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As
Lute Olson enters his 23rd season at the University
of Arizona, he has established both the Wildcat
basketball program and himself as two of the
preeminent figures on the collegiate basketball
landscape.
Whether it’s the 1997 national championship, four
Final Four appearances, 21 consecutive NCAA
Tournament appearances, 11 Pacific-10 Conference
titles, or the nation’s best winning percentage over
the past 18 seasons, basketball excellence and the
University of Arizona go hand-in-hand.
Olson, now in his fourth decade as a head coach,
also has a title that befits those monumental
accomplishments – Hall of Famer – as he was selected
for enshrinement into the Naismith Memorial
Basketball Hall of Fame on June 5, 2002. In a career
full of individual and team accolades, this honor
ranks among the best. True to form, Olson shared the
recognition with his family, coaches and players.
“I think it ranks right up there with the NCAA
Championship and the 1986 World Championship,” said
Olson. “This is definitely one of the special things
that has happened in my career. I am very thankful
for the recognition and opportunity for
enshrinement. I want to thank Bobbi and my family
for their sacrifices in addition to the former
assistant coaches and former players who also share
in this honor as well.
Set to begin his 33rd season as a head coach on the
NCAA Division I level with time spent at Arizona,
Iowa and Long Beach State, Olson is one of just 24
head coaches in NCAA history to win 700 or more
games (all divisions). He owns a career record
741-256, which adds up to a gaudy winning percentage
of .743. He has tallied a mark of 549-164 (.770) in
his 22 years at Arizona, while being named the
Pac-10 Coach of the Year seven times (1986, ‘88,
‘89, ‘93, ‘94, ‘98, 2003). Olson also has guided
Arizona to 18 consecutive 20-win seasons (the
longest active streak in the nation), and is one of
only four coaches in NCAA history to record 27 or
more 20-win seasons.
Long considered one of the top coaches in Pac-10
history, he has led Arizona to the aforementioned 11
league titles, with the last coming in 2005. He has
a career Pac-10 mark of 305-87 (.778), and the 305
conference victories are the most in league history.
Olson is the No. 2 coach in Pac-10 history for
career winning percentage for conference games with
more than two years experience, trailing only the
legendary John Wooden (.810/304-74).
As for his Arizona career, he has both the highest
winning percentage (.770), and number of victories
(549) in school history with the latter surpassing
Fred Enke’s 509 from 1925-1961 (36 years) during the
2003-04 season.
Olson, who was a finalist for Naismith Memorial
Basketball Hall of Fame induction in 2000 and 2001,
had success long before his days on the collegiate
level. In 11 years as a high school coach (1956-69),
he compiled a record of 180-76 (.703). After that,
there were four years in the junior college ranks at
Long Beach City College, where he was 103-22 (.824).
Factor in those games, along with the contests as
the head coach at Arizona, Iowa and Long Beach
State, and he has 1,024 victories heading into
2005-06 and has a .743 winning percentage in 1,378
career games coached. Olson became the 16th coach in
basketball history (covering all levels) to register
1,000 career wins, when his Wildcats defeated Utah,
67-62, on Dec. 11, 2004.
His success not only happens on the court, but also
in the recruiting process and in the number of
former players that currently play in the NBA. For
instance, the 2003, 2004 and 2005 recruiting classes
were each judged as one of the top 10 in the nation
by some analysts. In fact, the two highest-ranked
recruits in school history were signed to national
letters-of-intent in November 2002. With nine NBA
Draft picks in the last five seasons alone, Arizona
players routinely hear their names called on Draft
Day. Since the NBA Draft was shortened to two rounds
in 1989, Arizona leads the nation with 26 total
selections. In his collegiate career, Olson has
produced 51 NBA Draft picks, including 30 at
Arizona. Last year, there were eight Arizona alums
on NBA rosters, and Olson has had at least one
former player appear in the NBA Finals in seven of
the last 10 seasons. In that time span, six former
Cats have earned world championship rings.
Bolstered by depth and experience, the Wildcats
rolled to a 30-7 record in 2004-05, becoming just
the third team in school history to reach the 30-win
plateau. Behind the leadership of All-Americans
Channing Frye and Salim Stoudamire, UA grew into a
formidable opponent, at one point winning 21 of 23
games, claimed the Pac-10 championship for the
second time in three seasons and advanced to an NCAA
Regional final for the eighth time in school
history. Arizona ranked among the nation’s leaders
in free throw percentage (4th), three-point field
goal percentage (8th) and scoring offense (10th),
while Stoudamire led the nation in three-point field
goal percentage (.504). Along the way, Frye and
Stoudamire earned multiple All-America honors, the
18th and 19th Arizona players to earn such
distinction under Olson.
