Greatest College Basketball Coaches by Career Winning Percentage
Recruiting talented players and devising winning game plans weren't always the only job requirements for a successful college basketball coach. In the early 20th century, many college coaches had to wear more than one hat and coach two or three sports per year. And they still won frequently on the hardwood.
So how do we compare great college basketball coaches from different eras?
We could rank coaches by number of national titles (John Wooden) or career wins (Mike Krzyzewski). Those are both legitimate parameters. But for this list, college coaches are ranked by career winning percentage, spanning at least 10 years at major (Division I or equivalent) programs.
These 50 coaches — all of whom won close to or more than three out of every four games they coached — exemplify sustained excellence.
50. Joe Lapchick
Coaching career: 20 years (1936-47, 1956-65)
Schools: St. John’s
Record: 334-130
Winning percentage: .7198
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Joe Lapchick was a popular professional basketball player with the Original Celtics. He coached St. John’s from 1936 to 1947, went back to the NBA and coached the New York Knicks for 10 years, then returned to head up the Red Storm from 1957 to 1965.
He led St. John's to four NIT championships (1943, 1944, 1959, 1965), but made just one NCAA tournament appearance.
The primary source for win-loss records is Sports Reference. Records for active coaches are updated through April 2, 2019.
49. Cam Henderson
Coaching career: 20 years (1935-55)
Schools: Marshall
Record: 283-110
Winning percentage: .7201
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Cam Henderson is credited with pioneering the fast break and the 2-3 zone defense. At Marshall, he served as the athletic director as well as head coach of the football and baseball teams.
On the hardcourt, Henderson’s teams finished with a .500-or-better record in all but one of his years as coach.
48. Gregg Marshall
Coaching career: 21 years (1998-present)
Schools: Winthrop, Wichita State
Record: 502-195
Winning percentage: .7202
National championships: 0
Bottom line: He’s taken his squads to the NCAA tournament 14 times and led the Wichita State Shockers to the Final Four in 2013.
Marshall also has been to the NIT three times, and won that title in 2011, topping Alabama, 66-57.
46. (tie) Fred Schaus
Coaching career: 12 years (1954-60, 1972-78)
Schools: West Virginia, Purdue
Record: 250-97
Winning percentage: .7205
National championships: 0
Bottom line: As a player at West Virginia, Schaus was the first NCAA player to score 1,000 points. After retiring from the NBA, he came back to his alma mater and took the Mountaineers to five straight NCAA berths.
He left to coach the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA, then returned to the college ranks as coach at Purdue, where he led the Boilermakers to the NIT championship in 1974.
46. (tie) Dave Rose
Coaching career: 14 years (2005-19)
Schools: Brigham Young
Record: 348-135
Winning percentage: .7205
National championships: 0
Bottom line: As a player, Dave Rose was co-captain of the University of Houston 'Phi Slamma Jamma" team that lost the 1983 NCAA tournament final to North Carolina State.
Coaching BYU in the Mountain West Conference, Rose won 20 games or more in his first 13 seasons. But in November 2018, the NCAA ruled that his 2015-16 and 2016-17 teams had to vacate 47 wins due to a player's involvement with boosters.
Still, Rose went to the NCAA tournament eight times (posting a 4-8 record) and NIT tournament five teams (going 6-5).
He retired after the 2018-19 season. "I’m 61-years old. I still haven’t worked a day in my life," Rose said.
45. Joe B. Hall
Coaching career: 16 years (1961-64, 1972-85)
Schools: Regis, Kentucky
Record: 334-129
Winning percentage: .7214
National championships: 1 (1978)
Bottom line: Joe. B Hall coached Kentucky from 1972 to 1985, after a three-year stint at Regis from 1961 to 1964 (and touring as a competing player with the Harlem Globetrotters).
His teams went 20-9 in 10 NCAA tournaments, including three Final Fours and a national championship in 1978.
He was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2012.
44. James Usilton
Coaching career: 13 years (1926-39)
Schools: Temple
Record: 205-79
Winning percentage: .7218
National championships: 0
Bottom line: He spent 13 years as head coach at Temple, and during his tenure, he won the first NIT championship. That 1937-38 team that went 23-2 was retroactively named the national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation.
