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Best NCAA Basketball Coaches of the 1990s

Long before the days of NIL deals and wall-to-wall coverage on streaming platforms, NCAA basketball was a much different game than it is now. For the first half of the 1990s, basketball coaches weren’t worried about recruiting players that would only stay for one season before heading to the NBA. Because of this, the best coaches had four-year plans for each player and mostly picked out local players.

The 1990s marked a significant shift into modern basketball and some coaches were able to adapt through the entire decade. Out of the many that could be picked, these were the best NCAA basketball coaches of the 1990s.

Honorable Mention:

  • Lute Olson
  • Jim Boeheim
  • Bob Huggins
  • Bob Knight
  • Jerry Tarkanian
  • Tom Izzo
  • John Thompson
  • Tubby Smith
  • John Calipari

5. Rick Pitino

After leading Providence to a stunning Final Four run, Rick Pitino was one of the hottest coaches available in 1987. He found his way to the University of Kentucky, which was ineligible for postseason play due to sanctions at the time. After the 1990-91 season, Kentucky was eligible once again and Pitino took advantage.

He coached the Wildcats through the 1996-97 season, making all tournaments the team was allowed to make. That first year of eligibility resulted in an Elite Eight run. The Wildcats made it at least that far five times in six years, including a championship in 1996 and a trio of Final Fours.

4. Roy Williams

Before he headed to Chapel Hill to coach North Carolina, Roy Williams had made his mark at Kansas. Replacing Larry Brown, Williams took over at the end of the 1980s, and after one season became a national title contender. Williams spent the entire decade with the Jayhawks, winning at least a share of the Big Eight/12 Conference Championship in all but two seasons.

Williams also led Kansas to an NCAA Tournament appearance in each year of the 1990s. Though he didn’t win a championship, Williams did reach the Final Four twice and at least the Sweet 16 five times.

3. Jim Calhoun

Jim Calhoun was hired by the University of Connecticut in 1986 and got off to a slow start. When the 1990s came around, though, UConn became one of the nation’s top teams. Calhoun’s Huskies made the NCAA Tournament in all but two seasons, reaching at least the Sweet 16 on six occasions. 

After flirting with a Final Four appearance so many times, Calhoun finally reached the promised land in 1999. The 34-2 Huskies didn’t just make the Final Four, either, as they ended up defeating Duke for Calhoun’s first NCAA Championship.

2. Dean Smith

It’s a testament to the greatness of Dean Smith to be one of the best 1990s coaches without even being around for the final three years of the decade. Smith, the North Carolina legend, already had decades of success heading into his final years as a coach. 

Smith retired in 1997, but not until he made four Final Four appearances during the 1990s, including his final NCAA Championship in 1993. Even at the very end, Smith’s Tar Hells finished 28-7 and reached the Final Four one last time before calling it a (very fine) career.

1. Mike Krzyzewski

After struggling during his first three seasons with Duke in the early 1980s, Mike Krzyzewski found his footing in the latter half of the decade and made his Duke Blue Devils dominant for the entirety of the 1990s. In the first two seasons of the decade, Coach K and his team took home back-to-back championships.

Coach K added a pair of Elite Eight runs during the 1990s and nearly won a third title in 1994. There was one season that Duke didn’t make the tournament during the decade, and it was when Coach K missed most of the season with an injured back that needed immediate medical attention. 

Best NBA Basketball Coaches of the 1990s

The 1990s were indeed a magical time for basketball. It was the decade when many younger fans really started to become enthralled by the sport, and countless players rose to superstardom. Of course, Michael Jordan led the way during the decade, but plenty of other stars like Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing, and Shaquille O’Neal (just to name a few) made the NBA a globally watched league.

Of course, no matter how much talent a team has, they won’t make it to the mountaintop if they don’t have the right coach. The 1990s had nearly as much star power on the bench as it did on the court, with hall-of-fame coaches leading the charge. Who really stood out, though? Here are the best NBA coaches of the 1990s.

5. Chuck Daly

Though known more for his time in the 1980s with the Detroit Pistons, Chuck Daly still found a lot of success in the following decade. In fact, the second of his back-to-back championships in Detroit came in 1990.

Daly, who also coached the Dream Team, never had a losing record in the 1990s despite coaching three different teams (Detroit, New Jersey, Orlando). Daly retired after the 1998-99 season with a career record of 638-437.