In the ebb-and-flow of college basketball in which
rosters seemingly grow younger each year, Olson’s
Wildcats continue to remain among the game’s
royalty. Arizona opened the 2003-04 campaign without
a senior in its projected 10-man rotation for the
third time in five seasons. Despite its relative
youth, the Cats posted a 20-10 overall record and
continued the nation’s longest streaks for NCAA
Tournament appearances (20) and 20-win seasons (17).
For the second year in a row, UA led the nation in
scoring (87.1 ppg) and also ranked second in free
throw percentage (.786). All told, two players
garnered all-conference accolades, three were
all-region picks and one garnered All-America kudos,
marking the seventh straight year with at least one
Wildcat All-American. Olson posted career win No.
700 on Jan. 3 and became UA winningest coach (510
wins) on Jan. 17.
Lofty expectations have become commonplace for the
Wildcats, and such was the case in 2002-03.
Beginning the season as the Associated Press’
top-ranked team for the second time in three
seasons, the Olson-led charges held that ranking for
13 of 19 polling periods, while never falling lower
than No. 4 in the AP poll. UA won 28 games
(sixth-highest in school history) and advanced to
the NCAA Tournament’s “Elite Eight” for the seventh
time in school history. Along the way, Arizona
earned the school’s 10th Pac-10 championship in the
last 20 years with a 17-1 league mark that featured
a spotless 9-0 road record. Boasting a lineup that
had seven players tally at least 200 points, Arizona
led the nation with an 85.2 points-per-game average.
Any doubts about Olson’s ability on the sidelines
were put to rest in 2001-02. He quickly rebuilt a
roster that had been decimated by graduation and the
NBA Draft, molded a team made primarily of three
juniors and six freshmen, and turned it into one of
the nation’s best. That young Arizona squad exceeded
nearly everyone’s expectations by winning 24 games,
capturing the Pac-10 Tournament title (the school’s
fourth consecutive), and advancing to the NCAA West
Regional semifinal. After starting the year unranked
in the Associated Press poll for the first time
since November 1995, the Olson-led Wildcats served
notice by stunning second-ranked Maryland and
fifth-ranked Florida in its first two games. UA
would rise as high as No. 3 in the polls and
remained nationally ranked for the entire season.
Olson guided his charges through a season full of
distractions in 2000-01 to one of his most rewarding
results. Opening the year as the nation’s top-ranked
team in five different polls, the 2000-01 Wildcats
overcame two NCAA suspensions, the untimely passing
of Olson’s wife, Bobbi, and his own five-game leave
of absence to amass a 28-8 record, earn a berth in
the school’s fourth Final Four and play in the
national championship game. After struggling to an
8-5 start, the Cats finished the regular season with
15 wins in 17 games to emerge as a title contender.
The team rolled through the first five games of the
NCAA Tournament dispatching four conference
champions and stretching its season-long win streak
to 11 games, before falling to Duke, 82-72, in the
NCAA Final. Through it all, the Wildcats displayed a
toughness and determination seen in few teams across
the country.
In a career that has been dotted with terrific
coaching jobs, the 1999-2000 season may have been
one of the best. Whether it was an injury to a key
player, someone who left the program or the fact
that there were three freshmen in the starting
lineup, he was at his best all year in leading the
team to a 27-7 record and the program’s ninth Pac-10
Conference championship. The season was also
highlighted by his 600th career win, his 400th
victory as Arizona’s head coach and the renaming of
the McKale Center playing surface, “Lute Olson
Court”.
Arizona fans have grown accustomed to success when
basketball season rolls around, but believe it or
not, this same attitude did not exist before Olson’s
arrival in the “Old Pueblo” prior to the 1983-84
campaign.
When Olson took the reigns in Tucson on March 29,
1983, after nine successful seasons at Iowa, he was
given a program that finished just 4-24 the season
before. A quick and rapid rise to the top would
ensue, much to the delight of the legions of
hoop-crazed fans in the Sonoran desert.
Simply put, the 71-year-old Olson has created a
basketball-rich tradition at the University of
Arizona and made the Wildcats one of the programs
that others attempt to emulate.
