Posts Tagged ‘Gregg Popovich’

The San Antonio Spurs signed longtime head coach Gregg Popovich to a new five-year contract, the team announced Saturday.

Popovich’s new deal will pay him over $80 million, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

The 74-year-old is already the oldest coach in NBA history, and the new deal will see that record extended.

Popovich’s previous deal with the franchise – a three-year term signed in 2019 – ran out following the end of last season. However, the iconic bench boss made no mention of retirement, and such a decision seemed implausible after the Spurs won the draft lottery, allowing them to select French prodigy Victor Wembanyama first overall this year.

The 2023 Hall of Fame inductee, who will be officially enshrined in August, is also the Spurs’ president of basketball operations. Thus, he may not have to serve as the team’s head coach for the entire five-year duration of his new deal, notes Wojnarowski.

Popovich recently set the record for most career regular season wins by an NBA head coach. He currently boasts 1,366 victories throughout his 27 years in charge in San Antonio.

Tony Parker and Pau Gasol played for him. Becky Hammon coached alongside him. Dirk Nowitzki and Dwyane Wade waged battles against him.

He is Gregg Popovich.

And he, finally, is a Hall of Famer.

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame made it official Saturday, with three of the NBA’s all-time international greats — Nowitzki, Parker and Gasol — joining Wade, Hammon and Popovich as the headliners of the 2023 class that will be enshrined on Aug. 11 and 12 at ceremonies in Connecticut and Massachusetts.

“This is basketball heaven,” Wade said on the ESPN telecast of the announcement in Houston.

Also getting the Hall’s call: the 1976 U.S. Olympic women’s basketball team; former Purdue coach Gene Keady, a seven-time Big Ten coach of the year; former Texas A&M women’s coach Gary Blair, who took two teams to the Final Four; longtime coach at Division III Amherst and two-time national champion David Hixon; and Gene Bess — who won 1,300 games as a junior college coach at Three Rivers Community College in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.

The late Jim Valvano, who as a coach who led N.C. State to the 1983 NCAA title, was selected as a contributor — also taking into account his work as a broadcaster and an outspoken advocate for cancer research and the V Foundation.

Hall of Fame chairman Jerry Colangelo told the new members or their families about the happy news earlier this week. Most of them joined Colangelo and other Hall of Famers on Friday for a welcome dinner of sorts, then on Saturday took their first public bows as basketball royalty.

“This class not only represents all levels of basketball — it represents truly, in every regard, what the game is all about and where it is,” Colangelo told The Associated Press. “I mean, think about the candidates. There’s the countries that are represented, Germany and Spain and France. It shows how far the game has come and where it is today. I think maybe it’s the most unique class, I’d say, of all time, and that covers a lot of territory. It stands by itself as in its uniqueness.”

The four NBA players — Nowitzki, Parker, Gasol and Wade — combined for 95,092 points, 39 All-Star appearances and 10 NBA championships. Hammon was a six-time WNBA All-Star and is coach of the reigning WNBA champion Las Vegas Aces.

And all Popovich has done is win five NBA titles, more games than anyone else in league history and an Olympic gold medal at the Tokyo Games that were played in 2021.

“He’s amazing,” said Golden State coach Steve Kerr, who played for Popovich and coached under him with USA Basketball at the 2019 World Cup and then the Tokyo Olympics. “The Hall of Fame was just a formality. Everybody knew he would be there. It was just a matter of when.”

The longstanding belief was that Popovich wanted certain people in the Hall before he would allow himself to be under consideration. Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili had to go in first, and Popovich also lobbied for Houston two-time champion coach Rudy Tomjanovich. Parker going in with Popovich seems fitting, and Popovich has long raved about Hammon’s ability.

“In all honesty, I always felt the Hall of Fame is like for Red Holzman, Red Auerbach and Larry Bird and Magic Johnson. … I’ve never felt like I really belonged, to be honest with you,” Popovich said. “I’m not trying to be ‘Mr. Humble’ or anything. I’m a Division III guy. I’m not a Hall of Fame guy.”

It’s the latest accolade for Gasol, Spain’s longtime star whose two NBA championships came with the Los Angeles Lakers alongside his dear friend Kobe Bryant. Nowitzki, the German great who changed the game with his combination of big-man size and guard skills, spent the entirety of his 21-year career in Dallas and is sixth on the NBA’s all-time scoring list. Parker won four rings with Popovich in San Antonio.

“When Jerry called, I tried to stay all cool on the phone … but this is super cool,” Nowitzki said. “And I called my family, my immediate family … and my mom, right away, said, ‘I’m the mother of a Hall of Famer.’ That’s when it really set in.”

Wade won three titles with Miami. At the arena where the Heat play, they’ve retired the numbers of five former players — Tim Hardaway, Shaquille O’Neal, Alonzo Mourning, Chris Bosh and Wade. And now all five of them are linked by Hall of Fame membership as well.

