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As
Kentucky made its run to the NCAA's 2005
Elite Eight, national media members began
to notice unusual traits about Tubby
Smith's latest group of Wildcats. For
instance, no player scored 15 or more
points a game. No one averaged eight
rebounds. As many as 13 players routinely
saw action, often in the first half alone.
This team was selfless and versatile, yet
extremely competitive.
Just like its coach, Orlando "Tubby"
Smith.
In his nine seasons in the Bluegrass,
Smith has won with McDonald's
All-Americans and with unheralded prep
talent. He has won with future NBA stars
and with walk-ons from within the
Commonwealth. He has won with experience
and with new players.
In a nutshell, he's won.
Since arriving in Lexington in 1997, Smith
has led Kentucky to one national
championship, five SEC crowns and five SEC
Tournament titles, with six Sweet 16
finishes in his eight seasons.
Over his 15 seasons as a head coach, the
54-year-old has had 13 consecutive 20-win
seasons. In 2005, he joined Roy Williams,
Nolan Richardson, Denny Crum and Jim
Boeheim as the fifth head coach to win 365
games in 15 seasons or less. Smith's
career record is now 365-133, and his .733
winning percentage is eighth among active
coaches entering the 2006-07 season.
He totaled 100 wins quicker than any other
Wildcat coach except Hall of Famer Adolph
Rupp, reaching the plateau in 130 games.
Since taking over the UK program, he has
won 79 percent of his games despite
playing a schedule that annually ranks
among the nation's best.
Even more impressive, Smith has averaged
nearly 27 wins per season at Kentucky. In
the SEC Tournament, he's 19-4 at UK, and
he has won a league championship seven
times in his 15 years as a head coach.
Consistent success has become the standard
for Tubby Smith. The native of Scotland,
Md., was introduced as the Cats' 20th head
coach on May 12, 1997, six days after Rick
Pitino announced he was resigning to
become president and head coach of the
NBA's Boston Celtics.
Kentucky is Smith's third head coaching
stop. Previously, he revived two mediocre
programs, Tulsa and Georgia, into NCAA
title hopefuls. Prior to coming to the
Bluegrass, he spent two seasons at
Georgia, where he coached the Bulldogs to
a 45-19 (70.3%) record and the first
back-to-back seasons of 20 wins or more in
school history. Prior to Georgia, he
coached four seasons at Tulsa, guiding the
Golden Hurricane to Final 16 appearances
his last two seasons.
Much of his success as a collegiate head
coach has been measured by his teams'
performances in the NCAA Tournament.
Smith's 1994 Tulsa team upset UCLA in the
tourney's first round before knocking off
Oklahoma State. In '95, the Hurricane blew
away Big-Ten power Illinois to open March
Madness. His postseason success continued
at Georgia where the Bulldogs defeated
Clemson to open the '96 tournament before
upsetting the top-seeded Boilermakers.
Considered by many as one of the nation's
top coaches, Smith was selected to help
coach the 2000 U.S. Olympic Basketball
Team in Sydney. He served as an assistant
to Houston Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich
as the Americans withstood high
expectations to capture the gold medal.
Currently, he serves on the NCAA Committee
to study basketball issues, joining Duke's
Krzyzewski and Oregon's Ernie Kent. He
serves on the National Association of
Basketball Coaches Board of Directors and
in June 2000, spoke at a Congressional
hearing on the issue of gambling in
college sports.
While he continues to make strides
nationally in the sport of basketball,
Smith's first impact on the Bluegrass came
nine years before his national
championship. When Pitino took over the
Wildcats' program in '89, he sought an
assistant coach who knew the South, and
one name continued to surface -- Tubby
Smith. Smith left his assistant coaching
position at South Carolina and joined
Pitino's first staff, which had the
dubious honor of rebuilding a UK program
that had been rocked by NCAA probation and
player defections.
With only eight scholarship
student-athletes, none taller than 6-7,
the staff molded the Cats into winners
once again, exceeding expectations to
record a 14-14 mark. The following year,
with Smith promoted to associate coach and
UK still on probation, the Wildcats earned
a 22-6 record, a final ranking of ninth in
the AP poll, and an SEC-best 14-4 record.
Before coming to Kentucky in '89, Smith
was an assistant coach for George Felton
(a former UK assistant - 1998-00) at South
Carolina, where the Gamecocks notched a
53-35 record during his three years. Prior
to his stop in Columbia, Smith served as
assistant coach at Virginia Commonwealth
for seven years, including six seasons
under J.D. Barnett. In those seven
seasons, VCU registered a 144-64 record,
won three Sun Belt Conference
Championships and made five NCAA
Tournament appearances. And under Barnett,
Smith learned the principles of his
ball-line defense, a defense that in three
of his first four years at UK held
opponents to their lowest field goal
percentages since 1962.
Smith began his coaching career at Great
Mills High School in Great Mills, Md.,
where he was head coach for four years and
compiled a 46-36 record. His next stop
came at Hoke County High School in
Raeford, N.C., where he recorded a 28-18
mark in two seasons.
A 1973 graduate of High Point (N.C.)
College, Smith was an all-conference
performer as a senior. He played under
three different head coaches at High
Point, including Barnett, and earned a
Bachelor of Science degree in health and
physical education.
Smith is the sixth of 17 children raised
on a rural farm in southern Maryland. He
and his wife Donna, have three sons:
Orlando (G.G.) and Saul are both pursuing
careers in the coaching profession; and
Brian is a junior playing at Ole Miss.
Smith is very active in the community. The
Tubby Smith Foundation, which he
established to assist underprivileged
children, has raised over $1.5 million in
the past five years.
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