Highest Peak SRS
Single-season ceiling leaders.
1. Len Casanova
1949 Santa Clara (8-2-1)
21.12. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
16.1
Coaches Research Hub
Search any coach, jump to the record answer, then verify it with year-by-year rows, ranked-game splits, school impact, and comparisons.
Answer Pages
Fast answers, deeper profiles.
Current Research Window
Search coach records, career wins, win percentage, and rankings from the same filtered universe as the discovery visuals below. Start from the recommended sample, then tighten the field around identity, school, time span, or quality.
2
Coaches in view
1786 indexed coaches available
30
Coach-seasons
12392 total coach-season rows
1/1
Page position
2 coaches in the current filtered result set
Summary and Filtering
Coach search stays primary, then school, archetype, time span, and quality sharpen the rankings. The recommended starting point is 3+ seasons.
Primary Discovery
Start with career shape or flip to identity. Either way, the chart, the coach summary, the outlier list, and the table context all stay synchronized.
Start with the simplest question: who paired real strength with a repeatable week-to-week shape?
Len Casanova
Volatility: 8.54 • Average SRS: 4.69
52.4% win rate • 21.1 peak SRS
Hover or focus a point to isolate it. Click a coach to carry that selection into the results table.
Average SRS reads overall strength. Volatility is the spread of season-to-season SRS, so lower values mean a steadier profile.
Career shape lens
This is the clearest first-pass view for peak versus stability. It is the best place to start browsing.
Len Casanova coached 21 seasons, won 52.4%, and posted an average SRS of 4.7. Best season: 1949 Santa Clara. The profile was balanced with a highly volatile profile. 3 stints shaped the career arc.
These callouts update with the active discovery mode and filtered coach set.
Highest peak
Len Casanova
Single-season ceiling leader in the current filtered set.
Most consistent elite coach
Buck Shaw
High average strength without the season-to-season swing.
Keep the ceiling board in view, but as a support module for the active lens, not the main destination.
1. Len Casanova
1949
2. Buck Shaw
1940
Supporting Insights
These are shortcuts into the same table below. Performance leads the stack, while stability and longevity stay visible without competing with the main chart.
Performance
The fastest path into peak and results leaders.
Single-season ceiling leaders.
1. Len Casanova
1949 Santa Clara (8-2-1)
2. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
Who won the most across a meaningful sample.
1. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
2. Len Casanova
1949 Santa Clara (8-2-1)
Coaches who stacked elite endings.
1. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
2. Len Casanova
1949 Santa Clara (8-2-1)
Stability
Who stays in control year after year.
Low SRS volatility among winning coaches with a real sample.
1. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
Longevity
Long arcs, big samples, and durable careers.
Big careers and long arcs.
1. Buck Shaw
1940 Santa Clara (6-1-1)
2. Len Casanova
1949 Santa Clara (8-2-1)
Results Table
2 filtered coaches in view. Lower rank numbers are better. Lower volatility means more stable. Lower SP Def numbers are better on the identity chart.
| Compare | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Len Casanova 104-94-11 • 1946-1966 | Oregon, Pittsburgh +1 | 21 | 209 | 104 | 94 | 52.4% | 4.7 | 21.1 1949 peak | 8.5 | — | — | #15 | 0 | Balanced Volatile Builder | |
Buck Shaw 52-22-7 • 1937-1957 | Air Force, California +1 | 9 | 81 | 52 | 22 | 68.5% | 5.9 | 16.1 1940 peak | 11.0 | — | — | #0 | 3 | Balanced Longevity Coach |
Showing 1-2 of 2