It's also easier to keep track of only 171 losses, compared with 878 victories. But Summitt's next two wins might be tough for even her to forget.
Now in her 31st season with the Lady Vols, Summitt needs one victory to tie Dean Smith's record for the most wins in NCAA history and two to set a new mark.
Summitt reached No. 878 when Tennessee beat No. 1 LSU, 67-65, for the Southeastern Conference tournament championship last week.
The Lady Vols will host the first and second rounds of the NCAA tournament this week, and Summitt says her main focus is on winning a seventh national title. But even she recognizes the next two games are special.
"I don't think anyone is going to ignore the fact that there is an opportunity there to break a record. I'm just thinking about if that happens we're going to a Sweet Sixteen," she said.
Smith, who retired in 1997 after 36 years at North Carolina with an 879-254 record, offered her some encouragement.
"In my estimation, she would have had great success coaching in the men's game had she chosen that route," Smith said. "I remember what a great competitor she was in the 1976 Olympics, and it's obvious she has maintained that competitiveness all these years directing the Tennessee program."
Smith's record was surpassed this year by an NAIA coach. Harry Statham of McKendree College in Illinois finished this season with 896 wins.
Some have questioned whether Summitt's win total belongs in the same list with Smith and Kentucky's Adolph Rupp (876). After all, there has been less parity in the women's game, where only a handful of teams have dominated.
But Summitt, already a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame, has six championships, more than any other college coach but John Wooden, who won 10 at UCLA.
"She is basketball," said Beth Bass, CEO of the Women's Basketball Coaches Association. "What she's done is universal."
Hired at 22 as a graduate assistant and physical education teacher, Summitt has seen the sport grow from the days when she washed uniforms and drove the team van.
But some things haven't changed -- like Summitt's dominance in the NCAA tournament. The Lady Vols have been in every tournament since it began for women in 1982, and have reached the Final Four 15 times.
Breaking Smith's record couldn't come at a more fitting time, her husband says.
"It just seems like it ought to happen. The sky ought to be blue and the sun yellow and the grass green, and Pat ought to break the record during the NCAA tournament," R.B. Summitt said.
She has never lost in the first two rounds of the NCAAs, but the Lady Vols have been surpassed in recent years by archrival Connecticut.
Summitt has never shied away from a difficult schedule. Every year she faces powerhouse teams such as Connecticut, Texas, Stanford, Duke and LSU.
"Tennessee created every single rivalry that's worth anything in this country," former Lady Vols player Kara Lawson said. "She didn't have to play Connecticut, but she did."
Summitt, 52, grew up helping her parents, Richard and Hazel Head, work a tobacco and dairy farm in the rural west Tennessee town of Henrietta. Like many girls who play basketball in college or the pros, she got her start by playing against boys. She and her three older brothers played in the hayloft of their family's barn.
She played basketball at nearby University of Tennessee-Martin and made the 1973 national team as a junior. Summitt tore her ACL at the end of her senior season in 1974, but hoped to recover for the 1976 Olympics.
She came to Knoxville to get a master's degree in physical education. The head of Tennessee's P.E. department, Helen B. Watson, who died last fall, hired Summitt. Watson gave her a graduate teaching position and put her in charge of the women's basketball team.
Summitt took classes, taught P.E. and coached. She was 16-8 and 16-11 in her first two seasons while playing on the U.S. teams in the 1975 Pan American Games and '76 Olympics.
Meanwhile, UT decided to make a bigger commitment to women's athletics and offer some scholarships even before Title IX was enacted. A full-time coach was the top priority.
So when Summitt got home from the Olympics, Gloria Ray, UT's first women's athletic director, was there to convince her to stay in Knoxville.
Summitt has said she won't retire until she no longer enjoys her job. By then, she might be well past 900 wins.