Hartford Courant

Butler’s agent credits Thibodeau with helping springboar­d rise to stardom

- By Stefan Bondy

Any sports agent worthy of the job prioritize­s his or her client over the team. It’s about maximizing earnings and happiness.

Bernie Lee, who has represente­d Jimmy Butler since 2017, understood that when his client was racking up heavy minutes with the Timberwolv­es.

“Every player in the NBA, in some shape or form, is a depreciati­ng asset,” he explains. But Lee also understood Butler’s mindset, and he learned quickly to trust Tom Thibodeau.

“Obviously, I wantJimmy to play in the NBA for 30 years because we’ll get 30 years worthof contracts. But the reality is, everybody’s got a limited window to go get the things that they want,” Lee tells the Daily News in a phone interview before Game 4 of the NBA Finals. “Jimmy’s wired like this. And every great guy that I’ve been around is wired like this — Thibs is wired like this — would you rather have 30 mediocre years or 10 great ones? That kind of drives you to compete. It’s something you really need.”

To underscore his point about seizing opportunit­ies, Thibodeau used Isiah Thomas as an example in a conversati­on with Lee. Thomas, a two-time champion and all-time great, played just 13 seasons in the NBA before retiring at 32 years old because of injuries.

“I don’t think he left anything on the table,” Lee says. “He went out and did it, and he did things that are going to be remembered forever.”

Butler, of course, hasn’t reached the mountainto­p like Thomas but has also displayed no evidence of breaking down. At 31, he’s coming off a historic performanc­e in Game 3 of the NBAFinals, carrying a Heat team that is emblematic of his own career: underdog, gritty, selfless.

The vast majority of the credit belongs to Butler and his maniacal work ethic. But Lee also gives a nod to Thibodeau, who coached Butler at two different spots (Chicago, Minnesota) and in six of his nine NBA seasons. Lee says Thibodeau’s straightfo­rward and tireless approach establishe­d a standard for Butler’s ascension from an unknown 30th draft pick to superstar.

“One of my favorite human beings on planet earth,” says Lee, who represente­d two other players (MikeJamesa­ndJohnLuca­s III) who played for Thibodeau in Chicago. “Jimmy’s having a lot of success just based onthefound­ation that Thibs created for him.

“With Thibs, there’s no guess. It’s black-and-white. No grey area. He’s going to tell you, not only exactly what to do, but also how to do it. And the base is this — if you’re going to listen, if you’re going to work hard and work to the best of your ability to accomplish the things he’s asking you for, you’re going to have success. So it becomes like a very linear process andhe’s never going [to] create unknowns, you never have to guess where you’re at with him.”

In today’s NBA of player empowermen­t, Thibodeau’s demanding style could fall under scrutiny or require adaptation. Kyrie Irving, for instance, recently declared that his Nets don’t always need a head coach, noting that himself and Kevin Durant could take turns guiding the team. Around the NBA, tough coaching is being replaced by relationsh­ip coaching.

But while Thibodeau reportedly clashed with players in Minnesota — Karl-Anthony Towns, in particular — Lee says he never witnessed any issues with the coach. He shoots down the idea that some players aren’t built to play for Thibodeau.

“I would actually tell you the opposite. I’ve never seen someone not get along with him. I think some of that is overblown as well. I think different guys have different degrees of success with them. You can’t have a problem with Thibs because you don’t have to guess in terms of where you stand with them,” Lee says. “And there’s an old-school mentality there where you can lie about a lot of things but you can’t lie to yourself. And Thibs is going to tell you about yourself. And if there’s something that needs to be corrected either you’re going to do it or you’re not.

“But again, I never really saw anybody have an out-and-out issue with him.”

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/ CHICAGOTRI­BUNE ?? Jimmy Butler and Tom Thibodeau celebrate their win over Serbia in the goldmedal game on Aug. 21, 2016 at Carioca Arena 1 in Rio de Janeiro.
BRIAN CASSELLA/ CHICAGOTRI­BUNE Jimmy Butler and Tom Thibodeau celebrate their win over Serbia in the goldmedal game on Aug. 21, 2016 at Carioca Arena 1 in Rio de Janeiro.

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