Current:Home > ContactStanford's Tara VanDerveer will soon pass Mike Krzyzewski for major coaching record -Capitatum
Stanford's Tara VanDerveer will soon pass Mike Krzyzewski for major coaching record
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-06 09:34:10
On the day she becomes the college basketball coach with the most wins in history, Stanford’s Tara VanDerveer won’t deviate from her regular schedule. She’ll play bridge.
Yes, you read that correctly. A woman who has won three national titles and been to 14 Final Fours, the person widely considered the best strategist to ever coach in the women’s game, someone whose career win-loss record (1,201-267) soon will have no match, plays bridge. Every day, if she can.
And it might be the secret to her longevity.
VanDerveer, 70, is poised this weekend to pass Hall of Famer and former Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski as the winningest coach in college basketball when she earns her 1,203rd victory. No. 8 Stanford hosts Oregon on Friday and Oregon State on Sunday, and in between, she’ll do her best to schedule her daily game of bridge against her mom, 96-year-old Rita VanDerveer.
“I think bridge is a lot like basketball,” VanDerveer told USA TODAY Sports. “You’ve gotta play the hand you’re dealt. You’ve gotta maximize the cards you have. Sometimes you’ve got a lot of aces, and sometimes you don’t.”
During the pandemic, when Rita was isolated in Colorado, Tara and her sisters — she’s the oldest of five — played bridge every day to help their mom fend off loneliness. Tara continues to find time for it now, adding to an already packed schedule that includes practice, staff meetings, walking her dogs and morning workout swims with Katie Ledecky (seriously).
VanDerveer, now in her 45th year of coaching and 38th at Stanford, has always been good about finding balance. Other interests were necessary, probably because of what her parents told her when she was a kid. Get inside and finish your algebra homework, they’d say, because “basketball won’t take you anywhere.”
Throughout the years, as she traveled the world coaching games with Stanford and the 1996 Olympic team, VanDerveer sent them postcards from all her international stops, letting them know just where hoops had, in fact, helped her go.
Coaching for 45 years, Tara VanDerveer says, 'What's not to be happy about?'
But for all the accolades and passport stamps Tara has accumulated, Rita is most impressed by this: Her daughter, she told USA TODAY Sports, is a happy person.
“She’s always had the capacity to enjoy life, enjoy people,” Rita said. “I just think it’s wonderful to be around someone who chooses to be happy.”
Tara’s take: “I mean, look where I live. I work at Stanford, we’ve got a beautiful campus, I get to swim outside every morning with Olympians. I work with great people, we have a fantastic team. Basketball is an upbeat sport. What’s not to be happy about?”
When was the last time you talked to a college football coach with that perspective?
In working at one of the most elite academic institutions in America, few would expect VanDerveer to regularly compete for national championships. It's so tough to get into Stanford, VanDerveer's recruiting pool is significantly smaller than her peers'. (At the 2022 Final Four, former All-American Diana Taurasi said the school told her she “was not Stanford material.” She played at UConn instead.)
And yet, someone who’s won more than 1,200 games clearly has standards for herself.
“The idea of pressure, it’s all I know,” VanDerveer said. “I’ve been a head coach since I was 24 … but at the same time, I don’t think I’m defined by just being a basketball coach. I want to be a good daughter, a good sister, a good friend.”
Again, not the big-picture take you hear often from people in big-time college sports.
And yes, women’s basketball is big-time now, something VanDerveer has waited for her whole life. She’s not sure if it’s accurate to label the current explosion in popularity as “a women’s basketball renaissance,” but she knows this much: people are finally paying attention to the game she has loved for more than 50 years.
“I think that sometimes, the public thinks that women’s basketball just sprouted up out of nowhere,” she said. “But we’ve had great players and a great game for a long time. I dreamed about what I’m seeing now — and isn’t it cool to see your dreams come true?”
Don't expect Coach K-type celebration
How much longer VanDerveer will stick around on the sidelines is anyone’s guess. Yes, four-plus decades of coaching have taken a toll on her. (Last week during the Cardinal’s 71-59 loss at No. 3 Colorado, Buffs point guard Jaylyn Sherrod collided with her on the sideline, cracking one of Tara’s ribs). But every time Rita checks in on her oldest daughter after a stinging loss or a tough season, Tara’s answer is the same: “Mother, we just have to regroup, and work hard again.”
When Tara won her 1,000th game in 2017, the Cardinal celebrated with an on-court ceremony where Tara quipped she was “moving on to win 1,001.” Insiders understood the subtext: Can we please stop talking about this already? She probably feels similarly now. And while specials celebrating Coach K’s achievements have aired on ESPN, don’t expect anything similar when Tara hits the milestone.
Said sister Heidi, the head coach at UC-San Diego and one of Tara’s closest confidants: “If we tried to do something like that for Tara, she wouldn’t come to the gym.”
Though Tara acknowledged that being the winningest coach in the history of college basketball is noteworthy, she’s not motivated by records. If she were, she wouldn’t have taken the 1995-96 season off to coach the Olympic team; if she’d stayed at Stanford then instead of handing the reins to long-time assistant Amy Tucker, this record would have happened last January.
What she cares about is helping her players get better.
“I want to be able to take a player somewhere they can’t get by themselves,” she said.
So she’s ready to stop all this talk about a record. She needs to watch more film, study a different opponent, talk to another recruit on the phone. And yes, play another bridge game.
Follow Lindsay Schnell on social media @Lindsay_Schnell
veryGood! (4489)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- $1 million could be yours, if Burger King makes your dream Whopper idea a reality
- Why Michael Douglas is playing Ben Franklin: ‘I wanted to see how I looked in tights’
- Sheryl Swoopes' incorrect digs at Caitlin Clark an example of old-fashioned player hatin'
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Jury awards $25M to man who sued Oklahoma’s largest newspaper after being mistakenly named in report
- Apple TV+ special 'Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin' flips a script 50-years deep: What to know
- Popular model sparks backlash for faking her death to bring awareness to cervical cancer
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Conservative Nebraska lawmakers push bills that would intertwine religion with public education
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Carl Weathers was more than 'Rocky.' He was an NFL player − and a science fiction star.
- What Selena Gomez’s Friend Nicola Peltz Beckham Thinks of Her Benny Blanco Romance
- Donald Trump deploys his oft-used playbook against women who bother him. For now, it’s Nikki Haley
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- The Real Reason Vanderpump Rules' Ariana Madix Won't Let Tom Sandoval Buy Their House
- U.S. Biathlon orders audit of athlete welfare and safety following AP report on sexual harassment
- Arizona among several teams rising in the latest NCAA men's tournament Bracketology
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Why Zendaya, Timothée Chalamet and Austin Butler Say Filming Dune 2 Felt Like First Day of School
Roger Goodell pushes back on claims NFL scripted Super Bowl 58 for Taylor Swift sideshow
Toby Keith, in one of his final interviews, remained optimistic amid cancer battle
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Where's my refund? How to track your tax refund through the IRS system
Tracy Chapman, Luke Combs drove me to tears with 'Fast Car' Grammys duet. It's a good thing.
Jury awards $25M to man who sued Oklahoma’s largest newspaper after being mistakenly named in report