4. Rudy Tomjanovich

A former All-Star as a player, Rudy Tomjanovich took his first head coaching job with the Houston Rockets during the 199-92 season. Throughout the decade, Tomjanovich never finished with a losing record (saving it for the 1999-2000 season), winning two NBA Championships in the process (1994 and 1995). 

Tomjanovich would coach until the 2004-05 season with the Lakers when he abruptly resigned. Overall, Tomjanovich finished with a record of 527-416 and has been enjoying the retired life ever since departing the Lakers bench.

3. Pat Riley

Pat Riley had already been well established as a coach thanks to his time with the Los Angeles Lakers during the 1980s, winning four NBA Championships. Riley wouldn’t win a title in the 1990s after departing Los Angeles following the 1989-90 season, but he still had a strong decade. 

Riley coached both the New York Knicks and Miami Heat during the 90s, and only had one season where he lost more than 31 games. His Knicks reached the NBA Finals in 1994, as well. Riley finished his career with Miami following the 2007-08 season, having added a fifth title to his resume in 2006.

2. Jerry Sloan

The late Jerry Sloan had a lengthy playing career in the NBA and took on coaching in the late 1970s and early 1980s to not much success. It wouldn’t be until 1988 that he was hired again, this time with the Utah Jazz where he would remain for the rest of his career. During the 1990s, there was only one year in which he finished with at least 30 losses.

Sloan’s Jazz teams were a staple of the NBA Playoffs with his star players Karl Malone and John Stockton. They reached the NBA Finals in back-to-back years, ultimately losing out to Michael Jordan, Phil Jackson, and the rest of the Chicago Bulls both times.

1. Phil Jackson

Of course, you can’t talk about basketball coaches of the 1990s without mentioning Phil Jackson. Jackson started his coaching career in the 1989-90 season with the Chicago Bulls and remained with the team through their final championship run in 97-98 before heading to the Lakers for the final months of the decade. 

All in all, Jackson won six titles with the Bulls and his 1999-00 season with the Lakers also resulted in one of his five titles in LA. The “Zen Master” was known for his calm demeanor and ability to have big personalities all gel and work toward the common goal of a championship.

The Wisdom of Basketball Coaches – 5 Lessons For Life

While on the surface sports seem like a competition to see who the fastest and strongest are, there are a lot of life lessons that can be learned when participating in a sport. Perhaps no sport teaches more life lessons than basketball, where you rely on your team to help get you to the mountaintop of whichever league you’re participating in.

To become the best both on and off the court, every basketball player needs a great coach. Coaches do more than make you run sprints and have you practice free throws until the sun comes up. They teach life lessons at all levels. Out of all of the great basketball coaches, here are five of the biggest life lessons that everyone can take away.

5. Empower Everyone

In basketball, much of the team may revolve around a single person who has the most talent. However, not even the best players are able to play every minute of every game. People get tired or hurt, just like in real life. With that in mind, it’s important to empower everyone on the team so that when it’s their opportunity to contribute, they have the confidence to deliver. If a coach hasn’t done a good job of building up that confidence, that player is more likely to become overwhelmed with the situation since they don’t feel like a part of the actual team. Draymond Green noted that this is Steve Kerr’s strong point, saying “it’s on everybody to come together and empower that next man.”

4. Leaders Care

The late, great Dean Smith of North Carolina basketball said that “The most important thing in good leadership is truly caring,” adding that this is true in all aspects of life. “The best leaders in any profession care about the people they lead, and the people who are being led know when the caring is genuine and when it’s faked or not there at all.” So whether you’re in the NBA Finals or leading a team of salespeople, you have to care to lead.

3. Don’t Coast On Success

We’ve all had that time where we’ve had success, only to get a bit complacent or develop an ego instantly. When this success happens, people tend to think that they were the biggest reason behind a team’s success, it can be by pure chance that all of the right pieces fell into place. You have to continue to grow as a person. As hall of fame coach Pat Riley said, “Success is often the first step toward disaster.”

2. Communicate With Trust

Communication is more important than just about any aspect of life when building relationships both professional and personal. If you can’t communicate and do so with trust, then you’ll lose those around you in a heartbeat. Duke legend Mike Krzyzewski said that you don’t get to that level of trust “when you look each other in the eye and tell the truth. If you do that on a consistent basis, the element of trust is developed…and that becomes part of your culture.”

