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[Yahoo!] Happiness in Houston

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by T-Mac1, Feb 9, 2007.

  1. T-Mac1

    T-Mac1 Member

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    Happiness in Houston
    By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports
    February 9, 2007


    Prior to the season, a passage in the paper one morning punched Jeff Van Gundy in the stomach. True happiness is waking up every day and realizing what a great life you have, the author, Anna Quindlen, wrote.

    Yes, there it is, he thought.

    That's it.

    "It was the simplest way that I ever heard a definition of personal success," Van Gundy said Thursday.

    He wouldn't go so far as to call it an epiphany, but the words stay with him, serving as something of a baseline in the back of his mind. In his New York Knicks days, Van Gundy evolved into the patron saint of the basket-case coach – the five o'clock shadow, the bags under his eyes, the full uniform of the bleary, beleaguered slouch.

    "You know, it's not like I've got great perspective on anything – not even good perspective – but I've got some perspective," Van Gundy said. "I think I've matured and evolved in some way. The losses still eat at me and I'm still distracted by the job when I'm home – but maybe not as much."

    Just listening to himself, he had to laugh. Remember, this guy once dropped out of Yale and enrolled at Menlo Junior College because he wanted to get more run on the basketball team.

    "It's not like I've seen the light and burst through into this other place," he said, "but I'm trying to do better with all that."

    On his way, Van Gundy has delivered one of the better coaching jobs in the NBA this season.

    Once the Houston Rockets lost Yao Ming to a broken tibia before Christmas, even the most ambitious of expectations had them fighting to stay close to .500 until his return in March. Yao was having an MVP year, a breakout season in every way. And even if Tracy McGrady's troublesome back responded to a new-age therapy, the suggestion that the Rockets could stay within a whisper of the second-place San Antonio Spurs in the Southwest Division seemed improbable.

    "I'm not going to lie, but I thought they were in real, real trouble when Yao went down," said Bill Van Gundy, the patriarch coach of the family that includes Stan, late of the Miami Heat.

    And still, Houston, at 31-17, meets the first-place Mavericks in Dallas on Friday night, just 1½ games back of San Antonio for second in the Southwest and the third seed in the Western Conference. Without Yao, the Rockets have won 15 of 22 games and still maintained the best scoring defense (90.3 points per game) in the NBA. Without its All-Star center, Houston is hanging around, looming like an intriguing threat in the West.

    In Yao's absence, the Rockets have had to completely transform the way they play – from inside-out to outside-in. In every way, Van Gundy has reshaped this team on the run. In the pitiful East, Van Gundy's mentor, Pat Riley, couldn't respond nearly as well without Shaquille O'Neal. Somehow, Houston is winning at a respectable rate in the West with Dikembe Mutombo playing effective minutes in the middle, with Juwan Howard resurfacing as a rotation player and with McGrady needing to restore his standing to superstar status.

    As much as anything, Van Gundy went to work on the psyche of McGrady, even after the Rockets had completed the transformation to Yao's team this season. McGrady kept beating himself up in interviews, throwing out possible retirement scenarios, sounding like a shell of himself. McGrady's back problems had taken as great of a toll on his mind as his body.

    So much of an NBA coach's job is telling players that they're not nearly as good as they think they are, and here, Van Gundy had gone on a mission to relentlessly pump McGrady in private and public.

    "I thought he was into too much self-analysis, too much about what he couldn't do," Van Gundy said. "He felt he always needed to answer the questions, and he really put into question in his own mind about how good he still was. His focus was maybe too much on what he had lost, when he still has an ability to be a dominant player in the league."

    All in all, this season has turned into Van Gundy's finest work as an NBA coach. He's had Yao and McGrady in and out of the lineup so often with injuries, it sure would be intriguing to see what they'd look like together in the playoffs. Even if Van Gundy hasn't had the best fortune on the floor with the Rockets, Houston has been a better place for him to regain a balance to his life.

    If nothing else, he's become a father again in his 40s with two year-old Grayson, and that has left him much more sensitive to all the things he missed in his 30s with his 11-year old, Mattie.

    "I know this: Because you know it's the last one, you really hate to see them grow out of stages that you love," Van Gundy said. "When I was in my 30s, I didn't mind that time going quickly. Now, as they get older, I want everything to slow down."

    His father Bill said: "He's definitely had to make some adjustments in his priorities, see things differently, and I don't know if he could've done that [in New York] or not. I do know that he has more of a life away from the Rockets in Houston than he did in New York with the Knicks."

