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More precious than gold medals
WORLD ^ | 2/28/09 | Mark Bergin

Posted on 03/11/2009 2:29:20 AM PDT by rhema

Kay Yow accomplished most everything a women's basketball coach could dream. Over a 37-year career that included 34 seasons with North Carolina State, she compiled 737 victories, leading the Wolfpack to 20 NCAA tournament bids, 11 Sweet 16 appearances, and a Final Four in 1998. Outside the college ranks, she coached the 1988 U.S. Olympic team to a gold medal in Seoul, Korea.

But with her passing at the age of 66 last month, after more than two decades fighting breast cancer, Yow pointed her friends and well-wishers to look beyond basketball. In a video she'd recorded four years earlier with instructions to play it at her funeral, the Naismith Hall of Fame coach delivered 21 minutes of gospel, urging with deep sincerity that all who watched might come to Christian faith.

"Today, as I speak, I hope you won't be hearing Kay Yow speak, but that you'll be hearing the Lord speak through me," she opened, her voice faltering with grandmotherly affection.

Yow recounted the story of her religious conversion in 1975, when a persistent Campus Crusade staff member elbowed her way into a 15-minute audience with Yow's players, during which she presented the message of Jesus and charged the team to repent. One person responded. It was Yow.

Christianity took root quickly in the young coach, her lifelong commitments to kindness and hard work folding into her new faith. She often spoke openly of her personal relationship with Jesus and penned poetry to further communicate it.

In her posthumous video, she quoted lines from these simple forays of verse: "There's just something about sport that touches every part of me. More like Jesus let it make me. Let it make me more like thee." And elsewhere: "I'd rather have Jesus than a gold medal."

Yow charged her listeners not to grieve as though for one lost forever, but to "rejoice" that she had gone home: "I don't want you to fret over the fact that I'm not here or question why I'm not here, because God knows what He is doing. God doesn't make mistakes. He knows what is best for each of us. He's in total control."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: North Carolina
KEYWORDS: basketball; ncaa; tarheels; yow

1 posted on 03/11/2009 2:29:20 AM PDT by rhema
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To: Caleb1411

2 posted on 03/11/2009 2:29:55 AM PDT by rhema ("Break the conventions; keep the commandments." -- G. K. Chesterton)
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To: rhema

Good post.


3 posted on 03/11/2009 2:42:27 AM PDT by Shery (in APO Land)
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To: rhema

It’s always a day-brightener to read about classy coaches.


4 posted on 03/11/2009 1:21:32 PM PDT by Caleb1411 ("These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G. K. C)
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