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Jimcs50
05-05-2005, 07:54 AM
May 5, 2005, 12:54AM

Van Gundy's feisty stand puts city in his corner
By RICHARD JUSTICE
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle



He's sure to get the longest and loudest ovation at Toyota Center tonight. Never mind that he can't run, jump or shoot. Never mind that his next dunk will be his first.

Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy didn't take the usual path from basketball coach to folk hero this week.

He did it by standing up for one of his guys. He did it publicly, too, knowing he was tweaking one of the most powerful and thin-skinned men in sports — NBA Commissioner David Stern.

And when challenged by Stern, he refused to back down. He turned basketball into a morality play, and along the way, came away looking dramatically different in the hearts and minds of many of this city's basketball fans.

These are the same fans who hadn't known quite what to make of him.

Meet the new boss — same as the old boss.

For the last three days, Van Gundy has been showered with supportive e-mails, telephone calls and offers to pay the $100,000 fine slapped on him by Stern.

The Chronicle has received hundreds of e-mails, the vast majority of them supportive of the coach. Someone sent a box of 100 Grand candy bars to Van Gundy's home.

Some of this support surely comes from some of the same people who'd considered him something of a cold fish. They saw him a humorless outsider and a weak replacement for Rudy Tomjanovich.


We've got his back
Now he's our guy. He fought for us, and now we're standing behind him.

He's a native New Yorker, but, at the moment, couldn't be any more of a Texan if he showed up with cream gravy on his tie and a Dan Jenkins novel under his arm.

As for the man himself, he seems both dazed and amazed by the reaction.

"That's why I love living here," he said Wednesday afternoon as the Rockets prepared to play Game 6 of a best-of-seven series against the Dallas Mavericks tonight. "People are genuine, they're nice, they're kind, they're compassionate."

He declined the money offers, saying: "I had choices to make. I made 'em. I have to live with the choices."

This is the same guy — or is it? — who was widely viewed with distrust during most of his first two seasons here.

"I didn't mean to make myself the rallying point," he said.

Too late.

On Sunday, Van Gundy said an NBA referee whispered that officials had been ordered to keep a closer eye on Rockets center Yao Ming after complaints from Mavericks owner Mark Cuban.

Van Gundy was furious that the complaints of one owner could lead to a directive against one player.

And he said so. Stern countered with both the fine and a warning he might just throw Van Gundy out of the league altogether.

Van Gundy's reputation in Houston seemed to change almost overnight.

"The NBA ought to be ashamed and apologize to the Rockets, its fans and most of all coach Van Gundy," Rockets fan Kevin McCormack wrote to the Chronicle. "After all, all he did was speak the truth about an injustice."

Another fan, Edwin Turner, added: "Rarely does an individual earn respect in this multi-national, multi-racial, disheveled and spray-painted community. Jeff Van Gundy, in having correctly defended his, and by proxy, ours, has earned a permanent place ... no, a home ... in Houston."


Defiant coach stays mum
During a Wednesday afternoon news conference, Van Gundy declined to discuss the fine or Stern's threats to take more action. With the Rockets trailing the series 3-2 and facing elimination, he attempted to steer the conversation back to basketball.

"There's nothing gained by rehashing everything," he said.

His players seem both amused and supportive.

"He doesn't take crap from anyone," star forward Tracy McGrady said. "He's standing up for what he believes."

Van Gundy's public image has been so gray because he has preferred it that way. He works 18-hour days in a windowless office, where he devours videotapes, M&Ms and Diet Coke.

Pop culture isn't his thing, either. He recently referred to the television shrink as Dr. Fred.

Yet as the Rockets have added players from other teams, they've all said pretty much the same thing.

"He's the most prepared coach I've ever been around," guard Jon Barry said.

Players say he has got a sense of humor, but they're more likely to remember the temper tantrums like the one he threw the morning after a sloppy loss in Chicago.

"I had a meltdown," he said recently. "I didn't mean to get that angry, but the more we watched the tape, the madder I got. It was like an out-of-body experience."

