Humble Pie: Mullin' Over St. Thomas Aquinas 32-Point Victory vs. St. John's

"I claim to be a simple individual liable to err like any other fellow mortal. I own, however, that I have humility enough to confess my errors and to retrace my steps." - Mahatma Gandhi

A 32-point exhibition-game setback for St. John's against local Division II institution St. Thomas Aquinas was a generous dose of humility for newbie coach Chris Mullin. The Red Storm was red-faced, but it could take some comfort from the fact the inexplicable defeat won't formally count against its record like a 22-point setback against visiting Incarnate Word (Tex.) the following month. Tom Izzo-coached Michigan State (Grand Valley State MI prior to start of 2007-08 campaign) and Jim Boeheim-coached Syracuse (LeMoyne NY in 2009-10) each incurred the ignominy of succumbing against a small-school opponent in an exhibition contest before reaching an NCAA playoff regional semifinal by season's end. Last year, UAB upset Iowa State in the NCAA tourney after losing an exhibition game against UNC Pembroke. This season, Iowa got off to a great start in Big Ten Conference competition after bowing to Augustana (S.D.) in an exhibition game where the Hawkeyes trailed by as many as 15 points in the second half. Actually, former Redmen All-American Mullin is in good company among mentors exposed to the humility described by Gandhi.

Many of the biggest names in college coaching history recovered from embarrassing defeats certainly not cited on their otherwise mostly-regal resumes. For instance, there are numerous mentors who captured NCAA championships despite losing to a small school at some point during their careers - Phog Allen (lost to Emporia State), Jim Calhoun (American International, Assumption, Brandeis, Bridgeport, Florida Southern, Merrimack, St. Anselm, Stonehill and Tufts), John Calipari (Florida Tech and Lowell), Denny Crum (Chaminade), Jim Harrick (Abilene Christian), Don Haskins (Louisiana College), Hank Iba (Abilene Christian and Westminster), George Ireland (Regis), Doggie Julian (Amherst, Colby, St. Anselm, St. Michael's, Springfield, Tampa and Williams), Mike Krzyzewski (King's, Scranton and SUNY-Buffalo), Rollie Massimino (New Orleans and Philadelphia Textile), Al McGuire (Evansville and Washington MO), Rick Pitino (Adelphi), Nolan Richardson Jr. (American-Puerto Rico), Norman Sloan (Presbyterian), John Thompson Jr. (Assumption, Gannon, Randolph-Macon and Roanoke) and Jim Valvano (Armstrong State, Bloomsburg, Gannon, Tampa and Wilkes).

Kansas' Bill Self lost 18 consecutive contests bridging the 1993-94 and 1994-95 seasons with Oral Roberts but at least he didn't lose a decision to a non-Division I institution. The following alphabetical list "retraces steps" of prominent coaches who lost games to non-Division I colleges during their major-college careers: