Double Trouble: Celebrated Coaches Lose Often to Double-Digit Seeded Foes

It's not dumping on Duke, but is double-digit NCAA defeats trending for Mike Krzyzewski, who was eliminated from the national tournament for the third time in the last eight years by a double-digit seeded opponent? At least none of the three were against an Atlantic 10 Conference member at the time. Similarly, new ACC member Syracuse bowed out against #11 Dayton, making Jim Boeheim the first coach ever to lose six games against double-digit seeded foes.

Last year, Georgetown coach John Thompson III joined Bobby Cremins as the only coaches in NCAA Tournament history to be eliminated four straight seasons from the playoffs by opponents with double-digit seeds. Granted, seedings can be very misleading after the process was introduced in 1979. With more parity and balance than ever before, there isn't much difference between a No. 4 seed and a No. 13 seed. Just ask Kansas' Bill Self after the Jayhawks exited at the hands of #10 Stanford.

But Boeheim, Krzyzewski, Self and Thompson might need inoculation against teams with worse seeds. Following is an alphabetical list of prominent coaches absorbing at least three NCAA Tournament defeats in a span of 10 years or fewer with the same school against opponents with double-digit seeds:

Marquee Coach School Three or More Losses vs. Double-Digit Seeded Opponents in Fewer Than 10 Years
Jim Boeheim Syracuse 2005/#13 Vermont, 2006/#12 Texas A&M, 2011/#11 Marquette and 2014/#11 Dayton
Dale Brown Louisiana State 1984/#10 Dayton, 1985/#13 Navy, and 1991/#11 Connecticut
Bobby Cremins Georgia Tech 1986/#11 LSU, 1987/#10 LSU, 1988/#13 Richmond, 1989/#11 Texas and 1993/#13 Southern
Lou Henson Illinois 1983/#10 Utah, 1987/#14 Austin Peay State and 1990/#12 Dayton
Gene Keady Purdue 1985/#11 Auburn, 1986/#11 Louisiana State, 1990/#10 Texas, 1991/#10 Temple and 1995/#14 Wisconsin-Green Bay
Mike Krzyzewski Duke 2007/#11 Virginia Commonwealth, 2012/#15 Lehigh and 2014/#14 Mercer
Ralph Miller Oregon State 1980/#10 Lamar, 1984/#11 West Virginia and 1989/#11 Evansville
Lute Olson Arizona 1992/#14 East Tennessee State, 1993/#15 Santa Clara and 1995/#12 Ball State
Bo Ryan Wisconsin 2008/#10 Davidson, 2010/#12 Cornell and 2013/#12 Ole Miss
Wimp Sanderson Alabama 1983/#11 Lamar, 1989/#11 South Alabama, and 1990/#11 Loyola Marymount
Bill Self Kansas 2005/#14 Bucknell, 2006/#13 Bradley, 2011/#11 Virginia Commonwealth and 2014/#10 Stanford
Kevin Stallings Vanderbilt 2008/#13 Siena, 2010/#13 Murray State and 2011/#12 Richmond
Norm Stewart Missouri 1987/#13 Xavier, 1988/#11 Rhode Island and 1990/#14 Northern Iowa
John Thompson III Georgetown 2008/#10 Davidson, 2010/#14 Ohio University, 2011/#11 Virginia Commonwealth, 2012/#11 North Carolina State and 2013/#15 Florida Gulf Coast
Billy Tubbs Oklahoma 1984/#10 Dayton, 1986/#12 DePaul and 1992/#13 Southwestern Louisiana