His sense of humor is dry. When a reporter quoted Yao as saying the Rockets would play like "an animal backed into a corner," Van Gundy smiled.

"Going to the clichés, are we?" he said.

He's an astonishing storehouse of information. If he says the Mavericks have made 53 percent of their 3-pointers from the left side of the court, then that's what they're shooting.

He loves other sports, too. He collects NFL Films videotapes, especially those that deal with coaching. He was an occasional practice guest of Bill Parcells when both were New York coaches.

He's a serious baseball fan, too, and sometimes will open an interview by asking: "What's Roger Clemens like?"

His brother, Stan, coaches the Miami Heat, and their father, Bill, was a lifelong coach.


'It's a decorum issue'
When Jeff Van Gundy was asked why he never shows emotion on the sideline, he said: "I think that's the product of being a coach's son. It's a decorum issue. If you celebrate, it's almost like taunting the other coach."

That outward calm belies his competitive fires. He's the guy who came up with the nickname "Big Chief Triangle," for Phil Jackson, whom he apparently sees as a bit too full of himself.

During last season's Rockets-Lakers playoff series, he loudly cursed Jackson at one point.

Asked about it later, he said: "He told me to sit down. I didn't think that was his place to tell me when or where to sit."

These days, he can sit almost anyplace he wants in Houston.

slayermin
05-05-2005, 08:06 AM
He's the guy who came up with the nickname "Big Chief Triangle," for Phil Jackson, whom he apparently sees as a bit too full of himself.

:lol

Slomo
05-05-2005, 08:09 AM
Sorry OT



He's a native New Yorker, but, at the moment, couldn't be any more of a Texan if he showed up with cream gravy on his tie and a Dan Jenkins novel under his arm. But I can't help laughing at the fact that thanks to MannyIsGod I actually understand that :lol

SouthernFried
05-05-2005, 08:25 AM
I hope someone in the media has the courage to actually look into his accusations. By the knee-jerk reactions of Stern and NBA muckity-mucks...I have a feeling there may be some truth in it.

Stern wants this guy gone...and that sounds like he's scared of Van Gundy. Makes you wonder.

Jimcs50
05-05-2005, 08:35 AM
It would not be hard for any decent investigative reporter worth his salt to find the source.

I do not want him to lose his job. Is this a communist or dictatorship league, where a friend can not give a friend a word of warning about something that is unjust, without getting fired???

JVG should not have said anything about the ref in the first place, because it shined the spotlight on him, and jeopardized his career.

Stern is a total asshole and a megalomaniac. He needs to admit what the truth is and just correct the problem with his refs and correct the problem instead of sweeping it under the carpet along with Jeff and the ref in question.

Sportcamper
05-05-2005, 09:15 AM
I think the Commish is pushing the wrong guy... Jeff Van Gundy may look harmless but he is more dangerous than a cornered badger! One second he looks calm and docile, the next second he is chewing on somebody’s leg!
http://sportsmed.starwave.com/i/magazine/new/vangundy_mourning.jpg

Sportcamper
05-05-2005, 09:17 AM
He has no fear! (http://rds.yahoo.com/S=96062883/K=Jeff+Van+Gundy/v=2/SID=w/TID=I031_87/l=IVI/SIG=128othr7q/EXP=1115384602/*-http%3A//img.coxnewsweb.com/B/02/72/60/image_60722.jpg)

MaNuMaNiAc
05-05-2005, 09:24 AM
What the heck is that picture of???

Sportcamper
05-05-2005, 09:28 AM
My point exactly Manu...He seems harmless right?
Until he gnaws your leg right to the bone!

Jimcs50
05-05-2005, 09:30 AM
What the heck is that picture of???

In a fight betw VG's Knicks and Riley's Heat, Jeff went into the fracas and grabbed Zo by the leg to try to protect his players....they said he even sunk his teeth into Zo.

I can not believe you have never heard of this.

Sportcamper
05-05-2005, 04:02 PM
http://i11.ebayimg.com/01/i/04/00/63/e4_1_b.JPG