The Sentinel-Record

Fisher’s taxing year ends with shot at 6th title

- JEFF LATZKE

OKLAHOMA CITY — A long, taxing year is coming to a familiar finish for Oklahoma City Thunder guard Derek Fisher.

It all started with him being front and center during the NBA lockout as the president of the players’ union. It grew more complicate­d when the Los Angeles Lakers traded him away after he’d won five championsh­ips with the franchise.

Fisher signed on with Oklahoma City, and he’s three wins away from achieving his ultimate goal of winning a sixth title. Only 13 players in NBA history have been a part of that many championsh­ip teams.

“What it would mean to win a championsh­ip means enough by itself without adding what has happened before now,” Fisher said. “I think for this particular team and group of guys, this particular organizati­on, there’s a lot of meaning that would come from us finding a way to win three more games. So, that’s primarily my focus right now. And then for me personally, there are a number of things I just won’t choose to reflect on or look into until after this is long done and I can step away from things for a minute.”

Fisher was heavily involved in the league’s labor dispute, engaging in the conference room discussion­s that eventually were able to save a season that was in peril. His season took an unsettling turn when the Lakers unexpected­ly traded him to Houston and he decided not to go.

Instead, he looked around to identify teams he thought gave him the best chance to win a title and he settled with the Thunder.

Even then, the turbulence wasn’t over. The leadership of the NBA Players Associatio­n asked for Fisher to resign as president in April, and he refused while questionin­g the union’s business practices under executive director Billy Hunter.

That dispute still looms as Fisher and the Thunder prepare to play Game 3 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night in Miami, with the series tied 1- 1. Fisher doesn’t expect any resolution until later this summer and he has done his best to keep his sights on the playoffs.

“All in all, for me, these are good problems to have. When you think about how tough it is for people every day, this is not hard at all to be able to try to figure out a way to be able to focus on playing basketball,” Fisher said. “I’m healthy. My family’s healthy. So, at the end of the day, if these are the things that I have to deal with to be called tough days, I’ll take it.”

While Fisher wasn’t pleased with how the Lakers handled shipping him out, he made the best of the situation by joining the Thunder — who would eventually eliminate L. A. in the second round of the playoffs. Fisher spent all but three of his first 15 years in the league with the Lakers, winning a handful of championsh­ips.

Of the players to win at least six championsh­ips, nine — including all- time leaders Bill Russell ( 11) and Sam Jones ( 10) — played with the Celtics during their dynasty in the 1950s and ‘ 60s. The others are former Fisher teammate Robert Horry ( seven), Kareem Abdul- Jabbar ( six), Michael Jordan ( six) and Scottie Pippen ( 6).

“This is his eighth NBA Finals in 16 years. As a player you wish you can get there once,” Thunder coach Scott Brooks said.

“A lot of players have never been there, and he has five championsh­ips.”

Fisher said he considers Horry — who won titles with the Lakers, Spurs and Rockets — in a “stratosphe­re all alone.” And he says he’s not going to rub it in if he’s able to win another title and surpass longtime teammate Kobe Bryant, who remains his friend.

“To me, it’s kind of sacred ground,” Fisher said. “I’m not going there. Some people will but not me.”

Once he signed with Oklahoma City, he chose the jersey No. 37 — the same as his age — to highlight that his advancing years would not be a factor. Brooks says he’s still making important contributi­ons on and off the floor.

“I’ve never been around a player that communicat­es as well as he does with his teammates, never have. The guy has an incredible knack for saying the right things at the right times,” he said. “He’s helping this team win this year, and he’s going to help this team win many years with all the things that they’ve took from him this past two or three months.”

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