Eddie Sutton reached a coaching milestone on Saturday.

Or did he?

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Eddie Sutton tallied the 800th victory of his career over the weekend.

So say the record books anyway.

Two years ago, a drunk driving charge sidelined Sutton for the last 10 games of the season at Oklahoma State. Cowboy brass decided that even though Sutton’s son Sean was coaching the team, wins and losses would still go on the elder Sutton’s record.

The Cowboys won four of their last 10 games, and Sutton’s record went 794 career wins to 798. It increased by four even though he wasn’t on the bench during the games or in practices during the week. He had absolutely nothing to do with the day-to-day operation of the team, and still, the wins counted toward his record.

What was a bad idea then seems even worse now.

Truth is, no one thought Sutton would coach again. The good folks at OSU wanted to make a nice gesture toward the coach. He resurrected the basketball program, which saved OSU athletics. OSU sports wouldn’t be where they are today without Eddie Sutton.

OSU did Sutton a disservice, though, when it credited him with Sean’s wins.

When he took over at San Francisco earlier this winter, he did so only two wins from his 800th. And on Saturday, after a frantic 19-point comeback, San Francisco beat Pepperdine and Sutton won No. 800. But, of course, it was really only No. 796.

That difference doesn’t change the fact that Sutton is one heck of a coach, a Hall of Fame-worthy coach. But fancy bookkeeping also doesn’t change the fact that he’s only been on the bench for 796 of his 800 victories.