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05/02/25 07:16:00
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05/02 19:15 CDT Gregg Popovich, the NBA's all-time wins leader, retires after
29 seasons as San Antonio Spurs coach
Gregg Popovich, the NBA's all-time wins leader, retires after 29 seasons as San
Antonio Spurs coach
By TIM REYNOLDS
AP Basketball Writer
Gregg Popovich stepped down as coach of the San Antonio Spurs on Friday, ending
a three-decade run that saw him lead the team to five NBA championships, become
the league's all-time wins leader and earn induction into the Basketball Hall
of Fame.
"While my love and passion for the game remain, I've decided it's time to step
away as head coach," Popovich said.
He will remain as team president. Mitch Johnson, a Spurs assistant who filled
in for Popovich for the season's final 77 games, becomes the team's head coach.
Popovich, 76, missed all but five games this season after having a stroke at
the team's arena on Nov. 2. He has not spoken publicly since, though had
addressed his team at least once and released a statement in late March saying
that he hoped to return to coaching.
That won't be happening.
"I'm forever grateful to the wonderful players, coaches, staff and fans who
allowed me to serve them as the Spurs head coach and am excited for the
opportunity to continue to support the organization, community and city that
are so meaningful to me," Popovich said.
Popovich's career ends with a record of 1,422-869, which includes the 77 games
--- 32 wins and 45 losses --- that were coached by Johnson this season. He also
won 170 playoff games with the Spurs, the most by any coach with one team and
the third-most overall behind Phil Jackson's 229 and Pat Riley's 171.
"The best there ever was," Spurs great Manu Ginobili said last year of Popovich.
An NBA and Olympic champion
Popovich was a three-time coach of the year, led the U.S. to a gold medal at
the Tokyo Olympics and coached six Hall of Famers in San Antonio --- Ginobili,
David Robinson, Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, Dominique Wilkins and Pau Gasol. He
went up against 170 coaches in the NBA and there have been 303 coaching changes
made in the league, including interim moves, during the Popovich era.
"I've got a video on my phone that's, like, priceless," said Chris Paul, who
played for the Spurs this season --- going there, in large part, because of the
lure of playing for Popovich. "It was us in Oklahoma City, before shootaround,
and Pop is doing ballhandling stuff. All these years I've always seen Pop
coaching in a suit, but I didn't know how hard of a worker he was when it comes
to training."
That work ethic, Paul said, carried over into this year after the stroke and
Popovich's commitment to his rehabilitation process.
"I was the first one to get to the arena for games, and I would walk past the
training room and Pop would be on the treadmill," Paul said. "I actually had a
chance to be in there while Pop is doing rehab or whatnot. So, to see how hard
he works, that's what I'm glad I got a chance to see. It had nothing to do with
basketball. It just showed who he is."
He took over in 1996
Popovich, in his role as general manager of the Spurs, made the move to fire
coach Bob Hill and promote himself into that job on Dec. 10, 1996. The timing
seemed, at best, awkward. The Spurs were 3-15 at that point, having played all
18 of those games without Robinson, who was just about to come back from
injury. Popovich took over on the day that Robinson returned to the lineup.
"A change in direction was necessary," Popovich said that day.
The Spurs hadn't changed direction again since.
"Coach Pop's extraordinary impact on our family, San Antonio, the Spurs and the
game of basketball is profound," Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt said.
"His accolades and awards don't do justice to the impact he has had on so many
people. He is truly one of one as a person, leader and coach. Our entire
family, alongside fans from across the globe, are grateful for his remarkable
29-year run as the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs."
The fortunes changed --- Duncan was picked No. 1 overall in the 1997 draft ---
but the direction under Popovich always stayed the same. The first championship
came in 1999; others followed in 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014. In his first 22
seasons as coach, the Spurs had 22 winning records, the first 20 of those
seasons winning at least 60% of the time.
His decision to step away comes with the Spurs having just completed the second
year of a rebuild around French star Victor Wembanyama, who arrived touted as
the next San Antonio great and has done nothing to suggest he won't live up to
that billing.
"Gregg Popovich's sustained success as head coach of the San Antonio Spurs is
incomparable. ... There are few people in the basketball community as beloved
and revered as Coach Pop," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said.
How he started
Popovich played at the U.S. Air Force Academy, famously wasn't picked for the
1972 U.S. Olympic team --- some still say he merited a spot --- and wound up
becoming a coach who might have been perfectly content to run Pomona-Pitzer, a
Division III program in California, for the entirety of his professional life.
That school had lost 88 consecutive conference games when he arrived; it didn't
take long for Popovich to deliver a conference championship.