Like Parker, Nowitzki and Gasol — and Popovich, for that matter — Wade got in on his first ballot.

“To me, it’s a no-brainer that all of these guys are first-ballot guys,” Heat president Pat Riley said. “Look at the records. Look at the longevity that they’ve had in this league. Look what they’ve done for the league, and how much the league calls them back — because they’re ambassadors of this great league and they have a great voice and a great message. Dwyane being a first-ballot was a no-brainer.”

The class will get its jackets and Hall of Fame rings on Aug. 11 in Uncasville, Connecticut, then the ceremony and their speeches will come on Aug. 12 in Springfield, Massachusetts.

“It’s incredible,” Popovich said on the telecast. “It’s obviously an honor … I sit here amongst people who I’ve always been in awe of myself. So to be in this situation is kind of an out-of-body experience to be honest with you. All I can do is thank all the people who have helped me to be in this position.”

Gregg Popovich is keeping it very real regarding the San Antonio Spurs‘ championship hopes.

The longtime Spurs head coach issued a tongue-in-cheek warning Monday to would-be bettors who are considering backing his young squad to lift the Larry O’Brien Trophy in June.

“I probably shouldn’t say this, but I’ll say it anyway, what the hell. Nobody here should go to Vegas with the thought of betting on us to win the championship,” Popovich told reporters at media day, courtesy of Adam Rossow of Spectrum News 1 Texas.

“And I know somebody will say, ‘Gosh, what a Debbie Downer. There’s a chance. What if they work really hard?’ It’s probably not gonna happen.”

San Antonio is considered a longshot to crack the Western Conference playoff picture, let alone win the title this season. The rebuilding Spurs are one of the youngest teams in the league, and all but four players on their current roster (Jakob PoeltlJosh RichardsonDoug McDermott, and Gorgui Dieng) have, at most, four NBA campaigns under their belt.

The 73-year-old head coach joked that the abundance of young faces has left him entirely unfamiliar with his personnel.

“I walked into the film room today, and there was this young kid sitting there, and I said, ‘Who the hell are you?'” he said, according to The Associated Press. “Seriously. He said … I forgot his name already. I don’t know anybody.”

With the San Antonio Spurs topping the visiting Utah Jazz 104-102 on Friday, head coach Gregg Popovich became the winningest head coach in league history, passing Don Nelson with career victory No. 1,336.

RANKNAMEWINSW%
1.Gregg Popovich1336.658
2.Don Nelson1335.557
3.Lenny Wilkens1332.536
4.Jerry Sloan1221.603
5.Pat Riley1210.636
6.George Karl1175.588
7.Phil Jackson1155.704
8.Larry Brown1098.548
9.Rick Adelman1042.582
10.Doc Rivers1032.586

Per his tradition, Popovich downplayed his role in the historic milestone after the game.

“Something like this does not belong to one individual,” Popovich said. “Basketball is a team sport, and you preach to your players that they have to do it together.

“And that’s certainly been the case in my life. With all the wonderful players and coaches, staff that I’ve been blessed with, the support of this wonderful city, the fans support us no matter what – all of us share in this record.

“It’s not mine – it’s ours, here in the city, because of all those people I just mentioned. That’s the joy of it.”

The win moves the Spurs to 26-41 on the campaign, and they now trail the 10th-seeded New Orleans Pelicans, owners of the fourth and final play-in berth, by a game.

Popovich’s legendary (and still ongoing) run as an NBA head coach had an unpromising start. The team dismissed Bob Hill not even a quarter of the way through the 1996-97 season. The 48-year-old Popovich, taking over a 3-15 squad sorely missing the services of injured 1995 MVP David Robinson, guided the team to a 20-62 finish overall – third worst in the league.

That would be the last losing campaign San Antonio posted for 22 years, largely because the club’s lack of success in 1996-97 netted the Spurs the first overall pick in the 1997 draft: Future Hall of Famer Tim Duncan. With Duncan complementing Robinson, then growing into a perennial MVP candidate in his own right alongside guards Tony Parker and Manu Ginóbili, San Antonio racked up regular-season wins with ease – including an 18-year stretch when the team never tallied fewer than 50 wins.

The titles quickly followed, too. Popovich and the Spurs captured franchise championship No. 1 at the end of the lockout-shortened 1999 campaign, barely two seasons after drafting Duncan. More hardware came in 2003, 2005, 2007, and most recently in 2014, as well as an unfruitful Finals appearance in 2013.

With Popovich at the helm of those all-time teams, he soon garnered personal accolades – presumably to the chagrin of the notoriously praise-averse bench boss. Popovich was voted Coach of the Year in 2003, 2012, and 2014, and his 17 Coach of the Month awards rank first all time. As part of the Association’s season-long 75th Anniversary celebration, the league declared Popovich one of the 15 Greatest Coaches in NBA History in February.

