爵士队教练Jerry Sloan闪电退休,一代传奇划下句点

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/28 22:40:27


为爵士执教25年,还是Larry Bird跟Magic Johnson的时代啊!当年惊心动魄的爵士VS公牛总冠军争霸还让人历历在目。Boozer已经先走了,DW与老教头不合,前老板Larry H. Miller已逝,今年爵士整体状况就是一个不对劲,Sloan大概也没什麽好恋栈。稍早还签了一个延长一年的合约,令人不胜欷嘘啊!

Sloan leaves Jazz as epitome of consistency


Posted Feb 10 2011 7:36PM

Jerry Sloan grew up on a farm in McLeansboro, Ill. So he always knew there was a time to take the crops in.

That it came this week instead of last week, today rather than tomorrow, is irrelevant.

"You do it 'til they don't want you anymore," Sloan once said. "Or it stops being fun."

In this case, probably more than a little bit of both.

Maybe it was halftime of Wednesday night's home loss to the Bulls,following a locker room clash with star guard Deron Williams(DW公开批评Sloan已经不是新闻,还放话你我只有一人会留在爵士) , when Sloan stopped hearing the calliope music inside his head and decided to resign as coach of the Jazz.

Or perhaps it was the week before when he agreed to a one-year contract extension through next season, but cautioned that it didn't necessarily mean he'd be around next season.

After 23 seasons standing, stomping and screaming in front of the Jazz bench, the 68-year-old Sloan was aware of the nearing expiration date stamped on his carton, but it never changed his demeanor or affected his style.

How much has the league, the game, the world changed in the time that he's been stalking those rabid sidelines in Salt Lake City?

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, 40 current NBA players were not even born when Sloan succeeded Frank Layden as coach of the Jazz on Dec. 9, 1988 and began carving out a plain-spoken, no-excuses legacy that is not likely to be matched.

"My time is up. It's time to move on," Sloan said through tears at the official news conference. "I thought about it a few days ago. It just seemed like this was the time to do it.

"I only have so much energy left. My energy level dropped off a bit....Let's move forward. That's the only thing I can tell you.

"I've had confrontations with players since I've been in the league, a number of guys. But those things are minor as far as going forward."

What was major is the impact that Sloan had on stabilizing the Utah franchise, establishing the Jazz as a perennial playoff team, and forging a common identity with his bookend superstars Karl Malone and John Stockton. Both are among the greatest players in the history of the game. Both are with Sloan in the Hall of Fame.

More than any of that, both are reflections of his respect for an honest effort.

"It's showing up every day and putting the best into whatever you are doing that tells who you are," Sloan said.

That's the simultaneously majestic and simple description of the Jazz under Sloan: workers.

The durable Malone played in 80 or more games in 17 of the 18 seasons he was with the Jazz. Stockton played in all 82 games in 16 of his 19 NBA seasons.

What all three shared was the empty feeling of having never reached the pinnacle of winning a championship, though coming agonizingly close with back-to-back losses to Michael Jordan and the Bulls in 1997 and 1998.

"Were we disappointed that we didn't win those?" Sloan has said. "Sure, but I didn't feel bad. If you go and play and you put everything into it, there's never any reason to feel bad.

"To me, the toughest part is not the losing. It's coming back after you've lost and seeing who you are then. That's the most critical thing to me. A lot of guys say, 'Oh, well, I tried. It's not quite as important anymore.' I just want to know if you're just gonna work as hard today and tomorrow. That's all I care about. I want to know if you still can pick yourself up and do it again."

For more than two decades, his teams always did.

"People always ask me what's changed over the years," said Sloan's longtime assistant and friend Phil Johnson, who also resigned. "We all evolve. We mature. But the major things have not changed with Jerry. His consistency is probably the key to all of his success.

"The basic philosophy and premise of how we want to play and how we want players to act, both on and off the court, has not changed."

Sloan's was a style that ran up a 1,221-803 career coaching record, making him the third-winningest coach in the NBA as his 23 years on the job with the Jazz made the him the longest-tenured coach in American professional sports. Yet somehow he was never named Coach of the Year.

"Hell, that's the kiss of death," he always chuckled. "They give that to you and then usually fire you a year or two later."

His was a philosophy that was cultivated from seedlings out of that hardscrabble upbringing as one of 10 farm kids raised by a single mother in McLeansboro, who rose at 4:30 a.m. to do his chores, walked 1 ½ miles and then hitch-hiked the rest of the way to school so that he could arrive for 7 a.m. basketball practice.

His was an innate, relentless drive that, early in his rookie NBA season as a player with the Bulls, had him showing up at Chicago Stadium at 4:30 p.m. for a home game, getting his ankles taped and was fully dressed in uniform and sitting at his locker when head coach Dick Motta arrived at the arena. Motta told Sloan to get a hobby.

That drive took him through an 11-year playing career, a stint with the Bulls as head coach that got him fired and then a run of nearly a quarter century in charge of the Jazz, never taking anything for granted.

