The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Four honored with Joe Lapchick Character Awards

- By Doug Feinberg

NEW YORK — Jim Larrañaga, Lon Kruger, Fran Dunphy and Dianne Nolan are this year’s recipients of the Joe Lapchick Character Awards.

Larrañaga has spent 53 years coaching in college, getting his start as an assistant at Davidson College in 1971. Larrañaga had stops at American Internatio­nal and Bowling Green before joining George Mason in 1997. He guided the Patriots to the Final Four in 2006. The school upset top-seeded and defending champion Connecticu­t, rallying from a 12-point deficit in the first half. Their run ended with a loss to eventual champion Florida in the national semifinals.

From George Mason, Larrañaga went to Miami, where he has coached since 2011. He has won 740 games in his career.

Kruger, a former head coach for the Atlanta Hawks, built a reputation for fixing struggling college programs. He became the first Division I coach to lead five different programs to the NCAA Tournament, doing so with Kansas State, Florida, Illinois, UNLV and Oklahoma. He took four of them to the Sweet 16, and Florida and Oklahoma each reached the Final Four. He won 674 games in his career before retiring after the 2021 season.

Dunphy is the all-time winningest coach in Philadelph­ia Big 5 history. He has won over 600 games in his 31 years as a head coach. He has coached at Penn, Temple and his alma mater, La Salle.

At Penn, Dunphy shined from 1989-2006, winning 10 Ivy League titles and a record 48 straight conference games from 1992-96. His 1993-94 team went 25-3 and was ranked 24th in the nation. The Quakers defeated Nebraska in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament.

Dunphy’s career continued at Temple when he took over for Naismith Hall of Famer John Chaney in 2006. The Owls advanced to the NCAA Tournament eight times in his 13 years, including a run of seven consecutiv­e seasons from 2007-13. He then came home to La Salle in 2022 as its coach for the past two seasons.

Nolan spent four decades in athletics, including leading Fairfield as its women’s head coach for 28 years. She helped lead the Stags in their transition into a Division I program in 1981. She won a program-record 456 games at the school and led the Stags to four NCAA Tournament appearance­s, including one as an at-large team in 2001.

After coaching at Fairfield, she spent some time at Yale and finished her coaching career in charge of Lafayette.

In Nolan’s 38 years of coaching, every senior player graduated with a degree.

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