Now this is an amazing coach!


On Tuesday the best man I know  will do what he always does on the 21st of
the month. He'll sit down and pen a  love letter to his best girl. He'll
say how much he misses her and loves her and  can't wait to see her again.

Then he'll fold it once, slide it  in a little envelope and walk into his
bedroom. He'll go to the stack of love  letters sitting there on her
pillow, untie the yellow ribbon, place the new one  on top and tie the
ribbon again. The stack will be 180 letters high then,  because Tuesday is
15 years to the day since Nellie, his beloved wife of 53  years, died.

In her memory, he sleeps only on  his half of the bed, only on his pillow,
only on top of the sheets, never  between, with just the old bedspread they
shared to keep him  warm.

There's never been a finer man in  American sports than John Wooden, or a
finer coach. He won 10 NCAA basketball  championships at UCLA, the last in
1975. Nobody has ever come within six of him.  He won 88 straight games
between January 30,  1971, and  January 17,  1974.   Nobody has come within
42  since.

So, sometimes, when the Basketball  Madness gets to be too much -- too many
players trying to make Sports Center,  too few players trying to make
assists, too few coaches willing to be mentors,  too many freshmen with
out-of-wedlock kids, too few freshmen who will stay in  school long  enough
to become men -- I like to go see Coach  Wooden.

I visit him in his little condo in  Encino, 20 minutes northwest of Los
Angeles, and hear him say things like "Gracious sakes  alive!" and tell
stories about teaching "Lewis" the hook shot. Lewis Alcindor,  that
is...who became Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

There has never been another coach  like Wooden, quiet as an April snow and
square as a game of checkers; loyal to  one woman, one school, one way;
walking around campus in his sensible shoes and  Jimmy Stewart morals.

He'd spend a half hour the first  day of practice teaching his men how to
put on a sock. "Wrinkles can lead to  blisters," he'd warn. These huge
players would sneak looks at one another and  roll their eyes. Eventually,
they'd do it right. "Good," he'd say. "And now for  the other foot."

Of the 180 players who played for  him, Wooden knows the whereabouts of
172. Of course, it's  not hard when most of them call, checking on his
health, secretly hoping to hear  some of his simple life lessons so that
they can write them on the lunch bags of  their kids, who will roll their
eyes.

"Discipline yourself, and others  won't need to," Coach would say. "Never
lie, never cheat, never steal," and  "Earn the right to be proud and
confident."

If you played for him, you played  by his rules: Never score without
acknowledging a teammate. One word of  profanity, and you're done for the
day. Treat your opponent with respect. He  believed in hopelessly
out-of-date stuff that never did anything but win  championships. No
dribbling behind the back or through the legs. "There's no  need," he'd
say.

No UCLA basketball number was  retired under his watch. "What about the
fellows who wore that number before?  Didn't they contribute to the team?"
he'd say.

No long hair, no facial hair.  "They take too long to dry, and you could
catch cold leaving the gym," he'd say.  That one drove his players bonkers.

One day, All-America center Bill  Walton showed up with a full beard. "It's
my right," he insisted. Wooden asked  if he believed that strongly. Walton
said he did.

"That's good, Bill," Coach said.  "I admire people who have strong beliefs
and stick by them, I really do. We're  going to miss you." Walton shaved it
right then and there. Now Walton calls once  a week to tell Coach he loves
him.

It's always too soon when you have  to leave the condo and go back out into
the real world, where the rules are so  much grayer and the teams so much
worse.

As Wooden shows you to the door,  you take one last look around. The framed
report cards of his great-grandkids,  the boxes of jelly beans peeking out
from under the favorite wooden chair, the  dozens of pictures of Nellie.

He's almost 90 now. You think a  little more hunched over than last time.
Steps a little smaller. You hope it's  not the last time you see him. He
smiles. "I'm not afraid to die," he says.  "Death is my only chance to be
with her again."

Problem is, we still need him  here.

Live each day as if it were your  last.