WE KNEW
HIM AS COACH
By Lute Olson, Arizona
The
greatest compliment you can pay can pay someone in
this profession is to simply call him “coach.”
Admiration, success and the respect of one’s peers
are what earn a man the simple title of “coach.”
Coach Ray Meyer had all of those things and more.
The passing of the legendary DePaul coach was
somewhat lost in the midst of first and second round
action in the NCAA tournament. Ironically that is
probably how coach would have proffered it. He
devoted much of his life to the game he loved, never
seeking the spotlight but the spotlight most
certainly found him.
For more then four decades he brought class and
dignity to the sidelines at DePaul University. Twice
he took teams to the Final Four and seven times he
guided teams to the National Invitational
Tournament, including a team that featured George
Mikan. At a time when the NIT was college
basketball’s crowning jewel, Mikan helped coach win
the 1945 NIT and the national championship.
Thirty-seven winning seasons and 724 career wins
would seem unapproachable to a young man breaking
into the profession today. But among his most
remarkable achievements was that his second
appearance in the Final Four, in 1979, came
thirty-six years after his first trip, in 1943.
It was only appropriate that he was inducted into
the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame that same year.
Equally as impressive as his staying power was his
ability to take something pretty good and make it
really great. So many of his teams began the season
without expectations, but by season’s end he taken
the average and turned it into a winner. And he did
that year after year.
But it wasn’t only basketball teams that coach would
touch in a positive way. Always approachable, coach
wore a smile like it was his purpose. And in many
ways it was. He always made every person feel like
they were special. That was his way.
Through the years countless numbers would cross
paths with the legendary coach and they were the
better for it. But it was coach who believed he was
in fact a better person for having known you. He
truly loved and admired people.
As visible as he was over the last twenty-plus
years, it’s hard to believe that coach actually
retired following the 1984 season. His career might
have concluded in an official capacity, but he
really never put down the whistle.
He would remain a fixture at the University that he
alone made a household name. For thirteen years he
served as a Special Assistant to the President, with
a focus on special projects. He would also provide
color commentary for DePaul basketball games on the
radio until 1997. Even then he was never more then a
mid-range jumper away from the game and the program
that he loved so much.
In December of 2003, the playing surface at the
University’s arena was officially named “Ray and
Marge Meyer Court,” in honor of coach and his late
wife. And his legacy will continue.
Quite simply, he was and will always be DePaul
University.
News of his passing may have been somewhat lost in
all the excitement of the NCAA tournament, but those
that knew would agree that he would have had it no
other way.
A true coaches coach, it was never about him. It was
always about the players. Therefore it was only
fitting that his passing came during one of the most
exciting and entertaining first weekends that the
NCAA tournament has ever seen.
Once a coach -- Always a coach.
Could a phrase ever better describe a man? |