1. Success is Measured By Effort

The final lesson to take away is that you don’t have to reach the pinnacle of success to truly succeed. Too often, people are hard on themselves because they aren’t the best in the world at what they do. Even if you’re not the best at something in your building, you’re still succeeding if you’re doing one thing: giving the best that you can. The best college basketball of all time, UCLA’s John Wooden, said that “Success comes from knowing that you did your best to become the best that you were capable of becoming.” Wooden won 10 NCAA Championships, but all he remembered was the effort given, not the end result.

Best Individual Pitching Season of the 2010s According to FanGraphs

Perhaps more than batting, pitching is something that’s very fleeting. Seemingly out of nowhere, a pitcher comes through and dominates for a year and then can fade into obscurity or completely burn out of the league. A big part of this is due to injuries sustained by pitchers. If even so much as a fingernail is just a nanometer too short or long, it can seemingly affect a pitcher.

There were some dominant years that took place in the 2010s for pitchers. Some of them really stood out as being all-time performances, too. Let’s take a look at the best individual seasons for pitchers during one of baseball’s most exciting decades.

Kershaw’s Dominance

Throughout the 2010s, no pitcher was as dominant overall as Clayton Kershaw of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Of the top 11 pitching seasons of the decade, four of those belonged to Kershaw. Two seasons sit at the top as the best of his career, with 2014 and 2015 taking the fourth and third spots overall, respectively. In those two seasons combined, Kershaw finished with a record of 37-10 and a combined 16.5 wins above replacement.

Cy Snubs

Speaking of Kershaw’s 2015 season, he surprisingly didn’t win the National League Cy Young Award that year. That honor belonged to Chicago Cubs starter Jake Arrieta, who surprisingly had the 14th-best season of the decade. Those who watched Arrieta that season know that he had one of the most dominating second halves in MLB history. Arrieta finished 22-6 that year with an astonishing 1.77 earned run average.

Having the highest WAR total doesn’t always translate into a Cy Young. In addition to Kershaw, there were several other pitchers that led the league in that category without winning the Cy Young. In the National League, this includes Roy Halladay in 2011, Matt Harvey in 2013, and Max Scherzer in 2018. As for the American League, Chris Sale (2017) Gerrit Cole (2019), Cliff Lee (2010), and Justin Verlander (2012) were some of the Cy Young snubs.

Strikeout Kings

There were a total of 11 pitchers that had seasons where they struck out at least 12 batters for every nine innings pitched. Max Scherzer accomplished this three times. Gerrit Cole, Robbie Ray, and Justin Verlander did it twice while Jose Fernandez (2016) and Chris Sale (2017) did it once each. Justin Verlander (2019) and Max Schezer (2018) were perhaps the most impressive as they were the only two pitchers to accomplish this feat in 220 or more innings.

The Two Best Seasons

While the assumption is that the best single-season performance of the 2010s probably belongs to Clayton Kershaw, his top season actually registered third overall on Fangraphs. The number two spot belongs to the late Roy Halladay when he was a member of the Philadelphia Phillies. Halladay didn’t blow anyone away in terms of strikeouts but also didn’t let batters get good contact or take walks.

Halladay helped get the Phillies to 100 wins on the season thanks to his 19-6 record with an earned run average of 2.35. Kershaw would end up winning the Cy Young Award that season in what was considered the eighth-best individual season of the decade by Fangraphs.

The top season of the 2010s belonged to a pitcher entering his prime and surprisingly only finished with a record of 10-9. That, of course, is Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom, and the record certainly doesn’t indicate just how good he was in 2018. deGrom had the lowest ERA for any qualifying pitcher at 1.70 and a strikeout rate of 11.16 per nine innings. For deGrom, it was the first of back-to-back Cy Young wins, with his 2019 campaign ranked as the 15th best of the 2010s.

Best Individual Batting Seasons of the 2010s According to FanGraphs

In the 21st century, baseball became more analytics-focused thanks to the advent of the internet and mathematicians determining what traits were more valuable for players. With that, new statistics were created thanks to websites and companies like FanGraphs. One statistic that has gained a lot of traction over the years is wins above replacement, or WAR, for short. FanGraphs uses a system to determine WAR, and some of the finest seasons for a batter in baseball history have come during the 2010s. A few, however, really stood out above the rest over the decade.