In 1997-98, he put together what may have been the
best team in Arizona history. His silver season as a
collegiate coach, Olson won his sixth Pac-10
Coach-of-the-Year honor after directing Arizona to
the program’s eighth Pac-10 Championship during his
tenure. That defending national champion club took
everyone’s best shot throughout the season, and
still managed to post a 30-5 record, thanks in part
to a school-record-tying winning streak of 19
consecutive games. The Wildcats, who were a
last-second, desperation three-pointer away from
becoming the first team in Pac-10 history to
complete the league schedule 18-0, would get one
step away from the school’s fourth Final Four before
falling to Utah in the NCAA West Regional final in
Anaheim, Calif.
In a career that has produced one major achievement
after another, it was the 1996-97 season that proved
to be the year when Olson reached the pinnacle of
his on-court coaching career.
After seeing his squad finish with a regular season
record of 19-9 and its lowest Pac-10 finish (fifth)
since his first year at the UA (eighth), he rallied
the troops for one of the most remarkable runs in
the NCAA tournament’s history. Going in as a No. 4
seed and with a two-game losing streak, the Wildcats
proceeded to do what no team has ever done — beat
three No. 1 seeds on the way to the national title.
By the way, the trio of wins didn’t come against
just any group of teams — they came against the
three winningest programs in college basketball
history.
The excitement started when Arizona knocked off
everyone’s favorite to win it all, Kansas, in the
regional semifinal in Birmingham, Ala. Then, after
going into overtime to beat Providence in the
Southeast Regional final (96-92), the UA advanced to
the Final Four in Indianapolis, where it beat its
second No. 1 seed, North Carolina. This win set up
the title game against defending national champion,
Kentucky.
The Wildcats vs. Wildcats match-up proved to be a
battle of epic proportions, one that resulted in the
first NCAA overtime title game in seven years. When
the dust settled, Olson’s club came away with an
84-79 win, a conquest that took place just two days
after his 14-year anniversary of being named the
head coach at Arizona. The monumental win set off a
wild celebration at the RCA Dome, and back home on
the streets of Tucson.
That national championship team was built out of the
same mold as the man who was in charge — forged with
a competitive fire, intensely driven and dedicated
to be the best. Following the year, Olson was
awarded with the second annual Chase Winged Foot
Award, an honor that is presented to the coach of
the national champions by the New York Athletic
Club.
In the year prior to the national championship
campaign (1995-96), Olson reached a pair of head
coaching milestones, as he won his 300th game as the
UA mentor and attained his 500th career victory as a
head coach.
Following the initial season as the Wildcats’
leader, the Arizona basketball program began its
trek into the local, regional and national
spotlight. The excitement that Olson brought to
McKale Center has been parlayed into sellout season
ticket crowds for the past 18 consecutive years and
well-earned respect for Olson among his peers in the
coaching profession.
Olson’s Wildcat squads have finished the season
ranked in the top 10 in one or both major college
basketball polls in eight of the last nine seasons
and 14 times overall. In fact, Arizona has finished
the season with a national ranking in each of the
last 18 years. As a testament to his long-term
greatness, CBS-TV included Olson on its list of the
“Ten Greatest Coaches in College Basketball History”
during the 2003 Final Four.
He continues to put his stamp on the NCAA and Pac-10
coaching record books with each passing season. He
has coached in the NCAA Tournament 26 times in the
last 27 years, including the 21 consecutive
appearances at Arizona, and overall he has a 45-26
(.634) NCAA Tournament record. In addition to the
appearances with his Arizona clubs from 1985-2005,
he led Iowa to trips in each of his final five years
in Iowa City, including the 1980 Final Four.
Olson’s Arizona teams are 38-20 (.655) in NCAA play
with trips to the 1988, 1994, 1997, and 2001 Final
Fours. His Iowa teams were 7-6 in NCAA action,
including a Final Four trip in 1980. His 45 NCAA
Tournament wins ties him for fourth place on the
NCAA Tournament’s all-time victory list, and he is
one of just 10 coaches who have coached in five or
more Final Fours. Further, his 26 appearances in the
NCAA Tournament puts him third on the all-time head
coaching list.
Some teams rebuild, but Olson reloads his Wildcat
program — always giving his players the right to
approve or disapprove any prospective recruit.
