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  • Gregg Charles Popovich is an American basketball coach who is currently the head coach of the

  • National Basketball Association's San Antonio Spurs. Taking over as coach of the Spurs in

  • 1996, Popovich is the longest tenured active coach in both the NBA and all Big Four sports

  • leagues. He is often referred to as "Coach Pop" or simply "Pop". He has won five NBA

  • championships as the head coach of the Spurs. He also has the most consecutive winning seasons

  • of any NBA coach, at 17. Popovich is one of only five coaches in NBA history to win five

  • or more NBA championships. Phil Jackson, Red Auerbach, Pat Riley, and John Kundla are the

  • other coaches.

  • Early life and education Popovich was born in East Chicago, Indiana

  • on January 28, 1949, to a Serbian father and Croatian mother. He started his basketball

  • career playing Biddy Basketball and was on the 1960 Gary Biddy Basketball All-Star Team

  • which finished third in the World Tournament, held at Gary's Memorial Auditorium. He attended

  • Merrillville High School and graduated in 1970 from the United States Air Force Academy.

  • He played basketball for four seasons at the Academy and in his senior year was the team

  • captain and the leading scorer. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in Soviet Studies,

  • and he underwent Air Force intelligence gathering and processing training. At one point, Popovich

  • considered a career with the Central Intelligence Agency.

  • Popovich served five years of required active duty in the United States Air Force, during

  • which he toured Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union with the U.S. Armed Forces Basketball

  • Team. In 1972, he was selected as captain of the Armed Forces Team, which won the Amateur

  • Athletic Union championship. This earned him an invitation to the 1972 U.S. Olympic Basketball

  • Team trials. Popovich returned to the Air Force Academy

  • as an assistant coach in 1973 under head coach Hank Egan, a position he held for six years.

  • Egan would later become an assistant coach under Popovich for the San Antonio Spurs,

  • and later an assistant coach for the Cleveland Cavaliers under Mike Brown.

  • During his time with the coaching staff of the U.S. Air Force Academy, Popovich attended

  • the University of Denver and earned his master's degree in physical education and sports sciences.

  • In 1979, he was named the head basketball coach of Pomona-Pitzer's men's team. Popovich

  • coached Pomona-Pitzer men's basketball from 1979 to 1988, leading the team to its first

  • outright title in 68 years. During his time as head coach at Pomona-Pitzer,

  • Popovich became a disciple and later a close friend of head coach Larry Brown at the University

  • of Kansas. Popovich took off the 1985–1986 season at Pomona-Pitzer to become a volunteer

  • assistant at Kansas, where he could study directly under Brown. Popovich returned to

  • Pomona-Pitzer and resumed his duties as head coach the next season.

  • On April 4, 2008, Popovich returned to the U.S. Air Force Academy to receive the Academy's

  • award of Distinguished Graduate. Despite his four NBA titles at the time, Popovich said

  • it was the most meaningful award he had ever received.

  • Career Following the 1987–88 season, Popovich joined

  • Larry Brown as the lead assistant coach for the San Antonio Spurs. From 1988 to 1992,

  • Popovich was the top assistant under Brown, before the entire staff was fired by owner

  • Red McCombs. Popovich moved to the Golden State Warriors for a brief stint in 1992,

  • serving as an assistant under future Hall of Famer Don Nelson and bringing with him

  • Avery Johnson, who had been cut by the Spurs. San Antonio

  • In 1994, Popovich returned to San Antonio as the general manager and Vice President

  • of Basketball Operations after current owner Peter Holt purchased the team. Popovich's

  • first move was to sign Avery Johnson to become the team's starting point guard. The two won

  • an NBA title together in 1999. Another one of Popovich's early moves in San

  • Antonio was to trade Dennis Rodman to the Chicago Bulls for Will Perdue. Rodman was

  • not fond of Popovich, as he said in his first book Bad As I Wanna Be.

  • After the Spurs got out to a 3-15 start in the 1996-97 season, with David Robinson sidelined

  • with a preseason back injury, Popovich fired coach Bob Hill and named himself head coach.