The Brilliance of Mike Trout

Of the 15 best individual seasons of the 2010s, Mike Trout was responsible for an amazing seven of them. The lowest of the bunch was Trout’s 2014 season when he put up an impressive 8.3 wins above replacement. He even outdid that season in 2019 despite playing in 23 fewer games. The most impressive feat for Trout, however, came in 2013.

It was then that Trout had the second-best season of the decade, posting a batting average of .323 with 27 home runs and 97 runs batted in. When you add in 33 stolen bases, terrific defense, and an on-base percentage of .432, it’s easy to see why Trout was considered to be the best player of the 2010s by a longshot. Sadly, despite his individual success, the Angels made just one postseason appearance in the decade and the team was swept by Kansas City in the American League Division Series.

No Triple Crown

Surprisingly, when Detroit Tiger Miguel Cabrera won the American League’s triple crown in 2012, his season wasn’t even top 30 of the decade in terms of WAR. Instead, it was the following season when he nearly repeated his triple crown performance that ranks highly, landing at number 11 in the decade.

Varied at the Back End

With Trout taking up four of the top 10 spots of the decade, there weren’t many spots left open, but nobody else had more than one season, making it a varied list of names. At the 10th spot is Josh Donaldson’s 2015 campaign with the Toronto Blue Jays when he mashed 41 home runs and hit for a .297 average en route to an MVP season.

Aaron Judge’s 2017 season was one to remember with 52 home runs for the Yankees, placing him in the ninth position. Trout’s 2015 then appears at eighth, but that same year, Bryce Harper was just a little bit better with the Nationals. That year, Harper hit an impressive .330 with 42 home runs to win the National League’s MVP award. Rounding out the bottom half of the top 10 was Jacoby Ellsbury’s 2011 season. Boosted by his stellar defense and power-hitting, Ellsbury finished second in MVP voting that year behind Justin Verlander.

Best Non-Trout Seasons

The top three batting seasons of the 2010s indeed feature Mike Trout, whose previously mentioned 2013 was his best. The third overall spot was taken by catcher Buster Posey of the San Francisco Giants. Hitting .336 on the season with 24 home runs and 103 RBIs, Posey got a big boost from his impressive defense behind the dish to launch him to an MVP win.

The best batting season of the 2010s, though, belongs to Mookie Betts while he was a member of the Boston Red Sox. Winning the American League’s MVP award that year in a landslide, Betts collected 10.6 wins above replacement while batting .346 with 32 home runs. Though he had just 80 runs batted in, Betts crossed the plate a whopping 129 times and stole 30 bases. Add in a walk rate that was almost higher than his strikeout rate and you can see why this was the best season of the 2010s.

Fangraphs Best 2000s Hitters Shows Barry Bonds On Another Level

The 1990s and heading into the 2000s were interesting times for baseball. Home run rates were through the roof, and it was later that the public found out that the likely biggest reason for that was the use of performance-enhancing drugs. This led to some of the most productive individual seasons in baseball history taking place in the early half of the decade.

If you take out the allegations or even confirmations that a player was using PEDs, the numbers for some of the performances are mind-boggling. Looking at the wins above replacement (WAR), there were 30 individual seasons where a player had a shocking 8.0 or higher. Let’s take a look back at the 2000s to see who had the best seasons.

It Was Bonds’s World

You probably could’ve guessed that Barry Bonds had some of the best seasons during the 2000s, but did you know that he had all four of the best seasons in the decade? He did all that while missing almost an entire season and then playing two injury-plagued seasons in his 40s, too. 2001 through 2004 were Bonds’s best seasons, with 2002 being his tops, and there were 19 games he didn’t even play in. In that season, Bonds blasted 46 home runs and batted in 110 runs while reaching base 58.2 percent of the time he came to the plate.

In second place is Bonds’s 2001 season in which he hit 73 home runs and 137 RBIs, so what made 2002 more valuable? The 2001 season saw Bonds strike out almost twice as much as 2002 with an on-base percentage nearly 70 points lower. Some might argue his 2004 campaign (which was the third best of the decade) was his personal best thanks to 45 home runs and an insane on-base percentage of .609. Of course, 2003 would round out the top four with another 45 home runs.