“I have been a firm believer that you build a
successful program with good people, Olson said. “We
never recruit the great players who are questionable
people. Hopefully, they will be great players as
well.”
Many of these players have utilized the Arizona
program to hone their skills and move onto the next
level. Under Olson, 28 players have been selected in
the NBA Draft (11 in the first round), while
numerous others have gone onto play overseas.
It most assuredly has been a successful run at
Arizona for Olson. After coming to Tucson, it took
just one season for him to ignite a dormant program.
In 1984-85, his second season, the Wildcats finished
the year at 21-10 and made the first of many visits
to the NCAA Tournament under Olson. It had been
eight years since an Arizona team had won 20 games
and the new head coach was just beginning to scratch
the surface.
National recognition came with the 1986 season as
the Cats won its first Pac-10 title and put together
a 23-9 record. That was the first of 11 Pac-10
titles that Arizona has won since Olson’s arrival.
The four titles won from 1988-91 marked the first
time a Pac-10 team won four consecutive titles since
the league expansion in 1979.
With the 1988 Pac-10 title in hand, the season
culminated with Arizona’s first trip to the Final
Four as the Cats put together the finest season in
school history with a 35-3 record.
Since that 1987-88 Final Four season, Arizona has
won an average of 26 games per season (averaging
just six losses), and the overall record of 479-118
during that same period is the nation’s best in
terms of winning percentage (.802).
The numbers get even better when you look at what
the Cats have done at home for Olson. In the last 22
years under Olson, Arizona has amassed a record of
322-33 (.907) in McKale Center, lost only 11
non-conference games and won 250 of its last 267
games. In that span, the Cats had an amazing run of
71 consecutive victories without a defeat, making it
the 10th-longest homecourt winning streak in NCAA
history.
The streaks haven’t built around a light schedule,
as Olson does not avoid tough games. Since his
arrival, Arizona has played 45 non-conference,
regular season games against teams that played in
the Final Four later that same season. Further, the
Wildcats have matched wits with a team that played
in the NCAA title game in nine of the past 11
seasons.
With the success of the Wildcats throughout the
years, the accolades for Olson continue to grow. His
resume includes Coach-of-the-Year honors from both
the Pac-10 (1986, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994,1998, 2003)
and the Big Ten (1979 and 1981) in addition to a
variety of regional and national honors. He earned
the John R. Wooden “Legends of Coaching” and the
Clair Bee Coach-of-the-Year awards in 2001. In the
summer of 1999, he was also inducted into the Pima
County (Ariz.) Sports Hall of Fame.
Olson’s success at Arizona mirrors his earlier work
at Iowa where in nine years in Iowa City from 1975
to 1983 he became the then-winningest coach in
school history (168-90/.651) and took the Hawkeyes
to the NCAA five straight times including a Final
Four trip in 1980.
Olson was born on a farm just outside Mayville,
N.D., on Sept. 22, 1934, and would go on to attend
high school in Grand Forks, N.D., for the 1951-52
season, where he led the team to the 1952 state
basketball championship.
In college, he was a three-sport athlete
(basketball, football and baseball) at Augsburg
(Minn.) College from 1953-56. As a senior in 1956,
Olson was recognized with the Augsburg Honors
Athlete Award, which is given annually to the top
male student-athlete. Since that time he also has
been honored by his alma mater with induction into
the Augsburg Athletic Hall of Fame in 1977 and
received the Augsburg College Distinguished Alumni
Award in April 1986.
After five years of prep coaching in Minnesota, he
moved west and coached for six years in Anaheim and
Huntington Beach, Calif., high schools. Olson was
inducted into the Two Harbors, Minn., Sports Hall of
Fame in July 2001.
He then guided Long Beach City College to three
league titles and the 1971 state junior college
crown and was the conference coach of the year in
three of his four seasons. Olson followed that with
a one-year stint as the head coach at Long Beach
State (1973-74), where he led the 49ers to a 24-2
record. That got the attention of Iowa, which hired
him for the next season.
Olson was married the former Roberta (Bobbi) Russell
for 47 years. Bobbi passed away in January 2001.
Olson has five grown children – daughters Vicki,
Jody and Christi, and sons Greg and Steve – and 14
grandchildren.
On April 12, 2003, Olson married the former
Christine Toretti of Indiana, Pa. She has three
sons, Joe, 19; Max, 17; and Matthew, 14. The couple
first met at the 2002 Final Four in Atlanta. |