LAHAINA, HAWAII – Jim Boeheim doesn't have to strain to think back to 38 years ago.
Just a year older then than the Gophers' Richard Pitino is now, Boeheim — the elder statesman of college basketball, and a Syracuse living legend — was a rookie coach. He recalls the start of the Bouie 'n' Louie era with incoming freshmen Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr, the team balance, the second-round loss to North Carolina-Charlotte in the NCAA tournament.
But what he remembers most is the feeling. Perhaps that's because nearly four decades later — as the Gophers prepare to meet Syracuse on Monday in the first round of the Maui Invitational — it really hasn't changed much.
"It's eerily similar," said Boeheim, who turned 69 last week. "I don't feel that much different than I did my first year of coaching."
That consistency has marked the performance of Boeheim's teams. In the only head coaching job he has ever had, Boeheim has taken the Orange to the NCAA tournament 30 times, while advancing 17 times to the Sweet 16, four times to the Final Four (most recently last season) and three times to the championship game, winning it all in 2003. In the Big East, he directed Syracuse to nine regular-season championships and five conference tournament championships while earning Coach of the Year honors four times.
"He is obviously one of the best coaches there is," Pitino said. "But he's sustained success — he rarely has an off year. Phenomenal recruiter, phenomenal developer.''
Pitino knows plenty about Boeheim. His father, Louisville coach Rick Pitino, was an assistant under Boeheim from 1976-78. And the younger Pitino, in his second year as a head coach, faced Boeheim six times while working under his father and at Florida under Billy Donovan.
It's no secret then what to expect from the Syracuse coach: a suffocating 2-3 zone defense and a relaxed offensive structure, usually with one key scorer.