    From a distance, Jeff looks longingly at his older brother, Stan, and marvels over the semblance of order he's found outside basketball. Jeff lived it on some level between the Knicks and Rockets jobs, but it didn't come as easily as it has for Stan.

    "I think he's found a purpose and contentment and rhythm of life right now, something that's more important than whether his team defends the pick and roll on the run well," Jeff said. "He's in a different place in life.

    "More shallow guys like myself are still here trying to figure it out."

    Another month, and Yao Ming will be back for the Rockets. The job gets a lot better then for Jeff Van Gundy, but truth be told, it isn't so bad now.



    www.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=Aqc6uYc1uhNmlu0niUynhMq8vLYF?slug=aw-rockets020907&prov=yhoo&type=lgns


    :cool:
     
  2. Nice Rollin

    Nice Rollin Member

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    jvg needs to re-up
    i dont want one and done larry brown or anyone else
     
  3. BenignDMD

    BenignDMD Member

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    grayson van gundy

    GVG :cool:
     
  4. LonghornFan

    LonghornFan Member

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    Unlike most here, I'm a big fan of JVG. An extension needs to be in the works for the Coach of the Year.
     
  5. brantonli24

    brantonli24 Member

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    Incredibly, the Yahoo front page says 'Jeff Van Happy'.... :eek: Blasphamy!!
     
  6. BritKid12

    BritKid12 Member

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    Excellent read. I think Van Gundy brings so much and fits in so well with the Rockets organization. I for one am thrilled to have a coach that is so dedicated to preparation and getting the most out players, physically and mentally. I sincerely hope we can keep him in H-town, it wouldn't feel right having another coach.
     
  7. Ryan02GT

    Ryan02GT Member

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    I also hope we can sign JVG to an extension, a coach change in the middle of the year would be terrible for us
     
  8. Will

    Will Clutch Crew
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    Oh, God, please, please, let Jeff Van Gundy re-up in Houston. I can't believe I ever wanted to fire Jeff Van Gundy. What will it take to persuade Jeff Van Gundy to sign another multimillion-dollar contract extension. Tell me, Lord, and I will go to the ends of the Earth to deliver his return. I want to have Jeff Van Gundy's baby RIGHT NOW.
     
  9. Luffy1

    Luffy1 Member

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    Unless rockets win it all this year, then JVG should not be renewed.
     
  10. DonkeyMagic

    DonkeyMagic Member
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    ^ that's a joke...right :confused:
     
  11. SpiffyRifi

    SpiffyRifi Member

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    That's the most ridiculous statement I've heard in a while.
     
  12. macfan

    macfan Member

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    What a great article. When was the last time the Chronicle provided some insight into why Tmac was struggling early in the season?

    I knew it was mental. I am glad he found his niche and his dominance again

    Van Gundy for President
     
  13. BrieflySpeaking

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    yea, he wont get an extension unless they go past the first round.
     
  14. macfan

    macfan Member

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    I don't think so. He's a top 5 coach in the league, maybe top 3.

    Anybody we replace him with, would be a big step down.

    Will the Lakers replace Phil Jackson? Will the Jazz replace Jerry Sloan if they don't get past the first round?
     
  15. xelloss12

    xelloss12 Member

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    You've never seen other Luffy1 posts have you? Best thing to do is put him on your ignore list with edc.
     
  16. Luffy1

    Luffy1 Member

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    No I don't believe the article was a joke. I believe it was written seriously.
     
  17. Howyalikemenow

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    I hope he gets an extension. I've always liked him.
     
  18. Joshfast

    Joshfast "We're all gonna die" - Billy Sole
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    u cant be serios.
     
  19. Williamson

    Williamson JOSH CHRISTOPHER ONLY FAN

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    Great article. However, it's funny to see this board come back around to Van Gundy. I know there are still some JVG haters on the board, but there doesn't seem to be too many left.
     
  20. roxfan123

    roxfan123 Member

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    I agree the statement is not right but maybe, just maybe we will see some of his coaching flaws in the playoffs and some of you guys will be desperate to jion the fire JVG bandwagon again? Me personally don't enjoy his offense that much, but that says nothing about whether he should get a renew. If Houston quits at another first round playoff, (which is something that I definitely do NOT want to see), will you renew his contract? Had he done a good coaching job this season, yes. Does he deserve a renew? Lets leave that until the postseason. :p
     

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