The Other Big Bopper

While Bonds was toward the end of his career when the 2000s came along, he was hitting better than he did at his peak. One player that was hitting their peak at this time was Alex Rodriguez, who holds five of the top nine individual seasons of the decade if you take out Barry Bonds. What’s even more impressive for A-Rod is that he did it with three different teams (Mariners, Rangers, Yankees).

From 2000 to 2007, Rodriguez put up performances that made him a hot commodity, which led to a record-breaking contract. The best season for A-Rod came in 2002 with Texas when he finished with a WAR of 10.0. In that year, he batted .300 with 57 home runs and 142 runs batted in. Rodriguez’s other amazing seasons included two with the Yankees (2005, 2007) one more with the Rangers (2003), and one with the Marienrs (2000).

The Best of the Rest

Bonds and A-Rod weren’t the only two having all of the fun in the 2000s. There were three other individual seasons that registered in the top 10, all of which came from different players. Coming in at ninth overall is the fourth member of the 700 home run club, Albert Pujols, back when he was just 23 years old in 2003. That year, Pujols hit a career-high .359 at the plate with 43 home runs and 124 RBIs.

At seventh overall was Adrian Beltre in 2004, his final season with the Dodgers. Somehow, Beltre didn’t even make the All Star Game that year despite a .334 average, 48 home runs, and 121 RBIs. The top non-Bonds or Rodriguez season, though, belonged to Sammy Sosa in 2001. While still a member of the Cubs, Sosa knocked in 160 runs (more than anyone else in the decade) and was propelled by 64 home runs.

Big Blue Boss: Brian Daboll’s Path to Coaching the New York Giants

In the NFL, teams are often rolling the dice when looking for a new head coach by giving someone a chance that has never been a head coach in the league before. Between 1983 and 2015, though, the New York Giants were never led by someone with zero prior head coaching experience at any level. That changed with the hiring of Ben McAdoo in 2016, but he was relieved of his duties the following year. Nearly five years later, the Giants named another head coach with no prior experience at the position when they announced that Brian Daboll would be the franchise’s 22nd head coach.

Daboll seemed to come out of nowhere leading up to his hiring, too. How did he go from relative unknown to leading one of the biggest sports franchises in the United States? Well, first you have to look outside of the country. Daboll was actually born in Canada (Welland, Ontario), making him the second NFL head coach from the country. Daboll was raised just outside of Buffalo, though, becoming familiar with football at a young age.

After attending the University of Rochester where he played the sport, Daboll’s coaching career got started at the college ranks when he was with both William & Mary and Michigan State University to round out the 1990s. In 2000, the New England Patriots hired the now legendary Bill Belichick, and Daboll was part of his inaugural staff as an assistant.

Daboll was promoted to the position of wide receivers coach for several years before taking on the quarterbacks coach job with the rival New York Jets for two years. Finally, Daboll got a big break when he joined the ranks of offensive coordinators in the NFL. He was first with the Cleveland Browns for two seasons before taking the same position with the Miami Dolphins and Kansas City Chiefs for one season each.

Unfortunately, Daboll’s offenses struggled and changes in head coaching regimes caused him to return to familiar territory. Daboll took a demotion in his return to the Patriots, this time as the tight ends coach. After racking up two more Super Bowl wins, Daboll got back into being an offensive coordinator, this time returning to college with Alabama for one season where the Crimson Tide won a national championship.

In 2018, Daboll returned home to Buffalo where he would finally start getting recognition as a potential NFL head coach. Daboll took the Bills’ offensive coordinator position and was given a project quarterback in the form of Josh Allen. After some growing pains in their first season together, Daboll and Allen found success, with the Bills becoming one of the league’s elite teams.

Following the success of Buffalo’s 2021 season in which they almost reached the Super Bowl, several teams wanted to speak with Daboll about him potentially becoming their new head coach, including the Chargers and Jets. However, it was the New York Giants that interviewed him on January 21, 2022, and announced that he was going to be the team’s head coach exactly one week later.

There were a lot of ups and downs along the way for Daboll in his coaching career. Things looked rather bleak for Daboll’s career after departing from three franchises in three years. During those three years, all three of the head coaches he worked for were fired when the teams had a collective record of 13 wins and 35 losses.

