Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year


The Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year is a basketball award given to head coaches in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The award is granted to the head coach voted to be the most successful that season by members of the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association, and since the 2012–13 season has also been awarded in separate voting by the league's coaches. The award was first given following the 1953–54 season, the first year of the conference's existence, to Everett Case of NC State. The first winner of the coaches' award was Jim Larrañaga of Miami in 2013.
Dean Smith of North Carolina has won the most awards with eight. Thirteen other coaches have won the award more than once. Five former ACC Coaches of the Year have been inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as coaches; Mike Krzyzewski of Duke and Roy Williams of North Carolina are the only two active coaches who are already members.
Fourteen coaches have won the award in the same season that they have also won a National Coach of the Year award; of those, only Krzyzewski and Smith have achieved the feat three times. Four coaches have won during the same season that they have coached a team that won the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship: Frank McGuire, Norm Sloan, Dean Smith, and Gary Williams. North Carolina has the most ACC Coach of the Year awards with 12, while its in-state rival, Duke, is second with 10. Frank McGuire is the only head coach to win the award at two different schools. Each of the original 1953 ACC members have had at least one of their coaches win the award. Among schools that joined the ACC before 2013, Boston College is the only one that has never had a winning coach. Thirty-one different coaches from twelve schools have received the award.

Key

Winners

SeasonCoachSchoolNational Coach of
the Year Awards
Conf.
W–L
Conf.
St.
Overall
W–L
Source
1953–54*NC State4
1954–55* NC State1
1955–56Wake Forest3T
1956–57*North CarolinaUPI1
1957–58* NC State3
1958–59Duke3T
1959–60Wake Forest2T
1960–61 Wake Forest2
1961–62South Carolina4
1962–63Duke1
1963–64 Duke1
1964–65NC State2
1965–66 Duke1
1966–67*North Carolina1
1967–68* North Carolina1
1968–69* South Carolina2
1969–70NC State3
1970–71* North Carolina1
1971–72Virginia3
1972–73 NC State1
1973–74 NC StateAP
USBWA
1
1974–75Maryland1
1975–76* North Carolina1
1976–77* North CarolinaNABC1
1977–78DukeNABC
SN
2
1978–79* North CarolinaUSBWA2
1979–80 Maryland1
1980–81Virginia1
1981–82 Virginia2
1982–83Georgia Tech6
1983–84*^Duke3T
1984–85 Georgia TechBT1T
1985–86*^ DukeBT
CBS
UPI
1
1986–87Clemson1
1987–88* North Carolina1
1988–89NC State4
1989–90 Clemson1
1990–91Wake Forest3T
1991–92Florida State2
1992–93* North CarolinaBT
N
1
1993–94 Wake Forest3
1994–95 Wake Forest1T
1995–96 Georgia Tech1
1996–97*^ DukeBT1
1997–98North CarolinaCBS
N
NABC
SN
2
1998–99*^ DukeN
NABC
1
1999–00*^ Duke1
2000–01Georgia Tech5T
2001–02*Maryland1
2002–03Wake Forest1
2003–04NC State2
2004–05Virginia Tech4T
2005–06*^North CarolinaAP
ARC
USBWA
2
2006–07Virginia1T
2007–08 Virginia Tech4
2008–09Florida StateBT4
2009–10* Maryland1T
2010–11*^ North Carolina1
2011–12 Florida State3
2012–13Miami AP
N
USBWA
1
2013–14Virginia1
2014–15 VirginiaUSBWA1
2015–16 Miami 2T
2016–17Josh PastnerGeorgia Tech11
2017–18 VirginiaAP
N
NABC
USBWA
1
2018-19 Virginia1T
2019–20 Florida State1

Winners by school

Footnotes