“Gregg Popovich’s success with the Spurs is unprecedented in our league, so it’s only fitting that he now holds the record for career wins,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. “His leadership and unwavering commitment to the game are widely admired by generations of players and coaches alike.

“Congratulations to Coach Pop on this latest achievement in his legendary career.”

Gregg Popovich tied Hall of Famer Don Nelson for first on the NBA’s career coaching wins leaderboard Monday with the San Antonio Spurs‘ 117-110 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.

RANKNAMEWINSW%
T1Don Nelson1335.557
T1Gregg Popovich1335.658
3Lenny Wilkens1332.536
4Jerry Sloan1221.603
5Pat Riley1210.636

In keeping with his career-long aversion to publicly drawing attention to his own achievements, Popovich did not take any postgame questions about the record-tying victory, according to the Associated Press. His players generally followed the five-time champion and three-time Coach of the Year’s example by also downplaying the milestone.

“You guys know Pop,” Spurs center Jakob Poeltl told reporters. “I don’t think he really cares about stuff like that. It didn’t even really get mentioned. I doubt it will get mentioned when we get the next win. It’s just how he is.”

Only Josh Richardson – one of the newest members of the organization, having been acquired at the trade deadline – dared betray the Spurs’ institutional stoicism.

“It’s hard to put into words how much of an impact he’s had on the Spurs organization, USA Basketball and basketball in general,” Richardson said.

San Antonio took advantage of the undermanned Lakers, who were missing LeBron James (knee soreness) and Anthony Davis (mid-foot sprain). All five Spurs starters finished in double figures, led by a game-high 26 points from All-Star Dejounte Murray and 18 apiece from Richardson and Poeltl.

Third-year guard Talen Horton-Tucker led Los Angeles with 18 points. Russell Westbrook added 17 points, 10 rebounds, six assists, and five turnovers in 35 minutes.

The 73-year-old Popovich will have an opportunity to own the head coaching wins record outright when the Toronto Raptors visit San Antonio on Wednesday night.

Gregg Popovich is within touching distance of history.

The San Antonio Spurs took down the Oklahoma City Thunder 114-106 on Wednesday to give Popovich his 1,333rd career win as a head coach, breaking a tie with Lenny Wilkens for second on the all-time leaderboard.

Popovich is now just three wins away from surpassing Don Nelson’s record 1,335 victories.

All-time coaching wins

RANKCOACHWINSLOSSESWIN %
1Don Nelson13351063.557
2Gregg Popovich1333689.659
3Lenny Wilkens13321155.536
4Jerry Sloan1221803.603
5Pat Riley1210694.636

Wednesday’s victory was San Antonio’s final game before the NBA’s All-Star break, meaning Popovich will have to wait to attempt to set the record. However, the 73-year-old could still break the mark in February.

Upcoming Spurs schedule

DATEOPPONENTLOCATION
Feb. 25WizardsAway
Feb. 26HeatAway
Feb. 28GrizzliesAway
March 3KingsHome
March 5HornetsAway
March 7LakersHome

Popovich recorded his first career win in 1996 after naming himself Spurs head coach 18 games into the season. His career .659 winning percentage is second only to Phil Jackson (.704) among the top-10 coaches.

Spurs forward Keldon Johnson led his squad with 22 points in Wednesday’s win. Big man Jakob Poeltl contributed with 20 points, 17 rebounds, and five assists as San Antonio improved to 23-36 to remain in the hunt for a play-in seed.

Thunder rookie Josh Giddey notched a third straight double-double in the loss, finishing with 17 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists.

San Antonio Spurs bench boss Gregg Popovich wasn’t shocked to see assistant Becky Hammon become the first woman to serve as an NBA head coach Wednesday.

Popovich, whose second-quarter ejection cleared the way for Hammon to take over coaching duties against the Los Angeles Lakers, said the WNBA legend merited the opportunity thanks to her work.

“It’s been business as usual from the beginning. We didn’t hire Becky to make history,” Popovich said Friday, according to Dan Woike of the Los Angeles Times. “She earned it. She is qualified. She’s wonderful at what she does.

“I wanted her on my staff because of the work she does. And she happens to be a woman, which basically should be irrelevant, but it’s not in our world, as we’ve seen as it’s been so difficult for women to obtain certain positions.”

Hammon joined the Spurs ahead of the 2014-15 season and has worked as an assistant on Popovich’s staff since. She was named the head coach of the franchise’s Summer League squad in July 2015, becoming the first woman bench boss in the competition’s history, and led the team to the title.

The former All-Star called her head coaching debut a “substantial moment” but lamented that San Antonio ultimately fell short against Los Angeles.

