Top 50 coaches: No. 23 Greg McDermott
Editor's note: Over the next five weeks, we will reveal the top 50 coaches in college basketball as decided by our ESPN Forecast panel. Today we unveil No. 23: Creighton's Greg McDermott. On Thursday, we release No. 22.
Originally Published: June 4, 2014
By ESPN.com
Where does Greg McDermott go from here?
That's the big question many will ask about McDermott, the hangover to what was otherwise one of his best years as both a coach and a father. Now that Doug McDermott, one of the best and most productive players in college hoops history -- the runaway 2013-14 national player of the year and the sport's fifth-leading scorer all-time -- has graduated to the NBA, what will his father do at Creighton?
It is not an unfair question. After all, before Doug McDermott transformed from a player his own father essentially passed on, Greg McDermott needed a lifeline out of Iowa State. Before he took the Cyclones job in 2006, Greg McDermott had a more-than-solid tenure at Northern Iowa. But the Cyclones years were rough ones, and by 2010, his fourth season, the coach could surely see the writing on the wall in Ames.
Luckily, Dana Altman vacated Omaha for a chance to ride the Nike wave at Oregon. The elder McDermott moved a couple hours west and brought his son -- who was all set to play for Ben Jacobson at Northern Iowa -- along for the ride.
What happens if Altman doesn't leave Creighton? The scenario is more fascinating than the plot of "Wolfenstein: The New Order" (though it probably contains less suspect psuedoscience). Instead, Altman left, Doug McDermott transmuted into a points-devouring monster, Creighton was invited to the new Big East, and the interesting scenario now before us -- what does a post-progeny McDermott tenure at Creighton really look like? -- raises the aforementioned questions.
But truth be told, we're not really interested in the future here. Our ESPN Forecast coach rankings are more about recent performance. In that realm, it's hard to quarrel much with McDermott's 23rd overall spot.
First of all, you have to give a guy credit for good genes. I mean, fair's fair. It's the best recruiting tool of them all! Second, and more seriously, Greg McDermott deserves at least some -- and probably a big chunk -- of his son's rapid development from decent freshman to amazing sophomore and beyond. Third, basketball teams require more than one really good player, and Greg McDermott built a team around his son full of pitch-perfect supporting players and offensive specialists. There are some objections worth raising about Creighton's consistent struggles on the defensive end, and the lack of deep tournament success is the one thing Doug McDermott's career didn't give us. But from pretty much any angle, Greg McDermott did about as good a job managing his son's -- and his team's -- rise to the national élite.
That includes the unusual challenge of, you know, coaching your own son. That's a challenge vexing youth league and high school coaches in every sport, everywhere, all the time. How do I treat my own kid fairly? How do I keep the rest of the team on board? Maybe college basketball has fewer warring parents than U-13 traveling soccer, but I doubt it. In any case, it's a delicate situation. You would never have known watching Creighton these past four years.
Next season will be an interesting one for Greg McDermott. His son will be in the NBA, which is as big a loss as any team will suffer year over year this summer. But three other excellent senior starters now gone -- Grant Gibbs, Jahenns Manigat and Ethan Wragge -- will make the task all the more difficult. We'll see how that goes and update accordingly. But for now? Greg McDermott brought one of the best players in college hoops history to Creighton and lifted the Bluejays to the best stretch in their history in doing so. That player just so happened to be his son. So what?
-- Eamonn Brennan
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