Daboll has learned a lot along the way, as highlighted by Giants general manager Joe Schoen pointed out. “Brian’s ability to develop young players, his leadership qualities, his football acumen, his communication skills, and his ability to bring an organization together were all traits that really stood out,” Schoen said.

FIFA Ultimate Team (FUT): How To Win

There’s a lot of excitement when you finally get the FIFA Ultimate Team that you want with all of the players that you’ve been working so hard for throughout the entire season. Then, like clockwork, the new FIFA is released and you have to start your team over again from scratch. It can be a little disheartening, especially as fewer and fewer people play the previous year’s release, essentially forcing you to move into the newest version. It doesn’t mean that it has to be a hassle, though. You can still win matches and build your ultimate team quickly by following the right steps.

Inevitably, you’ll run into some teams that have a boatload of talent when playing online. Due to EA Sports releasing packs that can be purchased with real money, those that don’t want to pay extra are already at a disadvantage. Still, having good players on a squad doesn’t make the person controlling them any better than you. It’s all about playing to your strengths and the opponent’s weaknesses. 

The first thing that you’ll want to do is assemble a squad that’s at least capable of scoring goals and keeping you competitive against higher competition. Early on in the season, gold players will become easily obtainable. While these aren’t superstar cards that have 99 ratings across the board, they can still get the job done. Focus on the objectives each day and you’ll have a formidable squad in no time.

The other main aspect of building your team is to make sure that there’s good chemistry amongst your players. Good chemistry means that the players get a boost to their attributes, so even an 80 overall card can play like an 83 if the chemistry is right. EA has introduced these types of rating boosters through all of their sports games so that the focus is on building a team that gels instead of just superstar names thrown together and completely out of their real-life positions. You wouldn’t want Cristiano Ronaldo playing goalkeeper in real life, would you?

Before hopping online, get some practice in against the computer. Game modes such as Moments and Squad Battles can get you ready for the fiercest competition, especially when playing on the highest difficulty. By doing this, you’re also getting a lot more rewards that can make your squad that much stronger. 

With your squad assembled, it’s time to get onto the pitch in an online match. More than anything, you’ll want to be extremely patient when playing an online match. It’s tempting to try and score a quick goal in hopes of getting your opponent to quit, but bad things can happen if you don’t net that goal. Sprinting toward balls in the open field will drain your stamina and make goal-scoring opportunities harder to come by later in the match.

Sprinting also takes away from your dribbling ability, so it’s best to focus on working your way around a defender rather than blowing by them with speed. The other biggest aspect is all about positioning. Too often, players online will get out of position defensively to chase a pass, leading to an open look. With that in mind, keep the ball moving with passes to try and get your opponent to leave their zone throughout the match.

Instead of trying to sprint in straight lines, be very meticulous about each movement your players make. This saves a lot of energy, and if you give a goal early on that doesn’t mean you should quit. Continue to play the matches in which you’re trailing, and you can still prevail simply by having more energy left over in the second half than your opponent. Take all of these tips with you, and you should start seeing the number in the win column increase drastically.

5 Celebrities Who Were Homeschooled

Homeschooling is becoming more popular every year. Some families embrace homeschooling to keep their kids away from mainstream culture. Others gravitate toward this option because they want to explore different modes of learning. There are as many reasons for homeschooling as there are homeschooling families. 

But can homeschooling lead to fame and success? For these five celebrities, it certainly might have. Here are five music, sports, and movie stars who were homeschooled. 

1. Christina Aguilera

As a child, Aguilera went to a traditional school. Then, she was schooled by a tutor on the set of the Mickey Mouse Club. But she returned to public school after she left the series. The experience wasn’t positive — Christina endured a lot of teasing from her classmates.

She begged her parents to be homeschooled, and they reluctantly agreed for her teenage years. Shortly after graduating from her homeschool classes, she launched her award-winning music career. Nobody can tease this star now.

2. Ryan Gosling

As a young kid, Ryan struggled a lot with traditional education. Due to severe dyslexia, he couldn’t read at the age of 10, and his ADHD made it hard to sit still and pay attention. His mom decided to homeschool him, and two years later, he got a job as an actor on the Mickey Mouse Club.

His career has been going hard since then, and he’s one of the few child stars who were able to be successful as an adult. Ryan claims that his homeschooling years gave him a sense of autonomy that he has never really lost. 

