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As a high school math teacher for more than five decades, Calvin College alumnus Dick Katte was all about numbers.
But on the court, as a basketball coach for 48 years, numbers werenā€™t his game.

So he finds it surprising that his win totalā€”876ā€”made him the winningest coach in Colorado high school basketball history.

ā€œItā€™s amazing that it happened,ā€ said Katte, who was on the sidelines of the Denver Christian High School basketball court from 1964 to 2012.

ā€œI never had a goal to reach a certain number; I just wanted to go to work and help young people every day.ā€

Those who know Katte, though, are grateful that the legendary coach has shared some of his expertise in his recently published book,.

The book is a compilation of biographical information on Katte, from his upbringing in Sheboygan, Wisc., to his battles with a brain aneurysm and cancer. It includes basketball strategies, his philosophy of coaching, his memories of individual games and championship seasons, and how to raise up young people of character.

ā€œWriting the book was a good process for me,ā€ said Katte. ā€œMost of it was pretty easy to recall. And though I didnā€™t always see why something happened at the time, I always had something good to take away from the experience.ā€

Such was the case in Katteā€™s second run at a state championship in 1972. (He won his first in 1970.) In the championship game, Denver Christian was up by double digits in the fourth quarter.

ā€œI told [my team] to slow it down, pull Eaton out of their zone and make them guard us,ā€ he wrote. ā€œWell, we never could get going again, and we lost by a point. . . . After over 40 years, some still carry that disappointment with them, and I feel bad that we didnā€™t win it. Itā€™s one of the lessons from life: about how you deal with adversity.ā€

Indeed, Katte himself benefited from this lesson when a brain aneurysm nearly took his life in 1984, and nine years later, when he battled cancer.

ā€œMy setbacks helped me become a better coach because it humbled me,ā€ he wrote. ā€œI realized I wasnā€™t in control, and thatā€™s the hardest thing to learnā€”especially for coaches. . . . Adversities are given for a purpose. How you use them is up to you.ā€

Following those trials, Katte would go on to win three more state championships, including one in his final season.

For Katte, one of the biggest lessons in the book, and a message he discloses frequently, is ā€œbloom where you are planted.ā€

ā€œWhat that always meant to me was that I didnā€™t have to change schools or ā€˜move upā€™ the coaching ladder to receive fulfillment as a coach. Each person must have a mission and vision to become the person God gifted him to be.ā€

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