division I Tournament Championship (1996)
America East Tournament Championship (1983)
America East Regular Season Championship (1980, 1983)
SEC Tournament Championship (1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997)
SEC Regular Season Championship (1995, 1996)
C-USA Tournament Championship (2003, 2005)
Awards
NABC National Coach of the Year (1987)
John Wooden National Coach of the Year (1987)
SEC Coach of the Year (1990, 1991, 1996)
C-USA Coach of the Year (2005)
Playing career
1970–1974 UMass
Position Guard
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1974–1976
1976
1976–1978
1978–1983
1983–1985
1985–1987
1987–1989
1989–1997
1997–2001
2001–present
Hawaiʻi (asst.)
Hawaiʻi
Syracuse (asst.)
Boston University
New York Knicks (asst.)
Providence
New York Knicks
Kentucky
Boston Celtics
Louisville
Pitino coaching the Louisville Cardinals
Pitino coaching the Louisville Cardinals

Rick Pitino (born September 18, 1952) is the head basketball coach at the University of Louisville. He has also served as head coach at Boston University, Providence College and the University of Kentucky, leading that program to the NCAA championship in 1996. Pitino holds the distinction of being the only men's coach in NCAA history to lead three different schools (Providence, Kentucky, and Louisville) to the Final Four. He has coached on the professional level for the New York Knicks and Boston Celtics with mixed success. In addition, Pitino has achieved a measure of success as an author and a motivational speaker.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Pitino, an Italian American and native of New York City, was captain of the St. Dominic High School basketball team in Oyster Bay, Long Island. He enrolled at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1970, where he joined the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He was a standout guard for the Minutemen basketball team. His 329 career assists rank eighth all-time at UMass and his 168 assists as a senior is the sixth-best single season total ever there. Pitino was a freshman at the same time future NBA legend Julius Erving spent his junior (and final) year at UMass, although the two never played on the same team because freshmen were ineligible to play varsity sports at the time. Pitino earned his degree from UMass in 1974. He was an inductee into the UMass Hall of Fame.

[edit] Collegiate coaching

Pitino is currently head coach at the University of Louisville. Previous college coaching assignments include Boston University, Providence College, and the University of Kentucky. As a collegiate head coach, Pitino has compiled a 494-182 record, for a .731 winning percentage that is ranked 12th among active coaches and 30th all-time among all collegiate basketball coaches entering the 2008 season.

Pitino started his coaching career as a graduate assistant at the University of Hawaii in 1974, and became a full-time assistant in 1975. He was then the first assistant hired by Jim Boeheim in 1976 as Boeheim began a now 31-year tenure at Syracuse University.

Pitino's first head coaching job came in 1978 at Boston University. In the two seasons before his arrival, the team had won a mere 17 games. Pitino led the team to its first NCAA appearance in 24 years.[1]

Pitino left Boston University to be an assistant coach with the New York Knicks under Hubie Brown. Pitino returned to college coaching to become head coach at Providence in 1985. The struggling Providence had gone a dismal 11-20 in the year before he took over. Two years later, Pitino led the team to the Final Four. That Final Four team featured point guard Billy Donovan, who would go on to be an assistant coach under Pitino at Kentucky and then win back-to-back national championships as head coach at the University of Florida.

After spending two years coaching in the NBA, Pitino returned to the college level in 1989, becoming the coach at Kentucky. The legendary Kentucky program was reeling from a major recruiting scandal brought on by former coach Eddie Sutton that left it on NCAA probation. Pitino quickly restored Kentucky's reputation and performance, leading his second school to the Final Four in the 1993 NCAA Tournament, and winning a national title in the 1996 NCAA Tournament, Kentucky's first NCAA championship in 18 years. The following year, Pitino's Kentucky team made it back to the national title game, losing to Arizona in overtime in the finals of the 1997 NCAA Tournament. Pitino's fast-paced teams at Kentucky were favorites of the school's fans. It was primarily at Kentucky where he implemented his signature style of full-court pressure defense.

Pitino went back to the NBA in 1997, but returned to college—and his adopted home state—on March 21, 2001 to coach a struggling Louisville team following the retirement of Hall of Fame coach Denny Crum. In the 2005 season, Pitino led Louisville to their first Final Four in 19 years, and became the only men's coach in NCAA history to lead three different schools to the Final Four. Immediately following their Final Four run, several players graduated or entered the 2005 NBA Draft, leaving Coach Pitino's 2005-06 team very inexperienced. The inexperience ended up in the Cardinals limping into the Big East Tournament seeded 12th, and missing the NCAA tournament. They did rebound and made it to the semifinals in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT), but were defeated by eventual champions University of South Carolina. The 2007 Cardinal team was primarily the same team, with added freshmen. Picked to be towards the bottom of the Big East conference yet again, Pitino led them to a 2nd place finish, 12-4 (tied with the University of Pittsburgh, but Louisville beat them earlier in the season) in the conference standings and a first round bye in the conference tournament. Pitino, realizing that this is another rebounding year and not paying any attention to the critics, implemented a 2-2-1 and 2-3 defense that has flustered the conference after he started using it midway through the season, and ending up with an unpredictable turnaround, moving up 10 spots from last year when they went 6-10. The surprisingly-strong 2007 team's season ended when the Cardinals lost to Texas A&M in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The 2008 Cardinals were also quite successful, finishing second in the Big East and ending the regular season ranked 13th in both the AP and Coaches' polls. University of Louisville was a three-seed in the 2008 NCAA tournament's East region. They defeated Boise State, Oklahoma and Tennessee to advance to the Elite Eight, where they were defeated by top seeded North Carolina.