43. Larry Brown
Coaching career: 11 years (1979-81, 1983-88, 2012-16)
Schools: UCLA, Kansas, Southern Methodist
Record: 262-100
Winning percentage: .7238
National championships: 1
Bottom line: Larry Brown is the only coach in basketball history to win both an NBA title (Detroit Pistons, 2004) and NCAA championship (Kansas, 1988).
In the college ranks, he took eight teams to the NCAA tournament and compiled a 19-7 record, including the title and three Final Four appearances.
42. Tom Izzo
Coaching career: 24 years (1995-present)
Schools: Michigan State
Record: 606-231
Winning percentage: .7240
National championships: 1 (2000)
Bottom line: "Mr. March" has excelled in the NCAA tournament and won the championship in 2000.
In 24 years, he’s been in the Big Dance 22 times, including a loss in the 2009 title game and eight Final Fours.
He’s also won nine Big Ten championships and six conference tournament titles.
41. Lou Carnesecca
Coaching career: 24 years (1965-70, 1973-92)
Schools: St. John’s
Record: 526-200
Winning percentage: .7245
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Known for his sense of humor and colorful sweater collection, Lou Carnesecca coached 24 seasons at St. John’s and took his teams to the postseason (NCAA or NIT tournament) every year.
His best season with the Red Storm was 1985, when the team went 31-4 and made its only Final Four appearance.
Carnesecca was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992 and the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.
42. Tony Bennett
Coaching career: 13 years (2006-present)
Schools: Washington State, Virginia
Record: 321-122
Winning percentage: .7246
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Often considered one of the best defensive coaches in college basketball, Tony Bennett has been at Virginia since 2009, and turned the Cavaliers into a perennial ACC powerhouse.
With Virginia, he’s won the regular-season title four times and has been to the postseason 11 times, including a 2018 first-round loss in the NCAA tournament, the first time a No. 1 seed lost to a No. 16 seed.
His team rebounded from that dubious mark the next season and made the 2019 Final Four, his first Final Four appearance.
39. Lew Andreas
Coaching career: 25 years (1924-50)
Schools: Syracuse
Record: 358-135
Winning percentage: .7262
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Lew Andreas played football and baseball at Syracuse. After graduation, he started coaching football and basketball.
His greatest basketball team was the 1925-26 Orangemen (now just Orange), which went 19-1 and was retroactively named national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation.
38. Dana Kirk
Coaching career: 10 years (1976-86)
Schools: Virginia Commonwealth, Memphis
Record: 215-81
Winning percentage: .7264
National championships: 0
Bottom line: This isn’t a pretty story. Dana Kirk built Memphis into a powerhouse in the early 1980s, with five straight trips to the NCAA tournament and a Final Four appearance in 1984-85.
A year later, Kirk was found to have committed severe recruiting violations, and Memphis State had all of its NCAA tournament games from 1982 to 1985 vacated.
37. Henry Lannigan
Coaching career: 24 years (1905-29)
Schools: Virginia
Record: 254-95
Winning percentage: .728
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Henry Lannigan was the first basketball coach at the University of Virginia. His 1914-15 basketball team finished with a perfect 17-0 record.
Lannigan also coached the track team (the university’s track and field venue is named in his honor) and formed the Cavaliers' first boxing team.
36. Nat Holman
Coaching career: 37 years (1919-52, 1954-50)
Schools: City College of New York
Record: 405-150
Winning percentage: .7297
National championships: 1 (1950)
Bottom line: Even while he played professional basketball until 1930, Nat Holman started as the City College of New York (CCNY) coach in 1919.
"Mr. Basketball" won both the NCAA and the NIT tournaments in 1950 (before the tourneys were run concurrently).
In 1951, CCNY players were caught in a multi-team point-shaving scandal. Holman was cleared, but the scandal led to CCNY dropping to Division III.
35. Jim Boeheim
Coaching career: 43 years (1976-present)
Schools: Syracuse
Record: 1,047-385
Winning percentage: .7311
National championships: 1 (2003)
Bottom line: Jim Boeheim often doesn’t look chipper — even though winning more than 1,000 games should cheer up any coach.
