After a 26-10 season that saw Purdue win a share of its 24th Big Ten championship and reach the Elite Eight for the first time in 19 years there are bound to be awards. Carsen Edwards is taking home many of them, but today it is time tim honor Matt Painter. This morning the National Association of Basketball Coaches named him the National Coach of the Year pre release:

Painter becomes the second Purdue coach to win NABC National Coach of the Year accolades, joining Gene Keady on the list (1994, 2000). The award has been given out since 1959, and Purdue is one of two schools to have two coaches win the award since 2000 (Purdue, Kentucky).

Purdue is one of just four teams to reach the Sweet 16 in three consecutive years (Purdue, Kentucky, Gonzaga, Michigan), and is one of six teams to win at least 26 games in four straight seasons (Purdue, Villanova, Kansas, North Carolina, Gonzaga, Kentucky).

Purdue finished the season ranked No. 13 in the Associated Press Top 25 poll, joining North Carolina as the only two teams nationally to be ranked in the top 15 of the AP’s final poll in each of the last four seasons.

Painter and the Boilermakers have advanced to 11 NCAA Tournaments in the last 13 years, one of 11 schools to advance to 11 tournaments during that span. His four Big Ten Coach of the Year honors are tied for the third most in league history (Gene Keady – 7; Bobby Knight – 5), and he averages 11.3 league wins per season, good for the fifth-highest average in Big Ten history.

Painter’s 12 NCAA Tournament appearances are the most for an active coach under 55 years old. Painter is 48 years old. He has made five Sweet 16s in the last 11 years, the ninth-most Sweet 16 appearances during that span in the country.