Austin American-Statesman

Ginobili breaks the mold

Argentine helped Popovich expand his coaching style.

- By Jon Krawczynsk­i

On a January night in Indiana more than a decade ago, 26-year-old Manu Ginobili was sitting on the floor near the end of the San Antonio Spurs bench as coach Gregg Popovich approached.

It was Ginobili’s second season in the NBA, and the celebrated Euroleague star was still trying to find his bearings in Popovich’s rigid system.

The coach glared at Ginobili, who was off to a rough start against the Pacers, and barked the kind of demand veiled as a question he’s become known for in his two decades with the Spurs.

“Are you ready to be a human being?” Popovich said, sprinkling a little profanity in for dramatic effect.

Ginobili nodded sheepishly, pulled himself up and checked back into the game.

That was in 2004, the infant stages of a union that Tony Parker has said he wasn’t sure was going to work. Ginobili played with reckless abandon, and Popovich was determined to saddle the wild stallion and turn him into a discipline­d player.

What ended up happening was something entirely different. The crusty old jockey started to just grab onto the horse’s mane, hold on for dear life and feel the wind fly through what little hair he had left. And he found it exhilarati­ng.

“Everything doesn’t happen in a day, but as you watch him play and realize the competitor that he is, he’s quite unique as a competitor and as a talent,” Popovich said. “Closing your mouth and not trying to coach so much is better, and letting that gifted player show you what he can do and how he can help your team win.”

Together they have won four championsh­ips, including the one last June. And while the exacting Popovich has built the most enduring success story in modern American sports with a my-way-or-the-highway approach, Ginobili is one of the few players to convince the coach to let him color outside the lines.

“I think it was a great accomplish­ment. Not only me, I think Tony also made him change or see things in a different way,” Ginobili said. “The truth is that he thought that was the way to go to make us better. It’s not that I talked him into it. He started to see that maybe we were going to be more successful and less predictabl­e playing a different way.”

If Popovich appears to be uncompromi­sing now, just try to think what he was like before Ginobili arrived in 2002.

“Pop had a way of coaching and Manu came and he was a little bit like a free bird, a little bit like a good (kind of ) crazy, just making stuff happen,” Parker said. “Pop was smart enough to adjust and Manu understood what Pop wanted, and they found a happy middle.”

With a military background, Popovich was a big believer in structure. His players have often spoken about the coach putting them in specific roles with little room for freelancin­g.

But that is what Manu does best. He reached great heights by playing with a fearlessne­ss that blitzed opponents from all angles. Sometimes that led to a wild turnover or a forced jumper in traffic.

For Ginobili, those turnovers were just the cost of doing business. For Popovich, they were a fork dragging down a chalk board.

“At the beginning it was me trying to adjust to him. He didn’t care about adjusting to me,” Ginobili said. “Then, slowly, I started to gain his confidence.”

Ginobili had to compromise as well, accepting a role as a sixth man because Popovich preferred his aggressive­ness and playmaking to help the second unit.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Manu Ginobili’s fifirst days with the Spurs were diffifficu­lt as his reckless playing style clashed with coach Gregg Popovich’s discipline­d approach.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ ASSOCIATED PRESS Manu Ginobili’s fifirst days with the Spurs were diffifficu­lt as his reckless playing style clashed with coach Gregg Popovich’s discipline­d approach.

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