Eventually, the NBA called. In time, Popovich would be paired with Robinson,
then the patriarch of a dynasty fueled by Duncan, Parker and Ginobili. And out
of that, Popovich put together a career like none other.
"Everyone knows the amazing job he's done and all the accomplishments,"
longtime coach Larry Brown said in 2021. "I wish more people really could know
the type of person that he is."
He was famously grumpy, liked to clash with reporters, rarely offered any
details of his basketball or private life other than what was necessary. It was
simultaneously real and an act. Popovich has a much softer side as well --- he
quietly championed causes like the San Antonio Food Bank for years and wasn't
afraid to make his political views known. And those lucky enough to know him
find him hilarious.
"He has an amazing sense of humor," Boston forward Jayson Tatum said while
playing for Popovich during the Tokyo Olympics four years ago. "I guess the
casual fan sees the person who does those interviews postgame, but that's not
the case of who he is at all. I absolutely love spending time with him."
A loss in the 2013 NBA Finals crushed Popovich, whose Spurs were in position to
close out the Miami Heat in six games, lost Game 6 in overtime after Ray
Allen's 3-pointer with 5.2 seconds remaining in regulation kept the Heat alive,
then fell in Game 7. But in the moments after the final horn, as Miami coach
Erik Spoelstra embraced his staff, Popovich joined the hug with a wide smile.
Spoelstra, who became coach of the Heat in 2008, now becomes the league's
longest-tenured in his current position.
"He's always just been an incredible example of class, dignity," Spoelstra said
of Popovich. "To be able to do that after wins or losses, I just think it's a
great example that you can still have class regardless of how the outcome comes
during a game."
When the Spurs beat the Heat for the title in a finals rematch in 2014, it was
Spoelstra who felt the sting of losing. And once again, it was Popovich who
sent congratulations on a job well done.
Golden State coach Steve Kerr played for Popovich and coached under him with
the U.S. team. They are close, so much so that Kerr wore a T-shirt Friday
before a Warriors playoff game against Houston with Popovich's face emblazoned
on it.
"I know this is a pretty emotional day for the Spurs," Kerr said. "It is for
the entire NBA. ... Pop is one of the most important people in my life, for
many, many reasons and most of them go way beyond basketball."
Kerr later added, simply, "Thank you, Pop."
A tenure like almost none other
Popovich's was a tenure like few others. He coached the Spurs for 29 seasons, a
span nearly unmatched in U.S. major pro sports history. Connie Mack managed the
Philadelphia Athletics for 50 years, George Halas coached the Chicago Bears for
40 and John McGraw managed the New York Giants for 31. Those three tenures ---
all wrapping up well over a half-century ago --- are the only ones exceeding
the length of Popovich's run with the Spurs; his tenure in San Antonio was
matched by the Dallas Cowboys' Tom Landry and the Green Bay Packers' Curly
Lambeau.
"It means I'm old," Popovich said last year.
Popovich broke a gender barrier of sorts in the league when he hired Becky
Hammon as the league's first female full-time assistant coach. Hammon, now
coach of the WNBA's Las Vegas Aces, would also become the first female head
summer league coach in the NBA and first female acting head coach when she
replaced Popovich for a game in 2020.
"Basketball is basketball," South Carolina women's coach Dawn Staley said when
asked about Popovich in 2017. "It doesn't have a gender. It has a mind. It has
an approach. It has a willingness. Given the opportunity, women can excel in
this game. As you can see. Becky Hammon is doing a great job. You need more
people like Coach Popovich to give them opportunities to learn, to grow, and to
embrace it. I don't think he sees gender. I think he sees someone that has a
great basketball mind, that's tireless. Once you're given that opportunity, you
see great things come out of it."
Popovich spoke about wine whenever he could and offered his views on politics
and current events but rarely offered much insight into coaching decisions or
personnel matters. It was almost military-like secrecy, which made sense given
that Popovich was an Air Force graduate and was an expert on, among other
things, the rise and fall of the Soviet Union.
His love of country led to him taking a small side job during his San Antonio
tenure --- coaching the U.S. for the 2019 World Cup and the Tokyo Olympics two
years later. His World Cup team finished seventh, the worst placing ever for a
U.S. team with NBA players. His Olympic team won gold.
"It's impossible to separate it if you have been in the military," Popovich
said when asked about the parallels of being at the Air Force Academy and
coaching the national team. "I've had classmates that have fought in wars --- I
have not --- and some of them are no longer with us. You get an appreciation
for people who have sacrificed. So, when you have an opportunity to do this for
your country, it's impossible to say no. I love being part of it."
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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
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