In 43 seasons, he’s gone to the NCAA Tournament an astounding 34 times, where he’s 60-33.
The Orange have been in five Final Fours, and are 1-2 in championship games, with the national title coming in 2003.
34. Lute Olson
Coaching career: 34 years (1973-2007)
Schools: Long Beach State, Iowa, Arizona
Record: 776-285
Winning percentage: .7314
National championships: 1 (1997)
Bottom line: Lute Olson was head coach at Arizona for 25 years, where he won 11 Pac-10 regular-season titles and a national championship in 1997.
He took teams to the NCAA tournament 28 times, compiling a 46-28 record that included five trips to the Final Four.
Olson was inducted into both the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002 and College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.
33. Doc Meanwell
Coaching career: 22 years (1911-34)
Schools: Wisconsin, Missouri
Record: 280-101
Winning percentage: .7349
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Walter Meanwell, a native of Leeds, England, led Wisconsin to perfect 15-0 records in 1911-12 and 1913-14.
Nicknamed "Doc" after he earned a doctorate degree in 1915, Meanwell had an astounding 126-11 win-loss record in his first eight seasons as a college coach, including two years at Missouri.
32. Ott Romney
Coaching career: 13 years (1922-35)
Schools: Montana State, Bigham Young
Record: 283-102
Winning percentage: .7351
National championships: 0
Bottom line: A relative of Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, George Ottinger "Ott" Romney coached basketball, football and track at Montana State Agricultural College (now Montana State) and Brigham Young.
Over his college coaching career, Romney never won fewer than 18 games in a season, and went 36-2 in 1927-28.
31. Phog Allen
Coaching career: 49 years (1905-09, 1912-56)
Schools: Baker University, Kansas, Central Missouri
Record: 719-259
Winning percentage: .7352
National championships: 1 (1952)
Bottom line: Forrest Clare "Phog" Allen got his nickname from his foghorn-like voice, and is known as the "Father of Basketball Coaching."
In 39 seasons at Kansas, his teams won 24 conference championships.
His 1951-52 Jayhawks won the NCAA championship, and were runners-up in 1940 and 1953.
30. Everett Case
Coaching career: 19 years (1946-65)
Schools: North Carolina State
Record: 377-134
Winning percentage: .7378
National championships: 0
Bottom line: The "Gray Fox" compiled an impressive record over 19 years at North Carolina State, where he won nine ACC regular-season titles and notched 11 conference tournament wins.
He made the NCAA Final Four one time.
As a high school coach, Case went 726-75 over 23 years, winning four Indiana state championships.
29. Sean Miller
Coaching career: 15 years (2004- present)
Schools: Xavier, Arizona
Record: 384-136
Winning percentage: .7385
National championships: 0
Bottom line: He’s a three-time gold medalist with USA Basketball — once as a player, once as an assistant coach and once as a head coach.
In NCAA tournament play, Sean Miller has taken teams to the Big Dance 11 times, compiling a 19-11 record, with no trips to the Final Four.
28. Rick Pitino
Coaching career: 32 years (1975-76, 1978-83, 1985-87, 1989-97, 2001-17)
Schools: Hawaii, Boston University, Providence, Kentucky, Louisville
Record: 770-271
Winning percentage: .7397
National championships: 2 (1996, 2013)
Bottom line: In 21 visits to the NCAA tournament, Rick Pitino compiled a 54-19 record, including seven Final Four appearances and a pair of national championships.
The first title with Kentucky in 1996, after the Wildcats finished the regular season with a 34-2 record.
Pitino’s 2013 championship with Louisville was later forfeited after the NCAA found the program guilty of several infractions.
27. Thad Matta
Coaching career: 17 years (2000-17)
Schools: Butler, Xavier, Ohio State
Record: 439-154
Winning percentage: .7403
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Thad Matta got his start as a college head coach at his alma mater, Butler. After short stints there and at Xavier (wining conference coach of the year at both stops), he got the top spot at Ohio State.
Matta coached the Buckeyes for 13 years (2004-17), took two Ohio State teams to the Final Four, and won four Big Ten conference tournaments.
