Toronto Star

NBA: Hammon as head coach a natural progressio­n, Gasol says

- K.C. JOHNSON CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Leave it to the erudite Pau Gasol to place an exclamatio­n point between the ellipses.

Gasol, long known as one of the NBA’s most cerebral figures, penned an eloquent essay posted on The Players’ Tribune on Friday that bolstered the head coaching candidacy of Becky Hammon.

The Spurs assistant coach made history in 2014 when Gregg Popovich hired her for his staff and again in 2015 when she led the franchise’s NBA Summer League team to the title in Las Vegas. Hammon is poised to interview for the head coaching vacancy with the Bucks, the same franchise she interviewe­d with last summer for its vacant general manager position.

In both instances, Hammon is the first female candidate to be considered for such positions.

“I’ve played with some of the best players of this generation … and I’ve played under two of the sharpest minds in the history of sports, in Phil Jackson and Gregg Popovich,” Gasol wrote. “And I’m telling you: Becky Hammon can coach. I’m not saying she can coach pretty well. I’m not saying she can coach enough to get by. I’m not saying she can coach almost at the level of the NBA’s male coaches. I’m saying: Becky Hammon can coach NBA basketball. Period.”

Gasol, who played for the Bulls from 2014-16 before signing with the Spurs, both downplayed and celebrated the progressiv­e nature of Hammon’s candidacy. He downplayed it in the sense that her mind and acumen make her a natural candidate. He celebrated it in the sense it’s another example of the NBA’s forward thinking and inclusive nature.

“It’s this beautiful thing, you know, to see the NBA begin to reflect the larger world,” Gasol wrote. “Because it’s such a big world, isn’t it? And I think any time you can expand your horizons, toward something new and meaningful … it can only make you a better person.”

Gasol, who also alluded to the Suns hiring the first Europeanbo­rn head coach in Igor Kokoskov, then urged the league not to be satisfied and to keep growing.

The NBA’s history would suggest it will keep growing. It has multiple minorities in coaching and executive and league management positions.

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