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  1. #1
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    The Tao of San Antonio Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich

    Why America Is in Love With the NBA's Brilliant, Crabby Uncle


    By
    Jason Gay
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    Updated May 12, 2014 9:16 a.m. ET

    Longtime San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich Getty Images
    At the moment, the San Antonio Spurs hold a three-games-to-none edge over the Portland Trail Blazers in the NBA's Western Conference semifinals, which continue Monday evening in Oregon. Barring an astonishing comeback by the likable and talented Blazers, the Spurs are poised to win the series and move on to the conference finals.
    Oh, who are we kidding: The Spurs are going to win the series and move on to the conference finals.
    So let's talk about the San Antonio coach, Gregg Popovich. Here are some essential numbers on Popovich: 65 years old, 18 seasons, 17 playoff appearances, 17 consecutive winning seasons, three G's in the first name. Nine hundred and sixty-seven regular-season wins against 443 losses, winning percentage of .686, third-best in league history. One-hundred and forty wins in the playoffs, three coach-of-the-year honors, including this season, and then the big one: four world championships.
    That's the data—and it's excellent, among basketball's best ever.

    Popovich with David Robinson, left, and President Clinton at the White House in 1999. Getty Images
    Still, that's not the reason why America adores Popovich. Popovich feels the love because Popovich is basketball's brilliant crabby uncle—and it's fun to love what might not love you back. In a sports era thick with self-promoters and self-mythologizers, Popovich has no interest in playing cute or dabbling in small talk. During interviews, he's as straightforward as a sledgehammer through drywall.
    Popovich talk is straight talk to the extreme; bluntness as performance art. If words are cheap, he is the an of Terse. "A lot of the questions he gets," said former Spur Malik Rose, "he feels the answers are pretty obvious."
    Then there's Popovich's signature look: Popovich Face. During games, Popovich will bear the look of an airline passenger who has just experienced something substandard about the flight, and cannot wait, when the plane lands, to write a brief but merciless letter to the airline. Stern-eyed and sometimes open-mouthed, Popovich Face is not exactly a look of disgust. It's more of a measured disdain.
    And yet this is a coach who has had more prolonged NBA success than anyone coaching in the league. Who has, in partnership with San Antonio's front office, cracked the difficult formula for preserving aged superstars while simultaneously developing his team's future. Who consistently has done it his way—even if it means unashamedly knocking heads with the boardroom of the NBA.
    "He's demanding but he's fair—and this is coming from somebody who spent considerable time in his doghouse," said Rose, who was part of Spurs le teams in 1999 and 2003. "He doesn't put on airs. He's not fake. He's 100% real."
    Rose describes a coach who remembers the names of player spouses and children and details from home. "Still, to this day, he asks how my mother is doing," he said. "He's very in tune to his emotional side."
    And Popovich's Spurs do it over and over and over. The les may be intermittent, but the winning culture is not. The hardest thing in sports is not achieving success but sustaining it; adapting to new compe ion and styles while accommodating for natural decline. The Spurs are like a pair of shoes you bought 20 years ago and can't believe how good they still are. With Popovich as coach, Spurs star Tim Duncan won his first NBA le during Bill Clinton's second term.
    And Clinton is a fan.
    "Coach Popovich is a great coach and a good man," President Clinton said in a statement to the Journal. "Year in and year out the Spurs keep winning, regardless of injuries, retirements, trades, and the talent of their opponents. Gregg's relationship to his players and his ability to get them to play as a real team are tributes to his extraordinary combination of leadership and humanity."
    Earlier this year, Popovich went to lunch in San Antonio with a group that included Clinton, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry Cisneros and current San Antonio Mayor Julián Castro. "His personality and his at ude on the court match this city very well," said Castro. "Unassuming but good character, not flashy but effective. People here really appreciate that."
    The country may be falling hard at the moment, but San Antonio has long known the Popovich behind the Popovich Face. He revealed it in an unguarded moment a couple of weeks ago during an on-court interview with Craig Sager Jr. , son of TNT sideline reporter Craig Sager, who has raised Popovich's perfunctory Q&As to destination television. At the moment, the elder Sager was undergoing treatment for leukemia, and his son was standing in. After a couple of gentle exchanges on San Antonio's playoff game with Dallas, Popovich turned to Sager Jr. with a compliment. "You did a great job," Popovich said. "But I'd rather have your Dad standing here."
    Then the coach looked square into the camera and addressed the elder Sager himself. "We want your fanny back on the court," he said. He added impishly: "And I promise I'll be nice."
    This was the Popovich that fans have come to adore—the coach who gets it, who knows what's important, who may not say a lot, but seems to always say the right thing. San Antonio is rolling in the playoffs once more, and some day Gregg Popovich will explain how he managed to do this for so long. He'll just probably do it in 10 words or less.
    Write to Jason Gay at [email protected]

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    You trying to kill my eyes? Dat font

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    what is this? an article for ants?
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    The Tao of San Antonio Spurs Coach Gregg Popovich