26. Edward McNichol
Coaching career: 10 years (1920-30)
Schools: Penn
Record: 186-63
Winning percentage: .7470
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Edward McNichol played on Penn’s basketball team from 1914 to 1917, and in his junior year was named a consensus All-American by the Helms Athletic Foundation.
In his first year coaching the team (1920), the Quakers finished with a 21-2 record and were retroactively named the Helms Athletic Foundation national champions.
25. Chick Davies
Coaching career: 21 years (1924-43, 1946-48)
Schools: Duquesne
Record: 314-106
Winning percentage: .7476
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Charles "Chick" Davies spent his entire coaching career at Duquesne, a private Catholic university in Pittsburgh, Pa.
In 1940 — the first year college basketball appeared on television — Davies took the 20-3 Dukes to both the NCAA and NIT tournaments. In the six-team NIT field, Duquesne lost in the finals to Colorado. Prior to the NIT tourney, Davies' club had lost in the Final Four of the eight-team NCAA field.
He went 1-1 in NCAA tournament games and 2-3 in the NIT in his career.
24. Fred Bennion
Coaching career: 11 years (1908-19)
Schools: Brigham Young, Utah, Montana State
Record: 96-31
Winning percentage: .7559
National championships: 0
Bottom line: During his career at three colleges, Fred Bennion coached basketball at BYU, Utah and Montana Agricultural (now Montana State) — but he also coached football at Utah and baseball at BYU.
His best stint on the hardwood was a 44-9 run (.830 winning percentage) at Utah.
23. Harry Fisher
Coaching career: 14 years (1904-16, 1921-25)
Schools: Fordham, Army, Columbia, St. Johns
Record: 189-60
Winning percentage: .7590
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Say what? Harry Fisher began coaching the Fordham University team while he was an All-American student-athlete on the Columbia basketball team that won a national championship in 1906.
Fisher went on to coach at Columbia for a decade, racking up a 101-39 record.
On top of that impressive legacy, Fisher was in the group that wrote the original rules for collegiate basketball.
22. Vic Bubas
Coaching career: 10 years (1959-69)
School: Duke
Record: 213-67
Winning percentage: .7607
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Vic Bubas is credited with pioneering the art of recruiting players on a national basis. He expanded Duke’s program from a regional to a national stage.
His Blue Devil teams won four conference championships and went to the NCAA tournament each time. He made it to three Final Fours and has an 11-4 postseason record.
21. George Keogan
Coaching career: 23 years (1915-16, 1919-21, 1923-43)
Schools: Saint Louis, Valparaiso, Notre Dame
Record: 371-116
Winning percentage: .7618
National championships: 0
Bottom line: After one year at Saint Louis and two years at Valpo, George Keogan made his mark as a coach for 20 years at Notre Dame.
In two decades leading the Fighting Irish, he never had a losing season.
Keogan also was the head baseball coach and an assistant to Irish football coach Knute Rockne.
20. Walter Livingston
Coaching career: 16 years (1911-27)
School: Denison
Record: 180-56
Winning percentage: .7627
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Walter Livingston served as the basketball, football and track coach at Denison.
From 1911 to 1952, he also was the school’s athletic director.
"Livy" never had a losing season in 16 years on the hardcourt with the Big Red.
19. Bill Self
Number of seasons coaching: 26 years (1993-present)
Schools: Oral Roberts, Tulsa, Illinois, Kansas
Record: 680-211
Winning percentage: .7632
National championships: 1 (2008)
Bottom line: Bill Self has done his best work at Kansas, where his 16-year winning percentage is .817, including a home win percentage of .957 at Allen Fieldhouse.
He led the Jayhawks to at least a share of 14 straight Big 12 regular-season championships, a Kansas record.
Self has been in the NCAA tournament 21 times, gone to three Final Fours, won the national championship in 2008 and has a 47-19 postseason record.
18. Frank Keaney
Coaching career: 28 years (1920-48)
School: Rhode Island
Record: 401-124
Winning percentage: .7638
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Frank Keaney was an innovator of the run-and-shoot offense during his 28-year tenure at Rhode Island.
He won eight conference championships and participated in four postseasons in the NIT.
