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Each
morning when coach Bob McKillop enters his
office in Davidson's Baker Sports Complex,
he passes a December 1968 Sports
Illustrated magazine that is displayed
prominently, one that has a cover
picturing North Carolina's Charlie Scott,
Kentucky's Mike Casey and Davidson's Mike
Maloy, under a headline that reads,
"Challengers to UCLA."
McKillop studies the photograph, and
thinks, "We can do that."
We can do what? The 1969 Davidson team won
27 games, the most in school history,
finished the season ranked third in the
nation and fought powerful North Carolina
to the final second before falling, 87-85,
in the NCAA Elite Eight. One step from the
Final Four. Davidson basketball can
duplicate that storybook season?
Go ahead, laugh at the supposition, or
even scoff at it, but if McKillop didn't
believe in his heart that it could be
repeated, he wouldn't be in his 18th year
as Davidson College's head basketball
coach. He's a confessed dreamer. His
players, who have seen his teams win seven
of the last 11 Southern Conference
Division championships, and four of the
last five, plus last season's SoCon
championship, call him a dream-maker. So
do many of the nation's leading coaches.
"Many times you only hear about the
coaches in the power conferences being
great coaches," says John Beilein, the
highly successful West Virginia coach.
"Bob McKillop is equal or better than any
other coach that I know, and I've coached
against most of the best in the country in
my 14 years in Division I."
Like many outstanding coaches, McKillop
cloaks himself in mystery lest he dare
become predictable, a trait coaches aren't
allowed to have. His resume tells an
interesting story, one of dedication,
discipline, preparation, competitiveness
and humility.
He was a successful baseball and
basketball player at Chaminade High School
in the New York City High School Catholic
League, where one of his fellow students
in homeroom for four years was Bill
O'Reilly of the O'Reilly Factor. Jack
Curran, the coach at rival Archbishop
Malloy High, helped him get a basketball
scholarship to East Carolina. His last
game at East Carolina was in the old
Charlotte Coliseum in the 1969 Southern
Conference tournament championship game, a
102-76 loss to Davidson, a game that stuck
in his mind and later would have major
consequences in his life.
Homesick and ready to be closer to home,
he transferred from East Carolina to
Hofstra University where he became the
team's MVP and later was inducted into the
Hofstra Basketball Hall of Fame. After
graduation in 1972, he signed as a free
agent with the Philadelphia 76ers but was
cut. The 76ers went 9-72 that season. "I
was cut from the worst team in NBA
history," McKillop jokes. Humility comes
in strange packages.
Reluctantly accepting the fact that his
playing career was over, he took a job
teaching history and coaching basketball
at Holy Trinity High in Long Island in
1972. After a sparkling 86-25 record as
coach, in 1978 McKillop was offered
assistant coaching positions at the
University of Pennsylvania and Davidson
where Eddie Biedenbach had just been named
head coach. In making his decision,
McKillop recalled his last game for East
Carolina, the loss to Davidson, the way
the fans celebrated the championship. In
making his decision between Penn and
Davidson, he visited the Davidson campus
in northern Mecklenburg County, was struck
by the beauty of the campus, the mission
of the college, the uniqueness of the
village. "Davidson, here I come!" The
Wildcats went 8-19 that season. Penn went
to the NCAA Final Four. Oh well.
After one year on the Davidson staff, a
great high school opportunity beckoned at
Long Island Lutheran High School. McKillop
went there as head basketball coach,
director of summer programs, and for two
years served as interim headmaster. He
compiled a record there of 182-51. In his
high school coaching career, he won five
New York State championships, coached five
high school All-Americas, one of whom was
Matt Doherty, former head coach at North
Carolina and now in the same position at
Florida Atlantic University.
"Bob McKillop is easily one of the
nation's best coaches," Doherty says.
"What he has done at Davidson is truly
remarkable. He recruits top-flight
students for one of the country's top
liberal arts colleges and competes in the
demanding Southern Conference along with a
ridiculously tough non-conference
schedule."
McKillop accepted the challenge of
rebuilding Davidson basketball and became
its head coach in 1989. He proceeded
cautiously at first, as he learned to mesh
what fit at Davidson with his personal
philosophy. "Davidson is a special place,
a unique place," McKillop says. "In
recruiting and staffing, we must have the
right fit, otherwise it could lead to
frustration and immediate failure."
Davidson has a special blend of academics,
social life and athletics. Not all good
players with excellent grades are a fit.
McKillop's ability to put the proper
people in place has been a leading reason
that he has succeeded at such a high level
at Davidson.
One of McKillop's former Davidson players,
Martin Ides, now in his fifth season of
playing professional basketball in Europe,
says: "There are many things that set
Coach McKillop apart from all the coaches
I've had, However, what I appreciate most
is what Coach calls our Davidson
Ôbasketball family.' I stay in contact
with many of our guys, I would love to be
on an all-Davidson team again with Coach
McKillop leading the way."