"I entered every day knowing this could be my last day," Sloan said. "I know that sounds corny. I'm a corny guy."

A plain-spoken farmer at heart, who just knew when it was time to rotate the crops.

Fran Blinebury has covered the NBA since 1977. You can e-mail him here and follow him on twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.

为爵士执教25年,还是Larry Bird跟Magic Johnson的时代啊!当年惊心动魄的爵士VS公牛总冠军争霸还让人历历在目。Boozer已经先走了,DW与老教头不合,前老板Larry H. Miller已逝,今年爵士整体状况就是一个不对劲,Sloan大概也没什麽好恋栈。稍早还签了一个延长一年的合约,令人不胜欷嘘啊!

Sloan leaves Jazz as epitome of consistency


Posted Feb 10 2011 7:36PM

Jerry Sloan grew up on a farm in McLeansboro, Ill. So he always knew there was a time to take the crops in.

That it came this week instead of last week, today rather than tomorrow, is irrelevant.

"You do it 'til they don't want you anymore," Sloan once said. "Or it stops being fun."

In this case, probably more than a little bit of both.

Maybe it was halftime of Wednesday night's home loss to the Bulls,following a locker room clash with star guard Deron Williams(DW公开批评Sloan已经不是新闻,还放话你我只有一人会留在爵士) , when Sloan stopped hearing the calliope music inside his head and decided to resign as coach of the Jazz.

Or perhaps it was the week before when he agreed to a one-year contract extension through next season, but cautioned that it didn't necessarily mean he'd be around next season.

After 23 seasons standing, stomping and screaming in front of the Jazz bench, the 68-year-old Sloan was aware of the nearing expiration date stamped on his carton, but it never changed his demeanor or affected his style.

How much has the league, the game, the world changed in the time that he's been stalking those rabid sidelines in Salt Lake City?

According to the Elias Sports Bureau, 40 current NBA players were not even born when Sloan succeeded Frank Layden as coach of the Jazz on Dec. 9, 1988 and began carving out a plain-spoken, no-excuses legacy that is not likely to be matched.

"My time is up. It's time to move on," Sloan said through tears at the official news conference. "I thought about it a few days ago. It just seemed like this was the time to do it.

"I only have so much energy left. My energy level dropped off a bit....Let's move forward. That's the only thing I can tell you.

"I've had confrontations with players since I've been in the league, a number of guys. But those things are minor as far as going forward."

What was major is the impact that Sloan had on stabilizing the Utah franchise, establishing the Jazz as a perennial playoff team, and forging a common identity with his bookend superstars Karl Malone and John Stockton. Both are among the greatest players in the history of the game. Both are with Sloan in the Hall of Fame.

More than any of that, both are reflections of his respect for an honest effort.

"It's showing up every day and putting the best into whatever you are doing that tells who you are," Sloan said.

That's the simultaneously majestic and simple description of the Jazz under Sloan: workers.

The durable Malone played in 80 or more games in 17 of the 18 seasons he was with the Jazz. Stockton played in all 82 games in 16 of his 19 NBA seasons.

What all three shared was the empty feeling of having never reached the pinnacle of winning a championship, though coming agonizingly close with back-to-back losses to Michael Jordan and the Bulls in 1997 and 1998.

"Were we disappointed that we didn't win those?" Sloan has said. "Sure, but I didn't feel bad. If you go and play and you put everything into it, there's never any reason to feel bad.

"To me, the toughest part is not the losing. It's coming back after you've lost and seeing who you are then. That's the most critical thing to me. A lot of guys say, 'Oh, well, I tried. It's not quite as important anymore.' I just want to know if you're just gonna work as hard today and tomorrow. That's all I care about. I want to know if you still can pick yourself up and do it again."

For more than two decades, his teams always did.

"People always ask me what's changed over the years," said Sloan's longtime assistant and friend Phil Johnson, who also resigned. "We all evolve. We mature. But the major things have not changed with Jerry. His consistency is probably the key to all of his success.

"The basic philosophy and premise of how we want to play and how we want players to act, both on and off the court, has not changed."

Sloan's was a style that ran up a 1,221-803 career coaching record, making him the third-winningest coach in the NBA as his 23 years on the job with the Jazz made the him the longest-tenured coach in American professional sports. Yet somehow he was never named Coach of the Year.

"Hell, that's the kiss of death," he always chuckled. "They give that to you and then usually fire you a year or two later."

His was a philosophy that was cultivated from seedlings out of that hardscrabble upbringing as one of 10 farm kids raised by a single mother in McLeansboro, who rose at 4:30 a.m. to do his chores, walked 1 ½ miles and then hitch-hiked the rest of the way to school so that he could arrive for 7 a.m. basketball practice.

His was an innate, relentless drive that, early in his rookie NBA season as a player with the Bulls, had him showing up at Chicago Stadium at 4:30 p.m. for a home game, getting his ankles taped and was fully dressed in uniform and sitting at his locker when head coach Dick Motta arrived at the arena. Motta told Sloan to get a hobby.

