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Troy Cooke, back at Show Low, one of 45 former Arizona athletes now head coach

One of Show Low High School’s players yelled “Arizona!” before inbounding the ball against Pusch Ridge on Saturday night.

As the player did that, in front of the Cougars’ bench, Troy Cookeslowly paced while calmly navigating his team, which includes his son Cougar, a junior guard.

“It was one of Lute Olson’s plays,” Cooke later said with a laugh about the “Arizona” yell from his player. “We run some of his stuff.”

Cooke has an abundance of exploits as an athlete from his high school, college and professional careers in various sports, but he is endeared the most to being a member of Olson’s first team at Arizona in 1983-84.

“I have a lot of his style,” Cooke said of the late Olson, who passed at age 85 on Aug. 27. “People have said, ‘You look like Lute on the sidelines.’ I guess playing for him, you just kind of get that. … He had a big impact on my life and my coaching style.

“He was nothing but class. You won with class, you lost with class with the character of the players and how you handled yourself. He taught me a lot of lessons, some of them were hard to learn. The style we played and having the team prepared … there’s a lot of Lute Olson in my coaching style.”

Cooke, who will turn 60 on May 9, won the state championship in the high hurdles at Flowing Wells while also being a standout in football and basketball. Before attending Arizona in 1982, Cooke played basketball for El Camino College in Torrance, Calif., where he helped lead his team to the California JUCO Championship with a 32-4 record. After his Arizona career, he played professionally in Europe for two seasons. 

Upon his return from Europe, Cooke bulked up after purchasing the Peoria Athletic Club and had a tryout in 1988 as a tight end with the Denver Broncos. He did not make the final roster but signed a two-year make-good contract.

Always active, Cooke turned to steer wrestling in rodeo and also became a Modified car racing champion while getting into the real estate business and working on a 27,000-acre ranch in the White Mountains.

Cougar is taking after his dad’s multi-sport exploits. Although Cougar scored 30 points in the 64-53 loss to Pusch Ridge, Cooke said his son’s future might be more in baseball as one of the state’s top shortstops. Arizona baseball coach Jay Johnsonand his staff are recruiting Cougar.

“We have high hopes,” Cooke said. “We hope that he can possibly have a choice of playing baseball or basketball at the next level. He’s really come on. He’s become a pure shooter. He is a very good athlete and competitor and has a high basketball IQ.”

Show Low’s loss to Pusch Ridge has the Cougars at 0-3. Despite the slow start, Cooke said he has confidence he will make Show Low a winner again.

“We’re going to try to get the program back to where it was,” Cooke said.

Flowing Wells and Arizona graduate Troy Cooke is back coaching Show Low after five seasons at Western New Mexico as an assistant (Javier Morales/AllSportsTucson.com)

He coached the Cougars to immediate success after taking over in 2012-13 when they previously had 10 straight losing seasons. He turned the program into one of the best at the Class 3A level in the state.

Show Low had back-to-back 20-plus win seasons and state tournament appearances in his two seasons as head coach, qualifying for the quarterfinals in 2013 and semifinals in 2014. He also earned a sectional championship in 2014.

In 2014-15, Cooke was hired as an assistant at Western New Mexico and made a return to McKale Center in 2018 when the Mustangs played the Wildcats.

His oldest son Canyon is a bio-medical engineer student at Arizona.

After five seasons at Western New Mexico, Cooke decided to return to Show Low last season as an assistant to help develop Cougar with the team. He took over the head coaching duties again late in the season when Matt Thackerstepped down.

“Looking back — hindsight is 20-20 — I wish I would have stayed on Lute’s staff as a graduate assistant and I probably would have been a Division I coach somewhere and been fired three times and retired by now, ” Cooke said, smiling. “But here I am at my age still coaching high school basketball and enjoying the game and feeling like I’m giving back.”

FORMER ARIZONA ATHLETES WHO ARE HEAD COACHES

List of head coaches of various sports and different levels who competed at Arizona. Compiled by AllSportsTucson.com.
Name UA Team Sport Start
Adia Barnes
1995-99 Arizona Women's hoops 2016
Heidi Bomberger-Bruschi
1993-97 Attleboro (MA) Feehan HS Volleyball 2020
Matt Brase
2003-05 Pallacanestro Varese (Italy) Men's hoops 2022
Robert Bonillas
1995-98 Desert View HS Football 2012
Tod Brown
1990-94 New Mexico Baseball 2022
Casey Candaele
1979-82 Buffalo (AAA) Blue Jays Baseball 2021
Jackie Coburn
2002-05 Scottsdale Horizon HS Softball 2013
Clark Crist
1977-80 Pulaski (VA) River Turtles Baseball 2021
Debby Day
1989-91 Cal-Lutheran Softball 2002
Shelley Duncan
1999-2001 Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (AAA) Yankees Baseball 2023
Byron Evans
1983-86 South Mountain HS Football 2020
Terry Francona
1977-80 Cleveland Indians MLB 2013
Tanya Farhat-Villarreal
1994-97 West Bend (WI) Slinger HS Softball 2015
Brenda Frese
1989-93 Maryland Women's hoops 2002
Kristie Fox
2004-07 UNLV Softball 2017
Margo Geer
2011-14 Alabama Swimming/Diving 2020
Chip Hale
1984-87 Arizona Baseball 2022
Jason Hisey
1988-91 Canyon del Oro HS Baseball 2019
Jack Howell
1983 Tri-City (A) Angels Baseball 2021
Krista Humphreys
1993-96 Corona (CA) Centennial HS Softball 2015
Mark Keel
1979-82 Silverdale (WA) Central Kitsap HS Football 2000
Steve Kerr
1983-88 Golden State Warriors NBA 2014
Andy Litten
1999-03 Scottsdale Horizon HS Football 2021
Hunter Long
2013-15 Douglas HS Football 2019
Caitlin Lowe
2004-07 Arizona Softball 2022
Brandon Manumaleuna
1997-00 Lawndale (CA) Leuzinger HS Football 2020
Jennifer Martinez-Walls
2008-09 Abraham Baldwin (GA) JC Softball 2017
Craig McMillan
1984-88 Santa Rosa (CA) JC Men's hoops 2000
Richard Mercado
2002-04 Santa Ana (CA) Mater Dei HS Baseball 2019
Leighton Milton
1992-93 Hollywood (CA) HS Football 2020
Edwin Mulitalo
1995-98 Southern Virginia Football 2018
Ronnie Palmer
2005-08 Monterrey Peninsula (CA) JC Football 2020
Jose Portilla
1996-97 Heritage Academy Football 2017
Rebekah Quiroz
2002 Pima CC Softball 2019
Colt Sedbrook
2006-08 Crown College (MN) Baseball 2024
Jason Stewart
1997-99 Encinitas (CA) San Dieguito HS Boys hoops 2014
Damon Stoudamire
1992-95 Georgia Tech Men's hoops 2023
Rafael Valenzuela
2008-10 Bowling Green (A) Rays Baseball 2023

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ALLSPORTSTUCSON.com publisher, writer and editor Javier Morales is a former Arizona Press Club award winner. He is a former Arizona Daily Star beat reporter for the Arizona basketball team, including when the Wildcats won the 1996-97 NCAA title. He has also written articles for CollegeAD.com, Bleacher Report, Lindy’s Sports, TucsonCitizen.com, The Arizona Republic, Sporting News and Baseball America, among many other publications. He has also authored the book “The Highest Form of Living” , which is available at Amazon.

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