Pitino is considered by many to be one of the first coaches to promote fully taking advantage of the 3-point shot, first adopted by the NCAA in 1987. By exploiting the 3-point shot, his teams at Kentucky in the early 1990s were known as Pitino's Bombinos, as a significant portion of the offensive points came from the 3-point shot. Even now, Pitino's teams are known for the 3-point threat and all of his teams rank towards the top in 3-point attempts per season.

[edit] Professional coaching

Pitino became head coach of the New York Knicks in 1987. The year before he arrived, the team had won only 24 games. In just two years, Pitino led the Knicks to their first division title in nearly twenty years.[2]

His NBA coaching experience often demonstrated a deep frustration with the dynamics of the league, especially in Boston, where he amassed a 102-146 record from 1997 to 2001. After being beaten by the Toronto Raptors on March 1, 2000 on a buzzer-beater by Vince Carter, Pitino's frustration reached critical mass as he addressed the press. Referring to the expectations of Boston Celtics fans and media, Pitino challenged each of them to let go of the past and focus on the future:

Larry Bird is not walking through that door, fans. Kevin McHale is not walking through that door, and Robert Parish is not walking through that door. And if you expect them to walk through that door, they're going to be gray and old. What we are is young, exciting, hard-working, and we're going to improve. People don't realize that, and as soon as they realize those three guys are not coming through that door, the better this town will be for all of us because there are young guys in that (locker) room playing their asses off. I wish we had $90 million under the salary cap. I wish we could buy the world. We can't; the only thing we can do is work hard, and all the negativity that's in this town sucks. I've been around when Jim Rice was booed. I've been around when (Carl) Yastrzemski was booed. And it stinks. It makes the greatest town, greatest city in the world, lousy. The only thing that will turn this around is being upbeat and positive like we are in that locker room... and if you think I'm going to succumb to negativity, you're wrong. You've got the wrong guy leading this team.

Pitino struggled in his roles with the Celtics, and statistics like 1998's 19-31 record made him little better in the eyes of many Boston fans than his inexperienced predecessor, M.L. Carr. Pitino's remarks became a cornerstone of Boston Celtics lore, and has served as a metaphor for other sports franchises and their inability to relive past successes. Pitino himself reprised the speech in a tongue-in-cheek manner at Louisville in November 2005, challenging his freshmen players to play as tough as past seniors and drawing laughter from sportswriters in a post-game press conference.

[edit] Author and accomplishments

Pitino is the author of a motivational self-help book (and audio recording) named Success is a Choice. He published an autobiography in 1988 entitled Born to Coach describing his life up until his time with the Knicks.

In 2005, Pitino's Louisville team posted a tie for the most single season wins in school history (33) while he became the first and only men's coach in NCAA history to lead three separate schools (Providence, Kentucky, and Louisville) to the Final Four.

Pitino's .744 winning percentage in 43 NCAA Tournament games is 3rd best among active coaches.

[edit] Celtic Pride Stable

Beyond basketball, Pitino has been involved in the sport of Thoroughbred horse racing as the lead partner in Celtic Pride Stable. Among its notable horses are A P Valentine and Halory Hunter.[3]

[edit] Personal life

Pitino married his wife, the former Joanne Minardi, in 1976. They have five living children: Michael, Christopher, Richard (currently serving as an assistant coach to his father at the University of Louisville[4]), Ryan and Jacqueline. Another son, Daniel, died in 1987 from congenital heart failure at the age of six months. Rick and Joanne established the Daniel Pitino Foundation (along with a Daniel Pitino shelter in Owensboro, Kentucky) in his memory, which has raised millions of dollars for children in need.[5]

Their son's death was not the last tragedy for Rick and Joanne. Both were especially hard-hit by 9/11, as Joanne's brother and Rick's closest friend, Billy Minardi, was working as a bond trader for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 105th floor of the north tower of the World Trade Center when it was struck by American Airlines Flight 11. Since 2002, UofL has designated a December home game as the Billy Minardi Classic. Only a few months earlier, another brother-in-law of Rick, Don Vogt, was killed after being hit by a New York City cab.[6]

Preceded by
M.L. Carr
Boston Celtics head coach
1997–2001
Succeeded by
Jim O'Brien
Preceded by
M. L. Carr
Boston Celtics
Director of Basketball Operations

1997–2001
Succeeded by
Chris Wallace
Preceded by
Denny Crum
University of Louisville
Head Basketball Coach

2001–present
Succeeded by
Current

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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