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More NBA Stuff: THE. Knickerbockers WIN! 2-0 is amazing…

[2-minute read]

And then there’s Mike Brown coaching (and Mitch Johnson for the Spurs, young though he is) in a way that shows trust in his supporting cast: no Brunson, no KAT, and players who’ve been trusted all season — guess what? — are ready to play when it counts. Big third quarter, game could’ve gotten away from the Knicks with Towns’s 4th (terrible call!) foul. And the stars are fresher? Yes. And will be, in the fourth quarter. I really like the NBA’s movement towards not only faster play, not only more full-court pressure on star guards, but the consequent requirement to play more guys and play like a team. I love coaching this way, which is essential in a high school program. Who knows who’s going to grow, mature, work his tail off, gain confidence…? And in this case, who knows how many important plays a trusted substitute (Shamet, McBride) or complementary player (Hart! Bridges!) can make?

Knicks up 12, early in the 4th. Brown *still* playing his bench, and they’re playing well. And Daddy (Coach) Rick Brunson wants to get in there to defend his boy! Coach Rick gets no technical foul for going all the way down to the Spurs bench to challenge the schoolyard bullies? (This game is close to going off the rails.) Jalen Brunson is way too cool to get baited into a foul like Fox (and Friends!) were hoping for. Nice try De’Aaron…”Too physical!” says Richard Jefferson on the broadcast, and I can’t agree more. Rugby rules. Blow the whistles, refs! That eventually *does* lead to the ability to let ’em play. Right now, not much skill is even possible. I get that officials don’t want to decide things, though. Toughest game in the world to referee.

And again I notice: wow, the Knicks have a surprisingly loud following in San Antonio. Resale market for tickets, and San Antonio ticket-holders have terrible temptations, in the many thousands of dollars, to make some money on their ducats. And the Knicks are an ancient and durable brand.

And what a finish! Spurs are so young, but tough! Their guard pressure, Fox and Harper (a baby! and a grown-arse man!) and the maybe gimpy Castle — so physical, and with the way the game’s being refereed, playing hard without (?) fouling. Tie game, rookie Harper with another big drive to the goal. Oh, and a crucial replay: turnover against the Knicks turned into three free throws for OG Anunoby. (Foolish foul in the coffin corner. Game changer.) (Wish OG was still a Raptor. Don’t expect *he* does.) Spurs huge, and then Brunson, fouled at least three times bringing the ball up, STILL gets a huge clutch shot off to tie…

Crunchiest of crunch times.

Whew! Wemby had a great look, straight as a die, long and strong (what we shooting coaches love to see, in a practicing player’s miss) but still a miss. Superb, furious, brave comeback by the Spurs but what an early-fourth-quarter clinic by the Knicks to compile what turned out to be just enough of a lead — as long as Victor doesn’t miss the last one. As long as Victor doesn’t, for moments here and there, look exactly like the young, young player, however magnificent he can be, that he *is*. And how can I not pull for Karl-Anthony Towns after a thoughtful, feeling interview like that one in the immediate aftermath of such a game? He came close to suggesting that his beloved mother blew Wembanyama’s shot off the back rim from the heavenly gates, but all that humility and all that gratitude for the game? Sweet and noble stuff, even if it is only about the winning and the losing of a silly sports match. One that millions lost sleep (and money, and their minds) over.

And I’m not in bed before midnight, but I still love sport. And I’m glad I watched. Nice ramblin’ atcha! Thanks for reading.

 

Requiem for a Coach

My first thought was brilliant — they always seem to be — where else could the wake for Coach Wright be but in the tiny, tiled box of a gym where he spent so many thousands of hours with his “kids”, this never-married father of none? The Caledonia Sweatbox, the dim, cramped but comfortable Blue Devils’ lair, where half-court shots were no longer than an NBA three-pointer, where big-footed forwards needed to turn sideways to get their Chuck Taylor high-cuts completely out of bounds…

But what if there are only twenty people there? That gave me pause; even in that bandbox of a gym, twenty voices would make for some unfairly desolate echoes. As it happens, my grand thought was punctured, and for the best. As it is with too many aspects of sporting and educational life these days, the bureaucratic and custodial hoops we’d have had to jump through were too many, so we didn’t celebrate Don Wright’s life of ball-bouncing generosity in the centre court circle of The Gym, as madly poetic as that might have been.

We did better. The community hall we got was perfect. (Its hardwood floor was a far better surface than we ever played on in the old town high school.) What do you need, really, when it’s time to pay tribute to the life of a man – once painfully shy and young and slender, but by his last days grey and limping and carrying too much goddam weight – who gave to our youthfulness and to our kids whatever he had? Nothing but the people, as it turned out, and they were there. We were referees, athletes’ parents, fellow coaches, former players and friends. (I was all of these things. A five-time winner.)

Dave B was there. He had been to Don something I never was: a young coach who got to discover, years later in repeatedly teasing conversations, that he had cut the man we were honouring when Don was an earnest and under-skilled twelve-year-old. Dave and his wife Georgia had made sure, for the last several years, that Coach Donny had a place to go for Christmas dinner. (They also did most of the coffee-making, cookie-dealing and cleanup for the memorial. The Basketball Family lives.) Dave, the nearly legendary “Bart” of the Hamilton hoops community, had been with Don one of “the usual suspects” when it came to college and high school basketball games, especially for girls’ and women’s teams. His eulogy at the service had some good laughs, but it was serious business. It even allowed a glimpse of anger, for Bart wanted it known that his friend, our friend, was more than might’ve met the eye. Bart had seen and heard too much of those who dismissed the Coach as either a has-been or “some old guy, whatever”. He made earnest and teary amends.

Most of those who spoke after Bart were former players, though there were some old friends and fellow coaches that he’d never blown a whistle at. (Come to think of it, he rarely blew one at any of us. He had no interest in the whistle. He wanted his voice to be enough. It was.) The sharing was utterly informal, as Don had insisted and would have liked, but at least one former Ontario West university All-Star, an experienced teacher, had written her remarks in order to have some anchor, some way to not “lose it”. Mind you, she’d already lost it twice before her turn came, and duly lost it again, but my goodness, weren’t these the best kind of “losses”: of composure, of emotional restraint, of the kind of busy life-living that sometimes leads us to forget to say “thanks” to those who built us? Cindy and I weren’t the only ones to lose it more than once, and we gained so much by really feeling what we felt.

There were about 100 of us. It was a grand reunion, including the core of my own high school team from three decades gone. Present, too, were about ten young women, high schoolers who looked a little bewildered and felt, for a while, out of place. They were members of the last teams that my old buddy Don, sore and often discouraged, gave his last weary hours of coaching to. They honoured “Mr. Wright” by their presence, and they went away knowing more of the man than they had, and wishing perhaps that they had found a way to give something back to him. We all did.

So long, Coach. Thanks for all the sweat, the hope, the ideals. Keep caring for us as we do for you. Fare well, brother.

[I also wrote an “In Memoriam” for Donald Edward, and it’s in the “On Second Thought” section. It gives a more clear picture of the man and what he did.]