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Joe Paterno
* Led teams to 19 bowl victories, more than anyone in his profession;
* Become the only coach to win four New Year's Day games -- the Rose, Sugar, Cotton and Orange Bowls;
* Captured National Championships in 1982 and 1986 and had teams finish undefeated, but uncrowned, in 1968, 1969, 1973 and 1994;
* Posted 11 or more victories in 12 seasons;
* Seen at least one player win a first-team All-America berth 30 times, including LaVar Arrington of the 1998 Nittany Lions;
* Won Coach-of-the-Year honors an unprecedented four times in balloting by the American Football Coaches Association;
* Been selected by the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame as the first active coach ever to receive its "Distinguished American" award;
* Appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated as its 1986 Sportsman-of-the-Year;
* Watched more than 200 of his ex-Lions play in the National Football League, including 23 who were first-round draft choices;
* Coached players who have won all of the major college awards -- Heisman, Maxwell, Lombardi, O'Brien, Outland and Biletnikoff;
* Witnessed the payoff to his emphasis on graduating and achieving academic goals through the selection of 20 first-team Academic All-Americas, 14 Hall of Fame Scholar-Athletes and 16 NCAA postgraduate scholarship winners;
* Tutored two players enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and five whose plaques hang in the College Football Hall of Fame in South Bend.
Joe Paterno
* Led teams to 19 bowl victories, more than anyone in his profession;
* Become the only coach to win four New Year's Day games -- the Rose, Sugar, Cotton and Orange Bowls;
* Captured National Championships in 1982 and 1986 and had teams finish undefeated, but uncrowned, in 1968, 1969, 1973 and 1994;
* Posted 11 or more victories in 12 seasons;
* Seen at least one player win a first-team All-America berth 30 times, including LaVar Arrington of the 1998 Nittany Lions;
* Won Coach-of-the-Year honors an unprecedented four times in balloting by the American Football Coaches Association;
* Been selected by the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame as the first active coach ever to receive its "Distinguished American" award;
* Appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated as its 1986 Sportsman-of-the-Year;
* Watched more than 200 of his ex-Lions play in the National Football League, including 23 who were first-round draft choices;
* Coached players who have won all of the major college awards -- Heisman, Maxwell, Lombardi, O'Brien, Outland and Biletnikoff;
* Witnessed the payoff to his emphasis on graduating and achieving academic goals through the selection of 20 first-team Academic All-Americas, 14 Hall of Fame Scholar-Athletes and 16 NCAA postgraduate scholarship winners;
* Tutored two players enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and five whose plaques hang in the College Football Hall of Fame in South Bend.
Doesn't the fact that he's coached for 127 years take away from his quantity of achievements?![]()
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My vote is Bob Knight. He won with players that wouldn't have even played at UNC or UCLA.
Nut? Yes.
Great coach? Also a yes.![]()
Doesn't the fact that he's coached for 127 years take away from his quantity of achievements?![]()
![]()
My vote is Bob Knight. He won with players that wouldn't have even played at UNC or UCLA.
Nut? Yes.
Great coach? Also a yes.![]()
Paterno hasn't "coached" for a decade. He stands on the sidelines and tries to stay alive. His coordinators and assistants call all the plays. He was a great coach, definately one of the best of all time for college ball, but you can't credit him for PSU's success last season.
Lemme guess, you won't give him credit for the 11-1 season last year, but I'm sure you'll give him credit for the previous few losing seasons...