'He's on my Mt. Rushmore of coaches': NCCU's LeVelle Moton reacts to Roy Williams retirement

Thursday, April 1, 2021
DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) -- When the North Carolina Central University men's basketball team faced off against the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill in December, Eagles head coach LeVelle Moton had no idea it would turn out to be Roy Williams' final season.

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"Not only is he a legend, he's on my Mt. Rushmore of coaches," Moton said.

You can look at the banners and list the victories, three national titles among them, but if you ask Moton how Williams changed college basketball, he will tell you it's how the Hall of Famer, retiring after 33 years as a head coach, treated the people around him.

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"They don't make them like that anymore," said Moton. "He's learned so much from Dean Smith. He's brought those morals and values into a game where, nowadays, the morals and value system is out the door and it's all about sheer competition."

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A last-minute matchup between their two teams, prompted by COVID-19 punching holes in both their schedules, started with a phone call; Williams, calling Moton on a Wednesday, inviting his team to travel from Durham that Saturday.

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It was also Williams who was the first person to reach out and offer support after Moton was hired at the Durham HBCU in 2009.
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"He said, 'people will never understand that you and I have more passion in our pinky than the average fan of our universities because we attended the university and now we're coaching,'" Moton said. "So no one loves the university more than us."
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Moton said that love for his community is why Williams always treated his team as his family but it's his children and grandchildren he knows Coach Williams is eager to enjoy more of.

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"Your kids don't care about national championships," said Moton. "Your grandkids don't care about how many victories you have nor do they care about you beating your rival. They care about moments that you've enjoyed with them."





With nothing left to prove, Moton said Williams left it all on the floor.

"Winning a national championship is not gonna make him a better coach," Moton said. "He was a trailblazer and a pioneer."
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