McKillop's players talk about his
leadership, teaching, and confidence.
"Coach McKillop is the best at preparing
his team," says Logan Kosmalski, who was
an All-Southern Conference player in 2005
and now plays professionally in France.
"His knowledge and attention to detail
made us feel like we could win against any
opponent."
Now 56 years old, McKillop loves history,
politics, Italian cuisine, nice clothes,
good books and movies that teach him
life's lessons. A frequent lecturer, he
has as many basketball friends in Europe
as he does in the United States. He once
dreamed of being a U.S. Senator from New
York, a notion that has since subsided.
His reading preferences lean toward
history, politics, leadership, coaching
stories and not much fiction. Four movies
rank as his favorites: Life is Beautiful,
Michael Collins, The Godfather, and
Schindler's List.
"Those movies teach great lessons about
life, family, struggles and leadership,"
he says. In his view, movies should do
more than entertain; they should also
teach life's lessons.
McKillop cherishes each moment and treats
it as gold. Whether it's on the bus with
his team to a road game or waiting for a
flight in an airport terminal, he always
has work at hand. When a friend was late
to a breakfast meeting last summer,
McKillop waved it off, saying as he
surveyed papers on the table in front of
him, "No problem. I had plenty of work to
do." He carries his office with him.
He grew up on Long Island and had a
fascination with sports for as long as he
can remember. He loved Army football and
the legacy of the Black Knights of the
Hudson. The first college basketball game
that he saw in person was at Alumni Hall,
St. John's vs. NYU. He loved going to
games at Alumni Hall and Madison Square
Garden and dreamed of playing for NYU, a
powerhouse at the time. Although he's been
in North Carolina for 18 years, he hasn't
lost the sharp edges of his New York
brogue. His phone mail message begins,
"How ya doin'?" His metaphors, which he
often uses, speak of "Broadway stages,"
and "magical carpet rides."
His coaching career at Davidson has been
scintillating by any barometer. His
Davidson record is 282-213. He's coached
Davidson longer than any basketball coach,
won more games there than any coach, and
his 154 Southern Conference wins are more
than any coach in league history. He's
been conference Coach of the Year five
times, has won seven Southern Conference
division titles, three tournament
championships, and taken his team to three
NCAA tournaments and three postseason
NITs. All this winning hasn't come at any
academic sacrifice, as 95 percent of his
Davidson lettermen have graduated.
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski calls McKillop
"a sensational coach." Texas coach Rick
Barnes says, "There are some great coaches
out there who deserve recognition, and Bob
is at the very top of that list."
McKillop derived his basketball philosophy
from many sources: Lou Carnesecca, Al and
Frank McGuire, Jack Curran, Frank Morris,
Paul Lynner, Dean Smith, John Wooden, Red
Auerbach, Ettore Messina and others. He's
studied the winning ways of former college
football coaches Ara Parseghian, Bud
Wilkinson and Knute Rockne. "I've stolen
from the best," he says, laughing.
McKillop's demanding practices are planned
to the second. He stresses fundamentals,
is a disciplinarian as well as a stickler
for details, but his players always know
he cares.
Jouni Eho, one of McKillop's former
players now playing overseas, was married
last summer. McKillop attended the
ceremony -- in Finland. "That was very
special to me," Eho says.
Terrell Ivory often was present when
McKillop was recruiting his brother,
Titus, who eventually chose Penn State
over Davidson. "Even though Titus didn't
go to Davidson, when my father died, Coach
McKillop was at the funeral," Terrell
said. "I said then that I want to play for
this man. He's like a second father to
me." Terrell, now an assistant coach in
high school basketball, came to Davidson
as a walk-on, earned a scholarship and
contributed to many wins.
McKillop runs several miles most days,
never gains an ounce, and as his
assistants can attest, can get so lost in
his work that he can go a full day without
eating. Sweets are a weakness, though, and
he attacks a bag of chocolate chip cookies
the way a woodpecker works on a sugar
maple. It's common to see him pour
chocolate syrup on top of a chocolate
brownie.
McKillop and his wife Cathy, a
knowledgeable basketball person in her own
right, have three children - Kerrin, 26, a
2002 Davidson graduate, Matthew, 23, who
graduated from Davidson last spring after
playing for his father for four years, and
is now playing professional basketball in
Europe, and Brendan, 18, a senior and
outstanding basketball player at Charlotte
Catholic High.
"Davidson College is a special place,"
McKillop says. "One reason our teams have
been so united and close is because we
reflect the total Davidson philosophy. Our
players remain close long after they leave
Davidson."
When McKillop thinks back to playing
against Davidson in 1969, he reflects on
the job former coach Lefty Driesell did in
putting the Wildcats in the nation's top
10 and twice taking them to the NCAA Elite
Eight. "What Lefty Driesell and his
players did is one of the greatest stories
in college basketball history," McKillop
says.
It was the "Broadway stage," is what it
was, and McKillop the dreamer thinks there
can be an encore.
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