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Former
Blue Devil player Chris Collins joined the
Duke coaching staff as an assistant coach
on July 22, 2000. Collins replaced David
Henderson, who was named head coach at
Delaware.
His first season as a coach in Durham
could not have been better as the Blue
Devils won the 2001 national championship
with an 82-72 victory over Arizona in
Minneapolis. Collins, who works primarily
with Duke's backcourt players, saw guard
Jason Williams be named a unanimous first
team All-America and the National Player
of the Year by the NABC. Chris Duhon, a
freshman under Collins' tutelage in 2001,
was named the ACC Rookie of the Year.
Collins' influence was never felt more
than prior to the NCAA Championship game
against Arizona. Collins told Mike
Dunleavy, who was coming off a poor
shooting performance in Duke's victory
over Maryland in the national semifinals,
to be aggressive against the Wildcats in
the title game.
"I just talked to him about going out and
being aggressive. If you miss a shot, so
what?"
Dunleavy responded, drilling a team-best
21 points, including a historical spurt of
three three-point field goals in a
45-second span in the second half to put
Duke ahead by 10 points.
"To see him go out the next day and play
with that courage and take those shots,
just take over the game, was such a
gratifying moment for me."
And to the Blue Devil faithful as well.
In 2001-02, Collins' second season at Duke
was also impressive as the Blue Devils
posted a 31-4 record, won the ACC
Tournament for the fourth consecutive
season and were ranked number one in the
nation in the final Associated Press poll.
Williams, one of Collins' understudies,
earned National Player of the Year honors
for the second consecutive year and became
just one of seven repeat winners of that
prestigious honor. Williams also became
Duke's second two-time first team
consensus All-America, joining Johnny
Dawkins as the only Blue Devil to
accomplish that feat.
The 2002-03 season was just as special as
the staff led a team with six freshmen to
a 26-7 record, a fifth consecutive ACC
Tournament championship and the Sweet 16
for the sixth straight year. Guard play
continued to be a strength for Duke as
Chris Duhon (third team All-ACC), J.J.
Redick (third team All-ACC and Freshman
All-America) and Daniel Ewing (ACC
Tournament MVP) all received individual
recognition throughout the season.
In 2003-04, Duke returned to the Final
Four for the second time in Collins' Blue
Devil coaching career. Two of his
backcourt players, Duhon and Redick,
earned All-America and All-ACC
recognition. The Blue Devils went 31-6
overall, won the regular season ACC title
and played in their sixth consecutive ACC
Tournament Championship Game before
advancing to San Antonio and the Final
Four.
Collins helped the Blue Devils to a 26-7
overall slate that included the ACC
Tournament crown and yet another berth in
the NCAA Tournament in 2004-05. Redick was
named the National Player of the Year
while Ewing was a second round choice of
the Los Angeles Clippers in the 2005 NBA
Draft.
A year ago, Collins' watched his star
pupil Redick register one of the most
impressive scoring seasons in Duke
history. Redick ranked second in the NCAA
with a 26.8 ppg. scoring average, while
setting the Duke and ACC career scoring
records and the NCAA career three-point
field goal record. He was a consensus
National Player of the Year and a
unanimous first team All-America for the
32-4 Blue Devils. Duke also captured the
NIT Season Tip-Off, ACC regular season and
ACC Tournament championships in 2005-06.
Collins' six-year resume at Duke includes
an overall record of 182-31, five ACC
Tourney championships, three ACC regular
season titles, three in-season tournament
titles and most importantly, the national
championship in 2001. Collins also served
as court coach for Mike Krzyzewski,
assisting the USA Basketball Senior
National Team staff with on-court duties
at the team's training camp in Las Vegas
in August of 2006.
"Coach Collins has really helped my
development as a player," says Redick, a
two-time National Player of the Year. "He
is a former player so he knows a lot of
the tricks of the trade and he has taught
me a few things that have really helped
me, whether it is being able to pick up
fouls when we are in the bonus or coming
off screens."
Before returning to his alma mater,
Collins served as an assistant coach at
Seton Hall for two years with Tommy Amaker,
a Duke standout himself from 1984-87 and
now the head coach at Michigan. In
1999-2000, Collins was part of a staff
that guided the Pirates to a 22-10 record
and the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.
Prior to Seton Hall, Collins spent the
1997-98 season as an assistant with the
WNBA's Detroit Shock.
As a player, Collins played professional
basketball in Finland during the 1996-97
season, leading the league in scoring.
While at Duke, Collins was a team captain
as a senior and four-year letterman from
1993-96. He still ranks sixth among Duke's
all-time leaders in three-point field
goals made (209) and attempted (539).
Collins averaged 9.1 points, 2.0 rebounds
and 2.4 assists as a collegian. He earned
second team All-ACC honors as a senior.
Collins and Stan Brunson formed a Duke
senior class that had 83 total victories,
three NCAA Tournament bids, one Final Four
appearance, two ACC regular season
championships, an ACC Tournament title,
and two in-season tournament championships
(the 1992 Maui Classic and the 1995 Carrs
Great Alaska Shootout).
As a senior in 1996, Collins had his most
productive season, leading the Blue Devils
in three-point field goals (79),
three-point percentage (.441), free throws
made (83) and attempted (115), assists
(132) and steals (37). Collins also ranked
second on the team by averaging 16.3
points per game. He was among the ACC
leaders in scoring (10th), assists
(fourth), field goal percentage (.467,
seventh) and free throw percentage (.722,
10th).
Collins is the son of former NBA head
coach and all-star, Doug Collins, who is
currently the lead television analyst for
TNT's coverage of the NBA. The Northbrook,
Ill., native joins former Duke standouts
Johnny Dawkins (associate head coach) and
Steve Wojciechowski (assistant coach) as
previous Blue Devil captains on Mike
Krzyzewski's staff. Collins is a 1996
graduate of Duke with a bachelor's degree
in sociology.
Collins, 32, and his wife Kim reside in
Durham with their two children -- Ryan (3)
and Kate (8 months).
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