How did Michael Malone coach the Nuggets to a championship?

Last Updated on June 18, 2023 by Admin

[ad_1]

TDP L nugsparade061523 cha 9326

As the sweet taste of champagne drenched everybody and everything in the Nuggets locker room, Michael Malone hung up the telephone in his office after calling his 80-year-old mother, sipped on a beer and told a dirty little secret about coaching a championship team:

X’s and O’s are overrated.

“The best coaches are not the greatest X’s and O’s guys,” Malone told me Monday night, after the Nuggets wrestled a 94-89 victory from Miami to win the first championship in franchise history.

And the greatest coach in the history of a team that has employed Larry Brown, Doug Moe and George Karl?

It’s Malone, without a doubt.

As Nikola Jokic dunked teammate Jamal Murray in the team’s therapy pool to celebrate winning the whole thing, 21-month-old Ognjena, a little girl who’s the apple of the real MVP’s eye, danced happily in a chair in Malone’s office. The coach was surrounded by staffers at a conference table turned into a makeshift bar that included a magnum of champagne hand-delivered by the NBA in a box.

“Belief,” Malone said, “is such an important thing in sports … or life.”

A champion is born of the belief anything is possible.

Malone fostered the belief that something the Nuggets have never done was possible. He did it with F-bombs and hugs.

“That’s what coaching is all about,” Malone said. “It sure ain’t about drawing up (bleeping) plays. It’s about building relationships and instilling belief.”

It’s a lesson Malone learned as a child by the example of Maureen and Brendan, his octogenarian parents who watched the championship-clinching victory on television back in New York.

[ad_2]

Source link