The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Udoka’s way: Finals run is a product of the coach’s vision

- By Kyle Hightower

The Boston Celtics’ BOSTON — transition from a team that was just outside the top tier of the Eastern Conference to being four wins away from the franchise’s 18th championsh­ip began the moment Ime Udoka grasped the microphone at his introducto­ry news conference last June.

Flanked by the Celtics’ co-owners and new president of basketball operations Brad Stevens, the first-time coach was asked what kind of stamp he hoped to put on his new team.

A smile on his face, Udoka didn’t hesitate to point out a shortcomin­g of his predecesso­r and new boss.

“We want to have a wellrounde­d team. I looked at the numbers overall, sorry to mention this Brad, but 27th in assists last year — we want to have more team basketball there,” Udoka said.

A year later, his pledge to build a culture on sharing the ball, accountabi­lity and gritty defense is no longer just an aspiration.

It’s the foundation of a team that’s back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 2010 and has Udoka on the cusp of becoming just the 10th coach to win a title in his first season.

Tyronn Lue (2016 Cleveland Cavaliers) is on that list, while Hall of Famer Bill Russell just missed it, winning the first of back-to-back titles his second season as a player-coach with Boston in 1968.

Like Udoka, who is of Nigerian descent, they are Black coaches who carved their places in a league in which coaches of color have often had to wait for opportunit­ies on the sideline.

That is even more underlined in a city like Boston with its complicate­d racial history, where Udoka can also join Russell, Doc Rivers (2008) and K.C. Jones (1984, 1986) as Black coaches to raise the Larry O’brien Trophy.

It took a while for Udoka’s first team to buy in after typical challenges like injuries were complicate­d more by unexpected absences due to COVID-19. It added up to a team that was nowhere close to playoff bound following a buzzer-beating loss to the New York Knicks on Jan. 6, dropping the Celtics to an 18-21 record and 11th place in the Eastern Conference.

But after a 33-10 run to close the regular season, and wins over the Brooklyn Nets, defending champion Milwaukee Bucks and topseeded Miami Heat in the first three rounds of the playoffs, here the Celtics are clearly a team built in Udoka’s image and driven by his leadership.

“He’s taught us things that we could learn and we taught him things,” point guard Marcus Smart said. “We knew that him being his first time, it wasn’t going to be easy. It was going to be hard. That’s just how it is, and that’s just the team we are, and that’s the mentality we picked up from him . ... When you’ve got a coach like that, it’s kind of hard not to follow.”

Udoka has benefited from what he heard from core players like Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Smart and even veteran Al Horford, who early on expressed a desire to be pushed and called out if necessary.

It happened on multiple occasions. After a Nov. 1 home loss to Chicago in which Boston surrendere­d a 19-point lead — one of several big leads the Celtics blew in the first half of the season — Smart, the team’s longest-tenured player, called out Tatum and Brown for their unwillingn­ess to pass the ball at times.

The comments prompted a players-only meeting soon after that loss, but Udoka also backed up Smart’s comments days later.

It led to uncomforta­ble conversati­ons in the locker room, but Udoka said it was also one of the moments that ultimately fueled their turnaround.

“I challenged their mental toughness. Some people liked it, some people didn’t,” he said. “The team responded as they have all year. And we really said let’s stop messing around and giving up these leads, because we had lost two or three 19-point leads and lost some games to Cleveland, Milwaukee on Christmas and Chicago earlier and then that New York game . ... I got tired of it. The team got tired of it.”

As the Celtics prepare to return to the Finals, Udoka is adamant that this group hasn’t reached its peak.

“First of all, we don’t hang banners for Eastern Conference championsh­ips in this organizati­on,” Udoka said. “... We’ve got bigger plans.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka, talking to guard Marcus Smart in Sunday’s Game 7 of the East finals against Miami, said testing his team’s mental toughness has been key, although there have been critics.
LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka, talking to guard Marcus Smart in Sunday’s Game 7 of the East finals against Miami, said testing his team’s mental toughness has been key, although there have been critics.

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