After retiring from the college game, he was offered the head coaching post with the Boston Celtics, but his doctor refused to let him take the job.
17. Jack Ramsey
Coaching career: 11 years (1955-66)
Schools: Saint Joseph’s
Record: 234-72
Winning percentage: .7647
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Before "Dr. Jack" led the Portland Trail Blazers to the 1977 NBA title and then became an ESPN commentator, he made a mark at Saint Joseph’s.
In his first season, the Hawks made the postseason (NIT) for the first time.
In his 11-year college coaching career, Ramsay took his college squads to the NCAA Tournament seven times and advanced to one Final Four.
16. Mike Krzyzewski
Coaching career: 44 years (1975-present)
Schools: Army, Duke
Record: 1,132-344
Winning percentage: .7669
National championships: 5 (1991, 1992, 2001, 2010, 2015)
Bottom line: Still going strong, "Coach K" is the all-time leader in total wins, and only John Wooden has more national championships.
Krzyzewski has taken the Blue Devils to the NCAA tournament 34 times, including 12 Final Fours, while piling up 94 postseason wins.
He also coached three United States men’s basketball teams to Olympic gold medals.
15. Dean Smith
Coaching career: 36 years (1961-97)
Schools: North Carolina
Record: 879-254
Winning percentage: .7758
National championships: 2 (1982, 1993)
Bottom line: The legendary "Dean" of college basketball, Smith was a success on the court and so were his players in the classroom, with 96.6 percent of his student-athletes receiving their degrees.
In 36 years as the Tar Heels coach, Smith led his teams to the NCAA tournament 27 times and advanced to the Final Four 11 times. His overall postseason record is 65-27.
14. John Calipari
Coaching career: 27 years (1988-present)
Schools: Massachusetts, Memphis, Kentucky
Record: 750-211
Winning percentage: .7804
National championships: 1 (2012)
Bottom line: Including his national championship with Kentucky, John Calipari has taken three different schools to the Final Four: Kentucky (2011, 2012, 2014, 2015), UMass (1996) and Memphis (2008).
Despite run-ins with the media and NCAA, Calipari has been successful. His teams have won 20 games 21 times and collected 30 wins eight times. He also has three 35-win seasons.
13. Francis Schmidt
Number of seasons coaching: 17 years (1915-34)
Schools: Tulsa, Arkansas, Texas Christian
Record: 258-72
Winning percentage: .7818
National championships: 0
Bottom line: While at Arkansas, Francis Schmidt coached the basketball, football and baseball teams, all of which were consistent winners.
Schmidt’s contribution to pop culture is the internationally known cliché: "Those fellows put their pants on one leg at a time," which he uttered as the football coach at Ohio State before a game with Michigan.
12. James Freeman
Coaching career: 10 years (1927-36, 1974-48)
Schools: St. John’s, Scranton
Record: 184-51
Winning percentage: .7830
National championships: 0
Bottom line: James Freeman played for St. John’s, graduated in 1927 and became the head basketball coach the following year.
He left in 1936 with a 177-31 record and a winning percentage of .851, which would have been the best in college basketball history. But one year of coaching at Scranton and a 7-20 record there caused the winning percentage to dip.
11. Al McGuire
Coaching career: 13 years (1964-77)
Schools: Marquette
Record: 295-80
Winning percentage: .7867
National championships: 1 (1977)
Bottom line: What a way to go out. Al McGuire won a national championship in his final season at Marquette.
He took the Golden Eagles to the NCAA tournament nine times (including two Final Fours) and amassed a postseason record of 20-9.
After coaching, McGuire became a color commentator for college games, famously paired on TV with Billy Packer.
10. Roy Williams
Coaching career: 31 years (1988-present)
Schools: Kansas, North Carolina
Record: 871-234
Winning percentage: .7882
National championships: 3 (2005, 2009, 2017)
Bottom line: He moved from one national powerhouse to another, coaching Kansas to a .805 winning percentage (1988-2003) and then North Carolina (.774 and counting).
All three of Roy Williams' national championships came with the Tar Heels, including his second season there (2005).
