USA TODAY US Edition

Williams has evolved as a coach on way to Finals

- Mark Medina

PHOENIX – As his team gathered together for a morning shootaroun­d, coach Monty Williams offered a message.

The Suns were about to play in the NBA Finals against the Bucks, the franchise’s first appearance in 28 years and the first for the majority of Phoenix’s coaches and players.

Williams found no need, however, to deliver a fiery speech or offer another detailed scouting report. Instead, Williams told his players, “Go hoop; ya’ll know what to do.”

Not only did that moment capture how Williams made the Suns feel trusted to ensure a 1-0 Finals lead over Milwaukee entering Game 2 on Thursday. The moment also revealed how Williams has evolved in his second season with Phoenix after serving a head coaching stint with New Orleans (20102015).

“Mine was probably a lot of insecurity, trying to show what I knew and prove it as opposed to just coaching,” Williams said. “That probably ruffled feathers.”

New Orleans had hired Williams, then 38, in 2010 after he served as a Trail Blazers assistant coach under Nate McMillan (2005-10), interned with the Spurs coaching staff on their 2005 NBA title team and cemented a nine-year playing career.

So, Williams admittedly thought he knew all the answers.

Williams soon realized he did not know it all.

Although New Orleans made the playoffs during Chris Paul’s final season with the franchise, Williams was fired four years later. Throughout that time, Williams said he heard directly from former players that his “my way or the highway” approach didn’t always work.

“We both have changed,” Paul said.

“If you haven’t changed in 10 years, then something’s wrong. I think we both have seen a lot since then.”

At 36, Paul garnered regular-season MVP considerat­ion and led the Suns to his first Finals appearance after his Hall of Fame worthy performanc­es became blemished with the Clippers (20112007) and Rockets (2017-18) because of playoff shortcomin­gs due to both injuries and philosophi­cal clashes with star teammates. Paul then proved he could remain durable and lead a young team last year with the Thunder before facilitati­ng a trade to Phoenix in hopes to win his first NBA title.

Now 49, Williams had since grown both through opportunit­ies and tragedy. Shortly after his firing, Williams became the Thunder’s associate head coach the following season that coincided with his wife, Ingrid, dying from injuries suffered in a car crash. Following a front office role in San Antonio, Williams became a Sixers assistant coach under Brett Brown (2018-19).

“I was so focused on winning and coaching; there were times players felt like I was really tough on them and hard on them,” Williams said. “Now, I try to be more considerat­e with how I get my message across.”

Feeling empowered under Williams

Williams offered an early window into how he would get his message across a day after becoming the Suns’ head coach.

Williams met with guard Devin Booker at a Scottsdale restaurant. After shooting the breeze, Booker told Williams,

“Coach, whatever you need me to do, I’ll do it.” Not only did that exchange capture Booker’s coachabili­ty, it also revealed Williams’ hope to collaborat­e.

“That was the start of this environmen­t that we live in where we get better every day,” Booker said. “Open dialogue, communicat­ion and him understand­ing where we come from as players also helps us out a lot.”

While some coaches wear their heart on their sleeves, Williams wears his beliefs on his hat. Williams has often appeared at news conference­s wearing a hat with the message “WS > WD”, a knockoff of Ben Franklin’s familiar message that “Well done is better than well said.”

So even if Williams has preached ball movement, defense, time management and gratitude, he has tried to instill those concepts through his actions.

Players have praised Williams for staying calm both after wins and losses. Williams also has stressed to his players to “smell the gym,” whether it involves an intense practice or a light workout. Through that routine, the Suns said they have stayed sharp without feeling burned out.

“Monty definitely made me a super gym rat,” Suns third-year center Deandre Ayton said. “I don’t know how, but he just knows. He makes us feel comfortabl­e with change. The thing he does best is just communicat­ing the things we do best and just stick to that.”

As a result, the Suns went 8-0 in the bubble after spending most of the 201920 regular season developing their young roster. After the Suns acquired Paul last offseason, Williams told Paul and Booker that he “would get out of the way.” He has since seen his backcourt tandem having extended conversati­ons with each other as well as with Ayton.

Unlike his time with New Orleans, Williams has mostly entrusted Paul with the play-calling. Williams will only run a play if Paul squints at him.

“Now I try my best to stay out of his way, because I know what he’s seeing,” Williams said. “Usually when he calls a play that I didn’t give him, it’s a play I wanted to run, anyway.”

That trust deepened in the NBA playoffs. After all, Spurs coach Gregg Popovich had encouraged Williams to “keep it simple and to keep loving your guys.”

So Williams did just that even as the Suns nursed a 2-1 first-round series deficit to the Lakers, which players credit for the team’s ability to win the series in six games.

Williams kept the same demeanor even as Paul missed the first two games of the Western Conference finals after testing positive for COVID-19.

In Game 2, Williams drew up a gamewinnin­g inbounds play for Ayton that he admittedly took from Brown and former Suns assistant coach Joe Prunty.

But Williams eventually lost his composure before the Suns’ decisive Game 6 win over the Clippers. That afternoon, Williams cried with Suns assistant Randy Ayers after the two talked about their journey that included coaching together in New Orleans.

“I want it badly,” Williams said before trailing off. “I know I’ve been blessed a lot to be in this position, and I never want to lose sight of that. So, sometimes it’s overwhelmi­ng when I think about how blessed I’ve been to be able to do what I do for a living.”

When Williams has felt overwhelme­d, he has channeled that stress into bettering himself. Sometimes, he watches more game footage. Sometimes, he talks with his children. Sometimes he talks with his coaching mentors, including Popovich, McMillan, Brown and Sixers coach Doc Rivers.

Just like how he deals with his players, Williams has become more deliberate on how and when to consult with his coaching mentors. Though he considers McMillan “a big brother,” Williams resisted prodding the Hawks head coach about the Bucks despite challengin­g them to six games in the Eastern Conference finals.

“I didn’t want to bother him. He offered help, but I know the emotions that you have in a series, and to me it just felt a bit disrespect­ful,” Williams said. “I did not want to do that to him, even though he offered it. I’m sure if there were any tidbits or he sees me doing something I shouldn’t do, he’ll call me. He’s never been shy about telling me what I need to do.”

Before, Williams rarely was shy about telling his players what to do as well. But as he coaches on the NBA’s biggest stage, Williams has become determined with finding the right answers without acting like he has them.

“After you’ve had some life experience­s and listened to people about their evaluation­s of you, especially people that you respect, you have no choice but to change,” Williams said. “I’ve learned I would rather be effective over right.

“I hope this time around there’s a level of growth there that exhibits that.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? The Suns’ Monty Williams says he was forced to change his ways from the first time he coached Chris Paul in New Orleans.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP The Suns’ Monty Williams says he was forced to change his ways from the first time he coached Chris Paul in New Orleans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States