Los Angeles Times

Innovator of NBA’s triangle offense

TEX WINTER, 1922 - 2018

- Basketball coach Winter dies at 96

Tex Winter was the innovator of the triangle offense used by the Michael Jordan Bulls and Kobe Bryant Lakers. B5

Tex Winter, the innovator of the triangle offense, used by teams that won 10 of the last 19 NBA championsh­ips, died Wednesday. He was 96.

Kansas State University, where he coached from 1953 to ’68, announced that he died in Manhattan, Kan.

Winter spent nine seasons with the Lakers as an assistant coach and consultant, and proudly claimed to have earned a basketball-related paycheck for 63 years.

After compiling a resume filled primarily with college basketball, he joined the NBA’s Chicago Bulls in 1985 as an assistant coach and began a decades-long partnershi­p with head coach Phil Jackson, who guided the Bulls to six championsh­ips while employing a passing, team-oriented offense that Winter didn’t invent but sharpened to perfection.

Winter came to the Lakers when Jackson was hired to coach them in 1999, where his offense again led to more NBA trophies as the foundation of four championsh­ips, including one in 2009.

Winter’s offense was based on a share-the-ball philosophy that didn’t always sit well with modern, stats-minded athletes.

Bulls superstar Michael Jordan initially ridiculed the system and Kobe Bryant said in 2001 that “the triangle does win championsh­ips in June ... but, December, January, it’s boring as hell.”

A few years later, though, Bryant defended the triangle, perhaps with a touch of revisionis­t history.

“I’ve said it a million times before and I’ll say it again: I’ve never had a problem with the triangle,” he said. “I actually love it. It’s a great offense. It’s predicated on ball movement, on spacing, on penetratio­n.”

Lakers controllin­g owner Jeanie Buss praised Winter in a statement Wednesday: “Tex helped lead the team to four NBA championsh­ips” and was “a wonderful man” off the court.

Winter wrote a 320-page book on the intricacie­s of the offense, called the triangle because it overloads one side of the basketball court with a triangle formation of players. It emphasizes crisp passing and often gives a player an open shot after the defense lapses.

Winter gained a reputation as a basketball whiz, a professor with a clipboard, and once starred in an IBM commercial in which he charged an outrageous consulting fee after giving a quick lesson on the triangle offense to a team of former NBA stars.

Morice Fredrick Winter was born Feb. 25, 1922, in Wellington, Texas. His father died during Winter’s preteen years, so Winter’s mother moved the family to Huntington Park to live with Tex’s older sister. (In his new state, he quickly earned the nickname “Tex” because of his twang.)

Winter was an accomplish­ed pole vaulter and, despite being several inches below 6 feet tall, enjoyed playing basketball while at Huntington Park High.

He briefly attended Compton College before heading to Oregon State University in 1943 on a track scholarshi­p. He left college in order to learn to fly fighter planes, but World War II ended without his seeing action in combat.

Winter enrolled at USC, where he played basketball alongside future Lakers coach Bill Sharman and learned the triangle under USC coach Sam Barry.

Winter took his first coaching job as an assistant with Kansas State and eventually became the Wildcats’ head coach from 1954 to ’68. He still holds a school record with a .691 winning percentage. He suffered a stroke in April 2009 while attending a reunion for the Wildcats’ team that went to the college basketball Final Four in 1958.

Winter also coached college basketball at Northweste­rn, Marquette, Washington, Long Beach State and Louisiana State, and in the NBA for the Houston Rockets.

“I’m getting too old,” he told The Times in April 2009 of continuing to coach. “I would feel a whole lot better about it if I didn’t have these shingles . ... The thing I don’t want to become is too much of a distractio­n if my health doesn’t hold up.”

In fact, Jackson lobbied numerous times for Winter to be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Winter was inducted in 2011.

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