That drive took him through an 11-year playing career, a stint with the Bulls as head coach that got him fired and then a run of nearly a quarter century in charge of the Jazz, never taking anything for granted.

"I entered every day knowing this could be my last day," Sloan said. "I know that sounds corny. I'm a corny guy."

A plain-spoken farmer at heart, who just knew when it was time to rotate the crops.

Fran Blinebury has covered the NBA since 1977. You can e-mail him here and follow him on twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.
 曝斯隆辞职因与德隆不和 公牛那场两人差点打起来
http://sports.sina.com.cn  2011年02月11日09:08  新浪体育

新浪体育讯 北京时间2月11日消息,爵士主教练杰里-斯隆于当地时间周四(2月10日)辞职,球队于当地时间下午3点举行发布会正式宣布此事。据雅虎体育专家马克-斯皮尔斯爆料,和球队头号球星德隆-威廉姆斯失和是导致斯隆辞职的原因。

  在周三对公牛比赛半场的时候,德隆和斯隆的矛盾爆发了出来, 斯隆和德隆之间的火花如此强烈,尽管矛盾当时就结束了,当时有两个爵士球员甚至担心两人会打起来。

  斯隆与德隆的关系在这个赛季变得越来越差,而据联盟内部消息说,老帅已经厌倦了处理和球队最好球员的关系。这种挫败感在斯隆和德隆半场的更衣室冲突下变得升级了。

  “他在半场的时候决定自己不干了,”联盟内部人士说,“他感觉老板更听威廉姆斯的,不像以前那样听自己的了。他不干了。”

  另外一个内部消息说,斯隆厌倦了威廉姆斯“把所有的事情怪在别人头上”。虽然德隆2012年夏天能成为自由球员,但是他是几个关键球员离开爵士后最好的也是最稳定的人。他向来以强势的领导能力和对胜利的渴望著称。

  另外,据内部消息人士称,斯隆曾经告诉爵士老板格雷格-米勒,如果这是他想要运营球队的方法,那么可以在不用自己当主教练的情况下完成。

  至于被任命为新主帅的助教泰隆-科宾,有消息表示,爵士希望他能成为未来的长期拼图。
taoweihust 发表于 2011-2-11 11:02

接掌江山不久的少主,把前朝遗老踢走?之前就猜想可能会发生这种事...
铁腕主帅,但逃不掉老板只炒教练不炒头号打牌的NBA宿命啊
老教练啊,可惜的就是碰到乔丹了,要不然至少也有一个总冠军了
onepiece 发表于 2011-2-11 11:07

根据新闻上写的发布会上斯隆的讲话,很明显是跟某个球员不和,这个球员定是德隆无疑了
“我的时代结束了。是时候从这个地方离开了。”流着泪的斯隆在发布会上说。“几天前我就开始考虑这件事情,我觉得现在是离开的最佳时机。”

  “我的身体里只剩下这点能量了,我只能选择离开,这是我唯一能告诉你们的。”

  “进入联盟之后,我和很多球员都有过冲突,很多。但是这些事对我来说,都微不足道。”
taoweihust 发表于 2011-2-11 13:05

直接导火线当然是DW。不过比照前老板当年力挺Sloan,把基里连科冷冻,新老板现在明显往DW那边倒。
芝加哥永远怀念你!
伟大的队员&伟大的对手!
老爷子的巅峰时刻是站在乔丹的对面的时候,在和公牛的比赛结束后辞职,真的让人不禁唏嘘感叹!
在一个论坛看到这样的评价:
十三年前我为神的那最后一投欢呼雀跃,今天居然觉得要是那投没中可能也不错...

不知道为什么,作为曾经公牛的球迷竟然真的泪流满面……
那个时代真的结束了
老帅以这种方式离开让人寒心。从此以后爵士将是我看球永远的敌人
一个时代,乔丹的时代,彻底的结束了
一个时代结束了····
这辈子可以看到不少nba时代的结束
一个时代结束了
斯隆的运气不是一般的背,爵士的巅峰期遇到乔丹不说,自己练个最佳教练都没得到。
再看看米切尔,布朗这种水货居然都能评为最佳教练,这简直就是讽刺。
斯隆是传奇
支持他一下
老爷子当年手下多少牛人都服服帖帖,德隆真是不知道天高地厚的家伙!
情比金软 发表于 2011-2-14 21:36


    时代不一样了,从前的老板告诉斯隆:“我相信你,这就是你的球队”,但是以前的老板去世了,一朝天子一朝臣啊
大侠@随风飘 发表于 2011-2-14 23:50

正解啊
+10000
德隆.威廉姆斯就一SB!
对了,这几天除了走了Sloan之外,三分神射Jeff Hornacek回来当爵士队助理教练。
德隆转会了,回过头再来看斯隆的离开..................
onepiece 发表于 2011-2-16 18:23
老人了。算是发挥余热还是稳定军心?
爵士新老板摆明就是不想付奢侈税就对了....
{:wuyu:}