3. Blake Griffin

This star basketball player was the number one overall pick in the NBA Draft. He played with the LA Clippers for nine seasons and went to the Detroit Pistons in 2018. Then, in 2021, he joined the Brooklyn Nets.

Blake was homeschooled in elementary and middle school. He started school in high school so that he could join the basketball team. The rest is history. 

4. Venus and Serena Williams

As chronicled in a recent biopic about their lives, the Williams sisters started focusing on tennis at very young ages. Their parents were the driving force in their success, and to give their daughters as much time as possible to practice, the Williams homeschooled the girls from a very young age. As they got older, their flexible homeschooling schedule allowed them to compete in matches around the world. 

5. Billie Eilish

As an 18-year-old, Billie Eilish took home five Grammys, and her career has been on fire since then. Eilish never went to a traditional school. Both she and her older brother were homeschooled. Eilish has Tourettes and an auditory processing disorder, so her parents knew that a traditional classroom probably wouldn’t work for her. Her parents also wanted to give Billie and her brother time to explore their passions, and based on the siblings’ musical success, the strategy worked splendidly. 

5 TV Law Shows From Most To Least Realistic

Lawyers may be among the world’s most-hated professionals, but they sure make for good television. 

Whether you watch for the suspenseful courtroom scenes or tune in for a glimpse into the dramatic lives of high-powered lawyers, you’ve got your pick of programs to choose from. 

But while TV law shows may be entertaining, they’re not necessarily accurate. In fact, some people might argue that the less realistic a show is, the more fun it is to watch. 

Which begs the question: Which TV law shows reflect the truth, and which might be found guilty of misrepresentation in a court of law?

Read on for a roundup of 5 of our favorite TV shows ranked from most to least realistic.

1. Better Call Saul

If you’re not familiar with the legal profession, you may be surprised to find this Breaking Bad spinoff at the top of the list. However, insiders insist that its depiction of the legal industry is on the money thanks to storylines that are mostly accurate and believable.

Law firm partner Jordan Rothman says of Better Call Saul, “It’s hard to relate all of the instances in which the show accurately depicts the practice of law. ”

2. Law & Order

It’s not surprising that this iconic television drama has a place toward the top of this list. The original Law & Order, aired for a decade, followed by several spinoffs with varying degrees of longevity and popularity.  

Set in New York City, Law & Order portrays the law from two different perspectives: the NYPD’s investigation of a crime, and the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office’s prosecution of the case. 

In addition to its unique viewpoint, Law & Order is also well-known for something else: it’s “ripped from the headlines” plot lines inspired by real-world cases. 

3. The Practice

While its predecessor, Ally McBeal, may have been known for its unbelievable antics (dancing baby hallucinations, anyone?), The Practice is one of the more realistic television portrayals of law life. 

Following the interactions and experiences of lawyers at a Boston law firm primarily handling criminal defense cases, The Practice doesn’t just address cases from a legal standpoint that pays meticulous attention to procedure and conduct, but also from an ethical one as the lawyers often end up wrangling with their own consciences. 

Furthermore, while many legal dramas take place at large prestigious firms, The Practice presents a realistic view of a smaller, struggling firm.

4. Suits

This USA Network show begins with the unlikely premise of a college dropout genius scamming his way to a position at an elite NYC law firm. From there, it doesn’t get much more realistic.  

According to law firm Orsus Gate, Suits “presents numerous fictions about what lawyers do and how they work,” including that attorneys randomly drop into the offices of opposing counsel, the use of a few “magic words” that lead to dramatic results, and the fast-moving judicial process.

Additionally, while Suits frequently depicts attorneys pouring over case law in the firm library, the majority of legal research takes place online. 

While these falsehoods may be entertaining, they can also lead to warped perceptions and unreasonable expectations about legal procedures, according to Orsus Gate.  

5. Ally McBeal

And that brings us to the aforementioned Ally McBeal. 

While this show was a huge hit—and made Calista Flockhart a household name—when it debuted in the late 1990s, its success had nothing to do with its realistic portrayal of the law. From the super-short hemlines to week after week of outlandish cases, Ally McBeal was sensationalism at its best. 

Oddball characters like John Cage and his “wattle fetish,” fantasy sequences, insane plot lines in which lawyers go undercover, and romantic entanglements rivaling a game of musical chairs are just a few of the reasons Ally McBeal has the distinction of being the #1 least realistic law show on this list.