The Sun (Lowell)

Popovich had reservatio­ns, but Spurs coach ready for restart

- By Tim Reynolds

Gregg Popovich fondly remembers his freshman year at the United States Air Force Academy, even though as a firstyear cadet he was extremely limited in where he could go and what activities were allowed.

Lockdown at Walt Disney World, he said, reminded him of those days.

“But two days, anybody can do that,” the San Antonio coach said Saturday.

He made it through that freshman year with ease, made it through the two days of in-room Disney quarantine as well, and now the longest-tenured and oldest active coach in the league is free to roam within the NBA bubble in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. That doesn’t mean he didn’t have reservatio­ns about being part of the NBA restart, given the ongoing issues of racial strife, social inequality and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“If you’re a thinking person, you’re going to look at all sides of a situation,” Popovich said. “And, especially being 71 years old, I thought, ‘Is this where I want to spend a lot of my time, doing this, under these circumstan­ces?’”

The answer was yes, and Popovich was running his first practice in more than four months Saturday as the Spurs began getting ready for a playoff push. When the season resumes July 30, San Antonio will be 12th in the Western Conference — only a half-game from ninth, where the Spurs would have to be and within four games of the No. 8 spot to force their way into a play-in series.

“I honestly do believe — it’s not just being a loyal soldier of the NBA, I’ve done my share of criticizin­g here and there when I thought it was necessary — I don’t know where else you would be as safe as we are right now,” Popovich said.

But Popovich’s age called into question whether he should be at the restart.

The Centers for Disease Control says people 65 and over can be more vulnerable to the virus. The NBA has three head coaches who have celebrated that birthday; New Orleans’ Alvin Gentry, 65; Houston’s Mike D’antoni, 69, and Popovich. Pelicans assistant Jeff Bzdelik, 67, and Los Angeles Lakers’ assistant Lionel Hollins, 66, are not at Disney for the restart.

“We have special guidelines and special things that we have to abide by,” Spurs forward Rudy Gay said. “I think going into this bubble, everybody has to take the proper precaution­s and do their own part ... not just our team, but other teams. It’s definitely serious. It’s a serious issue. But we vow to do the right thing.”

Popovich points to rising virus numbers in Texas as proof that on the NBA campus, where players and coaches will be tested daily and exposure to the outside world is basically cut off, his health shouldn’t be more at risk.

And to him, this is much more than basketball. The NBA restart will be about raising awareness on social issues and combating racism, and Popovich wants to be a big part of that conversati­on.

“If this bubble works, I’m safer here than I would be in Texas,” Popovich said. “And since the decision was made to do this to start the season again, under these circumstan­ces, with all the precaution­s, what a great opportunit­y.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Freshmen at the United States Air Force Academy are called doolies, and the experience for those first-year cadets can be extremely difficult. San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich, class of 1970, hasn’t forgotten those days. And for the San Antonio coach, a couple days of lockdown at Walt Disney World brought back the memories of doolie life.
AP FILE Freshmen at the United States Air Force Academy are called doolies, and the experience for those first-year cadets can be extremely difficult. San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich, class of 1970, hasn’t forgotten those days. And for the San Antonio coach, a couple days of lockdown at Walt Disney World brought back the memories of doolie life.

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