Popovich believes Hammon is ready for a permanent head coaching role, potentially opening up similar opportunities for other women in the league.

“There’s no reason why somebody like Becky and other women can’t be coaches in the NBA,” he said. “On a larger scale, that’s why it wasn’t a big deal to me – because I know her. And I know her skills, and I know her value, and I know her future is very, very bright.

“I understand the attention it got, but in all honesty, I assumed that most people already knew that she was qualified to be a head coach in the NBA.”

Becky Hammon made history Wednesday night by becoming the first woman to act as head coach in an NBA game, but she would have preferred to see the San Antonio Spurs secure a victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.

“I would have loved to have walked out of there with the win with the guys,” Hammon told reporters after L.A.’s 121-107 victory in San Antonio.

Hammon took the reins when Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich was ejected after a technical foul with 3:56 remaining in the second quarter.

“Obviously, I mean, it’s a big deal,” Hammon said. “It’s a substantial moment. I’ve been a part of this organization, I got traded (to San Antonio’s former WNBA team) in 2007, so I’ve been in San Antonio and part of the Spurs and (this) sports organization with the Stars and everything for 13 years.

“So I have a lot of time invested, and they have a lot of time invested in me, in building me and getting me better.”

Hammon joined Popovich’s staff in 2014 and has since risen to a lead assistant role. The 43-year-old previously earned six WNBA All-Star appearances as a player and became the first woman to helm a Summer League squad.

“Any player who knows the history of woman’s basketball knows what she meant to the sport,” Spurs guard DeMar DeRozan said Wednesday, according to Jeff McDonald of the San Antonio Express-News. “You don’t think twice about it. She’s one of us. When she speaks, we are all ears.”

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Brooklyn Nets stars Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving want the team to hire a “higher profile” head coach such as Gregg Popovich or Tyronn Lue, sources told ESPN’s Jackie MacMullan.

There is strong mutual respect between Durant and Popovich, and the Nets will explore the possibility of hiring the future Hall of Famer as their next bench boss, The Athletic’s Shams Charania reports.

The Nets already have ties to the Spurs franchise. General manager Sean Marks played a pair of seasons in San Antonio and later served as an assistant under Popovich, and former Spurs big man Tiago Splitter is a player development coach with Brooklyn.

Lue is in his first season as an assistant coach with the Los Angeles Clippers. The 43-year-old previously spent parts of four seasons as the Cleveland Cavaliers’ bench boss, during which he guided the club to its lone NBA title in 2016.

Marks is also considering interim head coach Jacque Vaughn for the permanent role, according to MacMullan.

Vaughn took over in March for Kenny Atkinson and guided the club to a 7-3 record, including a 5-3 mark during the seeding games with a shorthanded roster. Before joining the Nets, Vaughn went 58-158 in three seasons as head coach of the Orlando Magic.

Brooklyn was swept in the first round of the NBA playoffs by the defending champion Toronto Raptors.

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For the first time since 1997, the NBA postseason won’t feature the San Antonio Spurs.

However, that doesn’t faze longtime head coach Gregg Popovich.

“I don’t dwell on the past,” Popovich said after Thursday’s season-ending loss to the Utah Jazz, according to the NBA on TNT. “I don’t know who won the baseball championship from year to year. Four years ago I don’t know who won the NBA championship. That stuff’s totally (not) important.

“What’s important is the moment – you do what you’ve got to do then you move on. But looking at the past doesn’t do much good. Any success we’ve had has been because we’ve had some great players.”

Franchise greats Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, and Tony Parker no longer lead the Spurs, but some of the team’s younger players still fared well in Thursday’s 118-112 defeat.

Rookie Keldon Johnson finished with a game-high 24 points, and 23-year-old point guard Dejounte Murray recorded 12 points, 14 rebounds, and seven assists. Derrick White, a third-year guard who’s expected to be a key backcourt figure, didn’t play in the finale, but his overall run after the restart was impressive. He averaged 18.9 points, five assists, and 4.3 rebounds while shooting 39.3% from distance over seven games.

Popovich lauded the growth the club’s youngsters showed during the seeding games despite the long postseason odds.

“I’m more excited about this than anything you guys are talking about right now, successes or non-successes, because the success for streaks or whatever the hell you’re talking about ended,” he said. “I could care less about that. I’m thrilled at the way they played here.”

“They had no shot to get into this thing and basically willed themselves into it to have this opportunity,” he continued, adding that as the “young kids” developed, it was the best the team played all year.

Entering this season, Popovich had taken the Spurs to 22 consecutive playoffs, winning five NBA titles during that span. The only other campaign when he failed to reach the playoffs as head coach was his first season, when he replaced Bob Hill after San Antonio’s 3-15 start. The Spurs picked first in the draft following their 20-62 finish that season, and they selected Duncan.