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No joke: Roy Williams’ retirement had perfect timing. ‘Ol Roy’ really was that good.

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The end of an era: Roy Williams announces retirement

Read more coverage about Roy Williams’ retirement as coach of the UNC men’s basketball team.

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The lights of college basketball in the Carolinas grew dimmer Thursday morning, when Roy Williams unexpectedly retired in what most UNC fans wished was an April Fools’ Day joke.

It wasn’t, though. Williams, 70, will hang up his whistle after 33 years as one of the best college coaches ever — 15 years at Kansas, 18 years and three national championships at his North Carolina alma mater. Ol’ Roy, as he sometimes called himself, was done.

His timing was sublime. As the old saying goes, you always want to leave the people wanting more, and Williams has done that here. No one was anywhere near ready to kick him out, and there were tears in Chapel Hill and many other places about his retirement.

But the man is also 70 years old, and UNC basketball’s last two seasons weren’t up to his high standards. “I no longer feel like I’m the right man for the job,” Williams said at a tearful afternoon news conference explaining his decision.

Williams deserved to coach as long as he wanted to and then leave when he wanted to, and he’s done both those things now.

As he said: “I didn’t do a good job with this (2020-21) team. I wasn’t going to wait for strike three is the bottom line. ... Heck, I’d like to coach for 30 more years. But I just don’t think I’m the right guy.”

Williams liked to say that “Ol’ Roy ain’t that good,” whenever he was compared to his mentor Dean Smith or when his team was picked to win a national title before the season began.

But Ol’ Roy really was that good — a folksy, emotive, eminently likable disciplinarian who learned the college coaching trade from Smith and then mastered it himself. At UNC, he won national titles in 2005, 2009 and 2017, and his record was so good for so long that he had already made the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame before titles No. 2 and 3.

His wife, Wanda, had wanted him to retire after the 2009 national championship, Williams said Thursday. “But I got 12 more years, so I did pretty good,” the coach said.

As the most famous Tar Heel, Michael Jordan, told The Observer’s Rick Bonnell on Thursday, Williams is getting “to choose (his) own path, to walk away from the game when he wants.”

Continued Jordan: “It’s great he now gets to spend more time with his children and grandchildren. ... (But) I’m sad that he’s leaving because he has meant so much to basketball.”

Who will replace the coach? Hubert Davis? Wes Miller? Jerry Stackhouse? Mark Few? The speculation will grow over the next few days — and certainly the Tar Heels certainly shouldn’t limit themselves to “the Carolina family” during this search. But that column is for another time.

Williams deserves his own day and his own celebration, dadgummit. The man is retiring with 903 wins, nine Final Fours and a bushel of unused timeouts tucked somewhere inside that plaid sports coat.

North Carolina head coach Roy Williams was pumped up in 2016 after a basket by Marcus Paige.
North Carolina head coach Roy Williams was pumped up in 2016 after a basket by Marcus Paige. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

Williams has been a celebrity in North Carolina for so long it is easy to forget how unlikely his rise was. As Williams once told me in an interview: “When I was growing up in western North Carolina near Asheville, I never even thought about going to college until I was in high school. It just wasn’t part of what we talked about in my family. I thought I would go to work in a sawmill like everybody else.

“But Buddy Baldwin was my high school basketball coach and my history teacher, and he was also a UNC graduate. He loved the Tar Heels. ... The first time I set foot on the UNC campus came in 1967 during the fall of my senior year. I was on our high school square-dance team. I know it sounds comical, but it’s true. We came to Durham for a performance at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Yes, I square-danced at Duke.”

“I had never been to either Duke or UNC,” Williams continued. “The next day after our performance, Miss Weir, the teacher who was the sponsor of the square-dance team, brought us to Chapel Hill. She pulled me aside after we saw the campus and said, ‘This is where I want you to go to school. This is where you belong.’ ... So I came to Carolina, mostly because Buddy Baldwin and people like Miss Weir felt it would be a great place for me.”

North Carolina coach Roy Williams arrives for his retirement announcement on Thursday. Williams has coached for 33 seasons, the last 18 at North Carolina, winning the National Championship in 2005, 2009, and 2017.
North Carolina coach Roy Williams arrives for his retirement announcement on Thursday. Williams has coached for 33 seasons, the last 18 at North Carolina, winning the National Championship in 2005, 2009, and 2017. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

What Williams did in Chapel Hill was extraordinary, and he has left a permanent legacy via his generous scholarship contributions and the many Williams family members who also graduated from UNC. He thought he didn’t coach as well the past two years, though, and named several specific examples of last-second situations the past two seasons in which he thought he did the wrong thing. He promised he will never coach again, although I wouldn’t be stunned if he ended up coaching a grandchild on a middle school team sometime down the line. The man just loves to put teams together, although now it’s going to be golf foursomes.

“I was a coach,” he said. “And that was the proudest moment of my life.”

North Carolina coach Roy Williams leaves the Smith Center hand in hand with his wife Wanda, after announcing his retirement from coaching on Thursday, April 1, 2021 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Williams has coached for 33 seasons, the last 18 at North Carolina, winning the National Championship in 2005, 2009, and 2017.
North Carolina coach Roy Williams leaves the Smith Center hand in hand with his wife Wanda, after announcing his retirement from coaching on Thursday, April 1, 2021 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Williams has coached for 33 seasons, the last 18 at North Carolina, winning the National Championship in 2005, 2009, and 2017. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

Cut Williams’ vein open and he bleeds true blue. Even after those 15 years in Kansas, even after he turned down the UNC basketball job the first time in 2000 before accepting it in 2003, I don’t think anyone has ever loved Chapel Hill more.

The coach deserves this ride off into a Carolina-blue sky, golf clubs slung over his shoulder, family and players at his side, scared of what’s next, as he said several times, but also happy about it.

A longtime New York Yankees fan, he quoted Lou Gehrig during his news conference, saying he felt like the luckiest man on earth.

Ol’ Roy didn’t always manage the clock perfectly, but he timed this one just right. He left us wanting more.

This story was originally published April 1, 2021 at 12:40 PM with the headline "No joke: Roy Williams’ retirement had perfect timing. ‘Ol Roy’ really was that good.."

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Scott Fowler
The Charlotte Observer
Columnist Scott Fowler has written for The Charlotte Observer since 1994 and has earned 26 APSE awards for his sportswriting. He hosted The Observer’s podcast “Carruth,” which Sports Illustrated once named “Podcast of the Year.” Fowler also conceived and hosted the online series and podcast “Sports Legends of the Carolinas,” which featured 1-on-1 interviews with NC and SC sports icons and was turned into a book. He occasionally writes about non-sports subjects, such as the 5-part series “9/11/74,” which chronicled the forgotten plane crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 in Charlotte on Sept. 11, 1974. Support my work with a digital subscription
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The end of an era: Roy Williams announces retirement

Read more coverage about Roy Williams’ retirement as coach of the UNC men’s basketball team.