Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Coach Kidd gets his playoff shot against hometown Warriors

- Tribune News Service The Mercury News

Jason Kidd is back in town, and it’s not for a 30year reunion of St. Joseph High’s Class of 1992 in Alameda.

He is here to coach the Dallas Mavericks past the Warriors in the Western Conference Finals, which began last night at Chase Center.

“It’s always good to come home,” Kidd said Tuesday. “A lot of great things happened here as a kid growing up in the Bay. It’s always good.”

Kidd, 49, was such a teenage phenom that a shrine is on display just 16 miles from the Warriors’ new home, back over the Bay Bridge amid Alameda’s Victorian homes.

Take a step inside Kelly Gymnasium, turn to the right and a glass trophy case displays Kidd’s blue

St. Joseph jersey next to his Gatorade Player of the Year plaque. Team photos, autographe­d basketball­s, game tickets and other mementos honor the

Pilots’ state championsh­ips in 1991 and ’92.

Hanging from the whitepaint­ed rafters at midcourt is Kidd’s white jersey, with the subtitle “ALLAMERICA­N 1990-91-92.” That’s flanked by banners from those Division I-winning teams, featuring the names of every player and coach, alongside “32 – Jason Kidd.”

Inside that gym, Kidd took on more than prep foes in pick-up games. He faced Oakland legends such as Gary Payton, J.R. Rider and Brian Shaw, but also Warriors stars such as Tim Hardaway, Chris Mullin and Sarunas Marciulion­is.

“At first I thought Jason would get killed,” recalled Andre Cornwell, Kidd’s close friend since third grade and a St. Joseph teammate. “Then I saw him give Sarunas a hard time and it’s the first time I thought he could be a pro. He was a sophomore then.”

After two dynamic seasons at Cal, Kidd’s point-guard prowess led to a 19-year NBA career. He racked up 10 all-star selections, two Olympic gold medals (2000 and

‘08), and a 2018 induction to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfiel­d, Mass., where, yes, a handful of his St. Joseph classmates did gather for a reunion of sorts.

So, why bother with coaching now?

“Great question,”

Kidd responded before Tuesday’s practice. “I love the chess aspect of the game. I love the mental aspect of the game. I love helping players achieve their goals, financiall­y or winning. That’s what makes the game fun for me.

“As a player, I played to win,” Kidd added. “As a coach, we play to win. Your impact is a little bit less, but you’re here to help guys achieve their goals.”

Actually, Kidd was coaching up teammates at a young age, with the help of game film shot by his father, Steve, who passed away in 1999.

“Jason’s watched film since we were in fifth grade, of us playing basketball,” Cornwell said in a phone interview Tuesday from his Phoenix home. “I never understood why. I thought he was conceited because he scored 20 or 25 points, but it was more so him studying and watching, then educating me so much.”

Cornwell shadowed Kidd throughout his NBA career, and that meant impromptu shooting sessions that interrupte­d their offseason vacations in Lake Tahoe, San Diego or wherever Kidd felt the urge to work. It wasn’t until Kidd’s final season as a player, for the 2012-13 New York Knicks, that Cornwell caught wind of Kidd’s coaching goals.

Now he’s eight wins shy of becoming an NBA championsh­ip coach if his No. 4-seeded Mavs can upset the No. 3 Warriors, then win the Finals.

“I know he wants this bad,” Cornwell added. “Because of the home flavor and that it’s against the Warriors, he wants this series. Plus the fact he’s four games from the Finals, being this close, he’s excited.”

This is Kidd’s deepest playoff run as a coach, and it comes in his first season with the Mavericks.

“Jason is really unique, because he’s one of a few superstar, Hall of Famers who’s really gone on to become a great coach,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said.

A decade ago, Kidd won the lone NBA championsh­ip in his playing career (1994-2013) and it came in his second stint with the Mavericks, who originally drafted him No. 2 overall out of Cal.

Kidd lost in the conference semifinals in his first year as a coach, a one-and-done stint with the Brooklyn Nets (201314). He didn’t get out of the first round in two playoff runs with the Milwaukee Bucks, who dismissed him midway through the 2018 season. Kidd then became a Lakers assistant, won a ring in 2020, then found a perfect match back with Dallas.

“Now he’s more mature and more calm on the sideline,” Cornwell said. “No drinks are getting spilled,” like a 2013 sideline incident that cost Kidd a $50,000 fine for delaying a Nets’ loss.

“Now he’s going home and he’s again reached the highest heights in his profession, this time as a coach,” said Scott Lubeck, Kidd’s roommate during

St. Joseph’s road trips to high-profile tournament­s in Florida and South Carolina. “As a player,

Jason always had the ability to see things that were going to happen before they’d happen. As a coach, he’s the same way.”

The Mavericks reached these Western Conference finals with their first two series wins since Kidd led them to the 2011 title, when he was 38, the oldest starting point guard to win a championsh­ip.

Kidd’s coaching style? “Jason’s always been a defensive-minded coach, a very creative coach going back to Brooklyn and Milwaukee,” Kerr said. “He’s not afraid to attack and blitz. That’s part of the way he sees the game.”

That’s why Kerr and the Warriors expect Kidd to “blitz” Curry with multiple defenders, hoping to replicate a regular-season formula that helped contain Curry in the clutch.

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