Tubby Smith has joined what was already an impressive roster of men's basketball coaches in the Big 12.
With Smith now coaching at Texas Tech and the conference's lone newcomer, the Big 12 is the only league that can boast that all of its head coaches have taken teams to the NCAA tournament. Six of the 10 coaches have been to the Final Four.
"It makes it hard. I don't know if there's ever been another league ever that had 60 percent of coaches that have coached in the Final Four," said West Virginia coach Bob Huggins, who is part of that group. "That's extremely impressive."
Five of the Big 12 coaches have more than 500 career victories, led by Huggins' 723 though he got only 13 in his first Big 12 season. The other 500-game winners are Texas' Rick Barnes (560), Oklahoma's Lon Kruger (514), Smith (511) and Kansas' Bill Self (507) — that last trio reaching the mark last season.
"It speaks well (of the Big 12)," said Kruger, who last season became the first coach to take five different teams to the NCAA tournament. He led the Sooners to their first NCAA tournament since 2009, Blake Griffin's final season in Oklahoma.
"You have unbelievable coaches in this league. The records speak for themselves, what a lot of the coaches in our league have accomplished," Iowa State's Fred Hoiberg said Tuesday during a summer teleconference with league coaches. "That's an unbelievable stat, 60 percent of your league that have coached in the premiere event in college basketball."
Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State made it to the NCAA tournament last season, while Baylor won the NIT championship. The Jayhawks had the deepest NCAA run, getting to the round of 16 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, where the Big 12 next April.
Kansas shared its ninth consecutive Big 12 title with Oklahoma State, which got a boost for 2013-14 when Big 12 player of the year Marcus Smart decided to stay for more than just his freshman season with the Cowboys.