The Mercury News

Zaza Pachulia shares his NBA success with his homeland.

Patriot: Zaza Pachulia’s home republic is never far from his mind as the center does his best to share his success with his family and countrymen

- By Mark Medina mmedina@bayareanew­sgroup.com

As soon as he landed at the airport of his home country, Zaza Pachulia seemingly relived the Warriors’ championsh­ip parade in Oakland. In reality, Pachulia was greeted by friends, family and Warriors fans in Tbilisi in the Republic of Georgia.

Even for someone who returns every offseason, Pachulia did not fully anticipate what he saw when he visited his homeland in early August. Pachulia says it’s “the slowest month in Georgia” since plenty of its citizens take extended vacations to unwind and escape the country’s humidity.

None of those variables mattered, as Pachulia took the Larry O’Brien Trophy to the Republic of Georgia to celebrate his first NBA championsh­ip in 14 seasons.

“There were still thousands of people that came to the trophy celebratio­n,” Pachulia recalled in an interview with Bay Area

News Group. “You can feel the energy and the vibe around you.”

Pachulia expects to feel similar vibes when the Warriors (24-6) host the Memphis Grizzlies (9-21) on Wednesday at Oracle Arena. Questions loom if Pachulia will play after missing five of the past six games because of a sore left shoulder. Regardless, Warriors fans who attend the game will receive bobblehead­s that capture Pachu-

“It wasn’t easy to leave the country. To make the decision to leave everything? I was born and raised with all my friends and family members. It was a huge step in my career.” — Zaza Pachulia

lia’s likeness and feature the Georgian flag. Before tipoff, the Warriors will also have Georgian singers perform the American national anthem.

“Having your own bobblehead is kind of cool. This is an honor. It’s cool and something that will stay on my shelf,” Pachulia said before touching on hearing native Georgians singing the American national anthem. “I feel like it’s good for both sides. I’m so lucky to have this opportunit­y to make both sides happy.”

Pachulia said he has felt lucky lately for a number of reasons.

After winning his first NBA title, Pachulia resigned with the Warriors on a one-year deal worth $3.1 million in hopes of winning another. On Aug. 7, Pachulia received the Order of Honor from Georgia President Giorgi Margverlas­hvili, a prestigiou­s award bestowed upon citizens who make an outstandin­g contributi­on to the country.

A first for his country

Pachulia has helped his native country through the national team and his self-named academy. And he remains grateful and inspired in becoming the first player from the Republic of Georgia to win an NBA title.

“The love of this game has been with me since I heard the word basketball itself,” Pachulia said. “The love is even deeper right now. The more time you spend, the more effort you spend in doing something.”

At age 8, Pachulia’s love for basketball mirrored someone becoming attracted to looks over substance. Pachulia’s late father wanted his son to wrestle. Pachulia’s mother wanted him to play basketball after starring for the former Soviet Union’s women’s basketball team. Pachulia’s mom won the argument when she showed Zaza a photo of a basketball player. He found a basketball player more visually appealing because of height and muscle.

“I chose the right route, even though my dad was a little bit pissed at the beginning,” Pachulia said, laughing. “Then of course, he respected my decision. He was loving it.”

Pachulia’s infatuatio­n quickly morphed into something more substantia­l. In the winter of 1997,

he was called to the principal’s office, and it was not because he was in trouble. The Turkish national team wanted him after becoming intrigued with the 13-year-old’s size (6-feet-4) and potential.

The idea seemed enticing. After all, Pachulia spent his childhood in Georgia practicing in a freezing gym that required him to wear a hat, sweater and double layers of pants. In Istanbul, Turkey, Pachulia would join the country’s junior circuit while attending school. And yet …

“It wasn’t easy to leave the country. To make the decision to leave everything? I was born and raised with all my friends and family members,” Pachulia said. “It was a huge step in my career. Now you’re committed to basketball.”

Pachulia made that commitment because his parents showed their commitment by moving with him. More challenges awaited, though. In the summer of 1998, Pachulia’s father died during a routine doctor’s visit. Pachulia’s mom still worked various jobs to supplement his income with the national team to keep the hoops dream alive.

“Losing my dad made me more mature,” Pachulia said. “Being an only child, I didn’t have the right to act childish. I had to step up. I was earning money already in Turkey. I felt like I needed to protect the family and protect my mom and be a man.”

Dedicating the season

Without that maturity and monetary support to attend private school, Pachulia believed he would have never made it to the NBA. Instead, the Orlando Magic drafted the

19-year-old Pachulia with the 42nd pick of the 2003 draft.

Since then, Pachulia has become one of five Georgians to play in the NBA and has had various stops as an effective defender and screen setter in Orlando (2003-04), Milwaukee (2004-05), Atlanta (2005-13), Milwaukee (2013-15), Dallas (2015-16) and Golden State (2016-present).

His long NBA career has enabled Pachulia to start a basketball academy in Tbilisi for the past three years that currently coaches 700 children. With help from the Georgian government, Pachulia’s academy has new amenities with its court, locker room and weight room.

While the academy features two-hour practices, it also devotes 45 minutes of English classes. Yet, Pachulia also held out hope this could eventually become the pipeline that produces the country’s next basketball stars.

“My goal is to have pros and raise good basketball players that are going to help the country, play for the national team and have amazing careers either in Europe or here in the United States,” Pachulia said. “Hopefully that day is going to come.”

Until then, Pachulia plans to honor his native country in other ways. He will continue to make summer visits. He has an open invitation for any Warriors teammate that wants to take an all-expenses paid trip there in the offseason. And Wednesday, the Warriors will recognize the place that shaped Pachulia’s journey.

“I dedicated the whole season and the whole championsh­ip to my country,” Pachulia said. “I really felt a lot of them took it that way. They are champions.”

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Zaza Pachulia waved the flag of the Republic of Georgia, his homeland, after the Warriors won the NBA title in June.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Zaza Pachulia waved the flag of the Republic of Georgia, his homeland, after the Warriors won the NBA title in June.
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 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Fans attending the Warriors game on Wednesday against the Grizzlies will receive a Pachulia bobblehead.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Fans attending the Warriors game on Wednesday against the Grizzlies will receive a Pachulia bobblehead.

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