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Dean Smith, legendary men’s basketball coach, dead at 83

WASHINGTON — Dean Smith, the legendary men’s basketball coach who led the University of North Carolina to two national titles and multiple NCAA tournament appearances, died Saturday night.

He was 83.

Smith is considered the architect of the “Four Corners offense,” a methodical technique in which four members of one team stand in the corners of the offensive half-court while the point guard dribbles in the middle.

In its heyday, this was an effective strategy for slowing the game’s pace — and in many cases — it secured victories and stalled the other team’s momentum.

During his 36-year coaching tenure at UNC, Smith coached several future NBA stars, including James Worthy, Bob McAdoo and Michael Jordan, who’s widely acknowledged as the greatest professional basketball player ever.

Basketball around the Beltway: Tall task ahead for a Hoyas giant

WASHINGTON -- Past met present for Georgetown University when the school introduced Hoyas great Patrick Ewing as its head men's basketball coach, with an eye toward the future.  It happened on Wednesday in front of a room packed with media, boosters, fans, students, alumni and a pep band that did not know "Vehicle" by the Ides of March. But Ewing's name alone was music enough to everyone's ears at the John Thompson Jr. Athletic Center in D.C. Ewing even replicated his famous scene from when he committed to play at the Big East school in 1981, holding a Georgetown pennant above his head.
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