    Why America Is in Love With the NBA's Brilliant, Crabby Uncle


    By
    Jason Gay
    connect
    · Email
    · Print
    · Comments
    · Facebook
    · Twitter
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    · LinkedIn


    Updated May 12, 2014 9:16 a.m. ET

    Longtime San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich Getty Images
    At the moment, the San Antonio Spurs hold a three-games-to-none edge over the Portland Trail Blazers in the NBA's Western Conference semifinals, which continue Monday evening in Oregon. Barring an astonishing comeback by the likable and talented Blazers, the Spurs are poised to win the series and move on to the conference finals.
    Oh, who are we kidding: The Spurs are going to win the series and move on to the conference finals.
    So let's talk about the San Antonio coach, Gregg Popovich. Here are some essential numbers on Popovich: 65 years old, 18 seasons, 17 playoff appearances, 17 consecutive winning seasons, three G's in the first name. Nine hundred and sixty-seven regular-season wins against 443 losses, winning percentage of .686, third-best in league history. One-hundred and forty wins in the playoffs, three coach-of-the-year honors, including this season, and then the big one: four world championships.
    That's the data—and it's excellent, among basketball's best ever.

    Popovich with David Robinson, left, and President Clinton at the White House in 1999. Getty Images
    Still, that's not the reason why America adores Popovich. Popovich feels the love because Popovich is basketball's brilliant crabby uncle—and it's fun to love what might not love you back. In a sports era thick with self-promoters and self-mythologizers, Popovich has no interest in playing cute or dabbling in small talk. During interviews, he's as straightforward as a sledgehammer through drywall.
    Popovich talk is straight talk to the extreme; bluntness as performance art. If words are cheap, he is the an of Terse. "A lot of the questions he gets," said former Spur Malik Rose, "he feels the answers are pretty obvious."
    Then there's Popovich's signature look: Popovich Face. During games, Popovich will bear the look of an airline passenger who has just experienced something substandard about the flight, and cannot wait, when the plane lands, to write a brief but merciless letter to the airline. Stern-eyed and sometimes open-mouthed, Popovich Face is not exactly a look of disgust. It's more of a measured disdain.
    And yet this is a coach who has had more prolonged NBA success than anyone coaching in the league. Who has, in partnership with San Antonio's front office, cracked the difficult formula for preserving aged superstars while simultaneously developing his team's future. Who consistently has done it his way—even if it means unashamedly knocking heads with the boardroom of the NBA.
    "He's demanding but he's fair—and this is coming from somebody who spent considerable time in his doghouse," said Rose, who was part of Spurs le teams in 1999 and 2003. "He doesn't put on airs. He's not fake. He's 100% real."
    Rose describes a coach who remembers the names of player spouses and children and details from home. "Still, to this day, he asks how my mother is doing," he said. "He's very in tune to his emotional side."
    And Popovich's Spurs do it over and over and over. The les may be intermittent, but the winning culture is not. The hardest thing in sports is not achieving success but sustaining it; adapting to new compe ion and styles while accommodating for natural decline. The Spurs are like a pair of shoes you bought 20 years ago and can't believe how good they still are. With Popovich as coach, Spurs star Tim Duncan won his first NBA le during Bill Clinton's second term.
    And Clinton is a fan.
    "Coach Popovich is a great coach and a good man," President Clinton said in a statement to the Journal. "Year in and year out the Spurs keep winning, regardless of injuries, retirements, trades, and the talent of their opponents. Gregg's relationship to his players and his ability to get them to play as a real team are tributes to his extraordinary combination of leadership and humanity."
    Earlier this year, Popovich went to lunch in San Antonio with a group that included Clinton, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Henry Cisneros and current San Antonio Mayor Julián Castro. "His personality and his at ude on the court match this city very well," said Castro. "Unassuming but good character, not flashy but effective. People here really appreciate that."
    The country may be falling hard at the moment, but San Antonio has long known the Popovich behind the Popovich Face. He revealed it in an unguarded moment a couple of weeks ago during an on-court interview with Craig Sager Jr. , son of TNT sideline reporter Craig Sager, who has raised Popovich's perfunctory Q&As to destination television. At the moment, the elder Sager was undergoing treatment for leukemia, and his son was standing in. After a couple of gentle exchanges on San Antonio's playoff game with Dallas, Popovich turned to Sager Jr. with a compliment. "You did a great job," Popovich said. "But I'd rather have your Dad standing here."
    Then the coach looked square into the camera and addressed the elder Sager himself. "We want your fanny back on the court," he said. He added impishly: "And I promise I'll be nice."
    This was the Popovich that fans have come to adore—the coach who gets it, who knows what's important, who may not say a lot, but seems to always say the right thing. San Antonio is rolling in the playoffs once more, and some day Gregg Popovich will explain how he managed to do this for so long. He'll just probably do it in 10 words or less.
    Write to Jason Gay at [email protected]
    Don't make any more threads, please.

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