Imperial Valley Press

Del Harris receives 2020’s Chuck Daly achievemen­t award

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LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — Del Harris was a small-college player and once those days were over his life’s goal was to be a successful small-college coach.

He did quite a bit more than that.

Harris was revealed Friday as this year’s winner of the Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievemen­t Award, as presented by the National Basketball Coaches Associatio­n. Harris coached in the NBA for 32 seasons, 14 of them as a head coach with Houston, Milwaukee and the Los Angeles Lakers.

Prior recipients are Frank Layden ( 2019), Doug Moe (2018), Al Attles and Hubie Brown (2017), K.C. Jones and Jerry Sloan (2016), Dick Motta (2015), Bernie Bickerstaf­f (2014), Bill Fitch (2013), Pat Riley (2012), Lenny Wilkens (2011), Tex Winter and Jack Ramsay (2010) and Tommy Heinsohn (2009).

“This one has a special meaning simply because, I was noting the tremendous names that have gotten this word before and knowing there are many others out there who have given their profession­al lives to the sport,” the 83-year-old Harris said. “Coaching basketball is a special thing. It’s a ministry, a service, depending on how you look at it. When you do it, you’re fitting into the lives of the players in a very special way and a special relationsh­ip can be developed.”

Harris has spent parts of seven decades in the game as a coach or player. He also coached more than 400 internatio­nal games, with experience coaching the national teams from Puerto Rico, China, Canada, the Dominican Republic and the U.S.

Over the years, Harris watched eight of his assistant coaches eventually become head coaches and two others become NBA general managers. He worked with seven centers who went to the Naismith Hall of Fame, including Yao Ming, Moses Malone and Shaquille O’Neal. He also coached Kobe Bryant and Magic Johnson, which he said is part of the way he’s typically introduced before he appears at clinics.

“I get introduced as Kobe’s first coach, Magic’s last coach and in the movie Space Jam,” Harris said. “That’s all they care about.”

Harris’ college career started in 1965 at Earlham College, where he went 175-70 in nine seasons. He coached briefly in the ABA in 1975 and his NBA career started as a Houston assistant the following year.

He went 556-457 in his 14 NBA seasons as a head coach.

GAME 2 REFS

The NBA selected James Capers as crew chief for Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Friday night. David Guthrie is the referee and Eric Lewis is the umpire.

This means that Tony Brothers, Tony Brown, Pat Fraher, John Goble, Scott Foster and Zach Zarba — the six remaining officials in the 12-man pool for this year’s finals — will all work either Game 3 or Game 4 of the title series between the Los Angeles Lakers and Miami Heat.

INJURY UPDATE

The NBA updated the injury report for Game 2 of the finals on Friday afternoon, and the Heat still listed starters Goran Dragic (torn plantar fascia) and Bam Adebayo (neck strain) as doubtful. Adebayo is also dealing with a shoulder injury that is not on the report.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI ?? In this 2008 file photo, Chicago Bulls assistant coach Del Harris looks on during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game against the Denver Nuggets in Denver.
AP FILE PHOTO/DAVID ZALUBOWSKI In this 2008 file photo, Chicago Bulls assistant coach Del Harris looks on during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game against the Denver Nuggets in Denver.

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