West Virginia After his retirement from the NBA, Schaus returned to his
alma mater to coach the Mountaineers. In his first season, he led the Mountaineers to a 19–11 mark and an
NCAA tournament appearance. In the next five seasons, he posted an amazing 127–26 (.831) record, which included five consecutive NCAA tournament berths. The recruitment of Schaus for
Jerry West (a native of
Chelyan, West Virginia) to play for the Mountaineers was a key factor, with West calling Schaus his "mentor"; West played on the freshmen team in 1957 before playing with Schaus and the varsity team from 1958 to 1960. He led WVU to the
NCAA finals in 1959, but lost to
Pete Newell's
California team, 71–70.
Purdue After leaving NBA coaching and management in 1972, he returned to the college ranks to coach at
Purdue University, taking over for
George King. He held a 104–60 overall record as the
Boilermaker's head coach, while leading them to the
1974 NIT Championship and a berth in the 1977 NCAA tournament. He then owned the distinction of being the only coach to reach the NIT finals, NCAA finals, and the
NBA Finals. At Purdue, Schaus was the successor to George King, who was Schaus' successor at West Virginia. After 1981, Schaus returned to WVU to serve as the athletic director. ==Professional coaching/management career==