9. Jerry Tarkanian
Coaching career: 30 years (1969-92, 1995-2002)
Schools: Long Beach State, Nevada-Las Vegas, Fresno State
Record: 761-202
Winning percentage: .7902
National championships: 1 (1990)
Bottom line: The bald-pated, towel-chewing Jerry Tarkanian is best known for coaching success with the Runnin’ Rebels at UNLV. He took those squads to four Final Fours and won a national championship in 1990.
"Tark the Shark" went to the NCAA tournament 18 times, going 38-18.
He revolutionized the college game with a pressing defense that fed into a fast-paced offense.
8. Ralph Jones
Coaching career: 17 years (1903-20)
Schools: Butler, Wabash, Purdue, Illinois
Record: 194-51
Winning percentage: .7918
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Ralph Jones was an integral part of the development of high school basketball programs in Indiana and organized a school team as a student in 1899.
As a college coach, he won four conference titles and led three different schools to undefeated seasons: Wabash (1908), Purdue (1912) and Illinois (1915).
7. Thomas Kibler
Coaching career: 12 years (1908-10, 1913-17, 1919-25)
Schools: Ohio State, Washington College
Record: 125-32
Winning percentage: .7962
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Thomas Kibler coached just two years at Ohio State, and with a record of 22-2, he still holds that school’s record for highest winning percentage.
He coached basketball, football and baseball at Washington College, and in 1925, his hoops squad finished the season with a perfect 20-0 record — the last season the school was classified as a major college basketball program (Division I or equivalent).
Kibler coached the Shoremen basketball team until 1939 and won 169 more games, going 272-98 overall.
6. John Kresse
Coaching career: 11 years (1991-2002)
School: College of Charleston
Record: 258-64
Winning percentage: .8012
National championships: 0
Bottom line: John Kresse never had a losing season as coach of the College of Charleston Cougars.
He won nine conference championships but notched just one win in the NCAA tournament, going 1-4 in four appearances.
5. John Wooden
Coaching career: 29 years (1946-75)
Schools: Indiana State, UCLA
Record: 664-162
Winning percentage: .8039
National championships: 10 (1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975)
Bottom line: The Wizard of Westwood set the standard for college basketball greatness.
John Wooden won 10 national championships in a 12-year stretch, including an astounding seven in a row. During that run, his UCLA Bruins teams won an NCAA-record 88 consecutive games.
His pyramid of success is legendary, and he was national coach of the year a record seven times.
4. Adolph Rupp
Coaching career: 41 years (1930-72)
School: Kentucky
Record: 876-190
Winning percentage: .8218
National championships: 4 (1948, 1949, 1951, 1958)
Bottom line: Adolph Rupp was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1969, and his name is on the arena where the Kentucky Wildcats play their home games.
Rupp was an early innovator of the fast break and set offense.
He won four national titles while recruiting 80 percent of his players from Kentucky.
3. Mark Few
Coaching career: 20 years (1999-present)
Schools: Gonzaga
Record: 568-122
Winning percentage: .8232
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Mark Few is just 56 years old, so he likely has many years left to add to his streak of 20 winning seasons (above .500).
In his college coaching career, Few has lost 10 or more games in a season only twice, led Gonzaga to 18 West Coast Conference championships and made the NCAA tournament every year, advancing to the Final Four in 2017.
2. Clair Bee
Coaching career: 21 years (1928-31, 1931-51)
Schools: Rider, Long Island University
Record: 413-88
Winning percentage: .8244
National championships: 0
Bottom line: Clair Bee’s teams won 95 percent of their games from 1931 to 1951, including 43 in a row from 1935-37.
Credited with the creation of the 1-3-1 zone, he twice helmed undefeated seasons at Long Island University and won NIT titles in 1939 and 1941.
1. Sam Burton
Coaching career: 12 years (1921-33)
School: West Texas A&M
Record: 210-42
Winning percentage: .8333
National championships: 0
Bottom line: When Sam Burton first joined the West Texas State Teachers College, he was asked to coach basketball, baseball, football and track.
He was known as "Sad Sam" for the dour expression he wore on the bench — but none of his basketball teams ever lost more than five games in a season.
Related: Greatest College Basketball Teams