T H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y
The Chronicle
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011
DUKE 74
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
903
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTH YEAR, ISSUE 58
MSU 69
Mike Krzyzewski passes Bobby Knight on all-time wins list
Dawkins’ big night in the Garden helps deliver number 903
Krzyzewski stakes claim as top college basketball coach
by Chris Cusack
by Andy Moore
THE CHRONICLE
THE CHRONICLE
NEW YORK — When it was all over, Mike Krzyzewski pushed through the crowd of photographers surrounding him to find Bob Knight, his former coach and the man whose record he had just broken. The two embraced courtside, laughing, before Krzyzewski disappeared back into the throng. “I just told him… ‘Coach, I’m not sure people tell you this, but I love you, and I love what you’ve done for me, and thank you,’” Krzyzewski said. “And he says, ‘Boy, you’ve done pretty good for a kid who couldn’t shoot.’ I think that meant he loves me too.” More than four decades after Krzyzewski took the floor for Army as Knight’s point guard, the disciple passed his mentor with the 903rd head coaching victory of his career in a 74-69 win over Michigan State at Madison Square Garden in front of dozens of former Blue Devils. The victory breaks Knight’s NCAA Division I record, a mark that had stood since 2008. “It’s special,” said Seth Curry, who had 20 points and a team-high seven rebounds. “It’s something I’m going to remember for the rest of my life, and I hope
NEW YORK — 903. Did you really expect K to drag this out? Krzyzewski, who treats attention toward himself like a curse, only wanted and only needed one chance to pass his old coach Bob Knight last night for the 903rd win of his career. In winning, K reached the game peak. He reached commentary the pinnacle of his chosen profession. A man who went 111-106 his first eight years as a coach now sits as the greatest of all time. 903. Wow. He didn’t win those games by himself, of course, as he’ll readily tell you. He’ll say his players were responsible. He’ll say he was just lucky to recruit good kids. “I think it’ll mean a lot when it’s over,” he said to reporters in the press room of Madison Square Garden Tuesday night. “I think this is a program moment.” But to say that is to deflect reality, to gloss over the most seminal moment of his storied coaching career.
SEE 903 ON PAGE 12
SEE TRIUMPH ON PAGE 12
Coach K at Army COURTESY OF ARMY ATHLETICS
Arriving at Duke
Number 800
Passing Coach Knight CHRIS DALL, CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO/THE CHRONICLE