Mike Krzyzewski’s 42nd and final season as Duke’s basketball coach ends in New Orleans. Today we will discuss about Mike Krzyzewski: Net worth| Age| Record| Replacement
Mike Krzyzewski: Net worth| Age| Record| Replacement
Michael William Krzyzewski (nicknamed “Coach K”; born February 13, 1947) is an American college basketball coach. He has served as head coach at Duke University since 1980, where he has led the Blue Devils to five national titles, 13 Final Four, 15 ACC tournament championships, and 13 ACC regular season titles. Among men’s college basketball coaches, only UCLA’s John Wooden has won more NCAA championships, with a total of ten. Krzyzewski is widely regarded as one of the greatest college basketball coaches of all time.
Current position | |
---|---|
Title | Head coach |
Team | Duke |
Conference | ACC |
Record | 1,129–308 |
Biographical details | |
Born | February 13, 1947 Chicago, Illinois |
Playing career | |
1966–1969 | Army |
Position(s) | Point guard, shooting guard |
Net worth
According to Celebrity Net Worth, Krzyzewski has a net worth of $45 million.
Entering the Elite Eight on Saturday, Krzyzewski has won five national championships, three Naismith Coach of the Year awards, 1,201 overall wins and 100 NCAA Tournament victories in his 47-year coaching career. Krzyzewski was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2001 and the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.
Age

Krzyzewski is 75 years old, having reached that age on February 13. He was born on February 13, 1947. He is among the oldest people to do so. But he is not the oldest. That distinction belongs to another ACC contemporary.
Who is the oldest coach in college basketball history?
Syracuse coach Jim Boehm is the oldest coach in NCAA Division I history. And the Syracuse head man — who turns 77 on November 14, 2021 — has held that distinction for a few years now.
Boehm officially went on record on his 75th birthday in 2019, passing John Chaney in the process. Chaney – who experienced success in both Division I and II, but who is perhaps best known for his success at Temple – retired at the age of 74 after the completion of the 2005–06 season.
Record
Krzyzewski has a 1,170-361 record in his 46 years as a head coach, including 1,097-302 points in 41 seasons at Duke. The numbers reflecting Coach Kay’s career are simply staggering:
Five National Championships (1991, 1992, 2001, 2010, 2015)
Six gold medals as head coach of the US men’s national team
Nine National Player of the Year (11 honours)
Six National Defensive Player of the Year (Nine Honors)
10 consecutive top-10 AP polls concluded (1997-06)
12 National Coach of the Year Award (Eight Seasons)
12 Final Four appearances (tied for most in NCAA history)
13 ACC Regular Season Championship
15 ACC Tournament Championships (most in league history)
28 NBA Lottery Picks (Most in Draft History)
35 NCAA Tournament Bids (Maximum by a Coach)
37 All-America Selections (51 Honors)
67 ACC Tournament wins (most in league history)
68 NBA Draft selections, including 42 first-round selections
97 NCAA Tournament wins (most in NCAA history)
126 weeks ranked No. 1 in AP poll (most by a coach in election history)
517 ACC wins (most in league history)
556 weeks in AP poll’s top 10 (most by a coach in election history)
Ranked 649 weeks in AP poll (most by a coach in election history)
1,097 wins at Duke (the most in NCAA history at a school)
1,170 career wins (most in NCAA history)
Replacement
According to excerpts shared Tuesday, Krzyzewski described Amaker as having “a very difficult conversation” with his former assistant in the book. In conversation, Krzyzewski explained that if Amaker left Harvard to join Duke as an assistant this season, he would force the Blue Devils assistant’s downgrade and “create a strange dynamic with the stock.”
Amaker played at Duke between 1983 and 1987, and still holds the school record for consecutive games starting with 138. He was an assistant coach at Duke from 1988–1997 before leaving to coach at Seton Hall. He later coached at Michigan and Harvard.
The skier has never coached any other program. Like Amaker, he played at Duke, and was named first-team All-ACC and unanimously named second-team All-America during the school’s 2010 national championship run.