Retirement Planners: Weep On It/Think On It/Sleep On It/Drink To It

Steve Fisher came close by registering 12 consecutive winning campaigns, averaging more than 25 victories annually from 2005-06 through 2016-17 before retiring at San Diego State. But it's patently clear not every coach can depart with pomp-and-circumstance style such as luminaries John Wooden, Al McGuire, Ray Meyer and Dean Smith when they bowed out. From 1964 to 1975 with Wooden at the helm, UCLA won an NCAA-record 10 national titles, including seven straight from 1967 through 1973. McGuire's goodbye in 1977 with an NCAA title marked Marquette's eighth straight season finishing among the Top 10 in a final wire-service poll. Meyer directed DePaul to a Top 6 finish in a final wire-service poll six times in his final seven seasons from 1978 through 1984. Smith won at least 28 games with North Carolina in four of his final five seasons from 1992-93 through 1996-97.

But fond farewells such as UC Santa Barbara's Bob Williams winning at least 18 games eight of his final 11 campaigns are the exception, not the rule, in trying to cope with Father Time. How many school all-time winningest mentors rode off into the sunset donning at least a partial black rather than white hat? How much they may have tarnished their legacy is debatable but hanging around too long probably caused a few of the following celebrated coaches to lose portion of their luster: