USA TODAY International Edition

PATRICIA SUE HEAD SUMMITT

- Rachel Shuster

Born: June 14, 1952, in Clarksvill­e, Tenn. Education: University of Tennessee- Martin, where she was an All- America basketball player and earned a bachelor’s in physical education. Earned a master’s in physical education from Tennessee- Knoxville. Family: Summitt is survived by her mother, Hazel Albright Head; son, Ross “Tyler” Summitt; sister, Linda; brothers, Tommy, Charles and Kenneth. Halls of Fame: Inducted in 2000 into Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame; 1999 into Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame; 1996 into National Associatio­n for Sport and Physical Education’s Hall of Fame; 1990 into Women’s Sports Foundation Hall of Fame; also in Tennessee Women’s Hall of Fame. Coaching career: 38 seasons, all at Tennessee, 1,098208 (. 841), most wins for a basketball coach at any fouryear college or university, men’s or women’s, with 47% of games against ranked opponents and a 440- 168 record (. 724); faced 164 different opponents over 35 conference­s; 2000 Naismith coach of the century. Seventime NCAA coach of the year, eight NCAA championsh­ips ( 1987, ’ 89, ’ 91, ’ 96, ’ 97, ’ 98 with a 39- 0 record, 2007, ’ 08), second to Connecticu­t’s Geno Auriemma ( 11) among NCAA Division I women’s coaches. Eighteen Final Four appearance­s, most among all Division I coaches ( men or women). Sixteen Southeaste­rn Conference titles and 16 SEC tournament titles, eight- time SEC coach of the year; played on the USA’s silver medal team in the 1976 Summer Games in Montreal, coached the U. S. team to a gold medal in the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles, becoming the first in U. S. Olympic basketball history to play on and coach medal- winning teams. Among players coached: Candace Parker, Kara Lawson, Tamika Catchings, Cha- mique Holdsclaw, Nikki McCray Honors: Courts at TennesseeM­artin ( Pat Head Summitt Court) and Tennessee ( The Summitt) named in her honor. There also are streets named after her on those campuses; the SummittWoo­den Room at NCAA headquarte­rs; 2012 Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom; 2012 Billie Jean King Legacy Award from the U. S. Tennis Associatio­n; 2011 Mildred “Babe” Didrikson Zaharias Courage Award from the United States Sports Academy; 2011 “Sports Illustrate­d” Sportswoma­n of the Year; 2009 WNBA Inspiring Coach Award; one of “America’s Best Leaders for 2007” as released by “U. S. News & World Report”; among the “1998 Women of the Year” by “Glamour”; only woman on “The Sporting News” list of 50 Greatest Coaches of All- Time. Foundation: The Pat Summitt Foundation, begun in 2011 “to help find a cure for Alzheimer’s so that one day no family has to hear that a loved one has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.” Author: “Sum It Up: A Thousand and Ninety- Eight Victories, a Couple of Irrelevant Losses, and a Life in Perspectiv­e” ( with Sally Jenkins), 2013; “Raise the Roof: The Inspiring Inside Story of the Tennessee Lady Vols’ Undefeated 199798 Season” ( with Jenkins), 1998; “Reach for the Summitt” ( with Jenkins), 1998 Trivia: When she arrived in Knoxville she never corrected her mentors when they shortened her name from Patricia to Pat. She had always gone by Tricia or Trish. Quote: “Pat’s gift has always been her ability to push those around her to new heights, and over the last 38 years her unique approach has resulted in both unparallel­ed success on the court and unrivaled loyalty from those who know her and those whose lives she has touched.” — President Obama, in 2012

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