  • However, Robinson broke his foot after only six games and was lost for the season. Sean

  • Elliott was also limited to 39 games due to injury, and Chuck Person and Vinny Del Negro

  • also missed significant time. With a decimated roster, the Spurs were a rudderless team,

  • and won only 17 games for the remainder of the season for an overall record of 20-62.

  • However, the Spurs' disastrous season allowed them to win the first overall pick in the

  • NBA Lottery, which they used to draft Tim Duncan out of Wake Forest University. The

  • Spurs blossomed as Duncan teamed up with the 7'1" David Robinson to give them a "Twin Tower"

  • offense and defense for several years. After recovering to win 56 games in Duncan's rookie

  • yearand Popovich's first full year as coachthe Spurs came all the way back in 1999 to win

  • their first NBA title. In 2002, Popovich relinquished his position

  • as general manager to R. C. Buford, who had served as the team's head scout. Popovich

  • and Buford both got their starts in the NBA in 1988 as assistants on Brown's coaching

  • staff with the Spurs. Popovich has won four more championships with

  • the Spurs--2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014. Popovich was named NBA Coach of the Year in 2003, 2012,

  • and in 2014. He earned his 500th career victory on March

  • 2, 2006, becoming the fourth-fastest coach in NBA history to reach that milestone. He

  • led the team to a 63–19 season in 2006, which set a new franchise season record.

  • Popovich won his 100th playoff game on May 19, 2008, in a road game against the New Orleans

  • Hornets. The win tied him for third place in all-time playoff coaching victories with

  • his friend and mentor, Larry Brown. On May 2, 2012, Popovich won his second coach

  • of the year award for the 2011–12 NBA season. On November 29, 2012, Popovich sat out starters

  • Duncan, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili, and Danny Green for a nationally televised game against

  • the Miami Heat. Popovich has frequently sat out his starters on road trips over the years

  • in order to ensure they have enough rest for the playoffs; the Spurs are one of the oldest

  • teams in the league. NBA commissioner David Stern was outraged when he learned of this,

  • and said on the night of the game the Spurs' actions were "unacceptable," and "substantial

  • sanctions [would] be forthcoming." On November 30, Stern fined the Spurs $250,000 for what

  • he called "a disservice to the league and the fans." According to Stern, Popovich had

  • not informed the Heat, the league or the media in a suitable timeframe that the four players

  • were not making the trip to Miami. Stern's decision was criticized by commentators such

  • as Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, who said, "Stern doesn't care about the realities

  • of his league, just the appearances. To him, the appearance on Thursday night was that

  • Popovich had tried to embarrass him on national television and that's why the commissioner

  • tossed that tantrum." On March 22, 2013, Popovich became the second

  • head coach in NBA history to win 900 regular-season games with one team when the Spurs beat the

  • Utah Jazz. On April 22, 2014, Popovich was awarded the

  • Red Auerbach Trophy as he won the NBA Coach of the Year for the third time in his career.

  • He would also win his fifth NBA championship with the San Antonio Spurs that same season.

  • International basketball Popovich served on the coaching staff for

  • the U.S. national team in the 2002 FIBA World Championship, the 2003 FIBA America Men's

  • Olympic Qualifying Tournament and the 2004 Olympic Games, where the U.S. won a bronze

  • medal. Head coaching record

  • Personal life Popovich is actively involved in several charities

  • and programs in San Antonio, such as the Spurs/Pizza Hut Drug Free Youth Basketball League and

  • the San Antonio Food Bank. He is a noted wine enthusiast. He and his wife, Erin, have two

  • children, Micky and Jill. Popovich is also a supporter of Vlade Divac's

  • "You Can Too" campaign, designed to provide shelter to former Yugoslavian and African

  • refugees. See also

  • List of NBA championship head coaches National Basketball Association portal

  • References

  • External links NBA.com profile

  • Profile as a coach

Gregg Charles Popovich is an American basketball coach who is currently the head coach of the

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