Don Newman interviews with Phoenix about vacant assistant job

Spurs assistant coach Don Newman has interviewed with the Phoenix Suns about an added assistant coaching position on Coach Alvin Gentry’s staff.

The Arizona Republic reported that Newman talked with Gentry in a job that the Phoenix coach hopes will improve his team’s leaky defense.

Gentry also has talked with former Chicago assistant and current scout Pete Myers and Houston assistant Elston Turner, who was a finalist for the Suns’ head-coaching job in 2008. The Republic also said that Gentry may meet with Lakers assistant Jim Cleamons and other coaches who have been involved in the conference finals, such as Dallas’ Dwane Casey, Oklahoma City’s Maurice Cheeks and Miami’s Bob McAdoo.

The Suns are hoping to boost their defense after allowing the NBA’s fifth-worst defensive percentage (47.2) in 2010-11. Phoenix general manager Lon Babby has approved allowing Gentry to hire a veteran coach without losing any of his four current assistant coaches.

“I’m going to run it like a football team, and he’ll be a defensive coordinator,” Gentry told the Republic. ”We’ll spend a ton of time meeting the next two to three months to see how we can put changes to be better.

“What I decided was we just needed someone from the outside with a new voice and outlook. It’s not anything against who we have. Dan Majerle played for Pat Riley and was all-defensive, and I do have confidence in Bill Cartwright and the other guys, but we need a new approach because if we’re ever going to be good, we need a whole new voice to be consistent.”

Newman was hired by the Spurs before the start of the 2004-05 season and has worked seven seasons with the franchise.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if he left for what appears to be a better job on the surface than what Newman has with the Spurs. But there appears to be stiff competition for the position among several top assistants from around the league.

Shaq thankful for career

By TIM REYNOLDS
Associated Press

WINDERMERE, Fla. — Shaquille O’Neal changed from his gray T-shirt and sweat pants into a three-piece suit, then walked by some of the souvenirs he accrued during his NBA days for the final time as an active player.

Framed jerseys from the likes of Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Wayne Gretzky, Mark McGwire, Kirby Puckett, Steve Young and Jerry Rice. An NBA Finals MVP trophy. Bottles of wine with labels bearing the “S” logo that he borrowed from Superman and essentially made his own. Basketballs with the Miami Heat logos painted on them, one to commemorate his 25,000th point, the other for his 10,000th rebound. A photo of him, Bill Russell and John Wooden.

It took him 19 years to collect those memories.

On Friday, he vowed to start truly savoring them.

“It’s time for what’s next,” the Big Fella said.

The 39-year-old O’Neal made his retirement official, reiterating what he revealed in a video posted to Twitter two days earlier. Saying those words where he did brought a full-circle piece of closure to his career, since it all ended at his home in a suburb of Orlando, the city where his pro days began when the Magic made him the No. 1 pick in 1992.

“Never thought this day would come,” O’Neal said. “Father Time has finally caught up with Shaquille O’Neal.”

Speculation has been high for weeks that O’Neal’s playing days were over, and the widely expected became real on Wednesday. It took him 10 seconds to announce his plans in the online video, and as few athletes could do, those 10 seconds turned into a three-day story. Tributes have poured in and on Friday, O’Neal thanked just about everyone he could remember.

His parents, thanking his father for his discipline and his mother for sneaking him cake, milk and cookies when that discipline prevented the boy from getting his own. His brothers and sisters. His six children, who got an apology for his schedule demands and a promise that they would keep going to Toys “R” Us. His fans worldwide. The NBA and commissioner David Stern. The camaraderie in the locker room. The six teams he played with.

“And I’m really going to miss the free throws,” deadpanned O’Neal, a notoriously bad foul-shooter.

He insisted he will not return, nor will he coach anyone but his three sons. His career ends with 28,596 points, 13,099 rebounds, 15 All-Star selections, four championships and three NBA Finals MVP awards. He had a $1.4 million option to return to the Boston Celtics next season, but said he did not want to hold up the team’s plans several months if he needs Achilles’ surgery.

So he made the decision to retire, on his terms.

“I’m the luckiest guy in the world,” O’Neal said.

The finale came in a fitting place. He bought the home in 1993, and it’s remained his base ever since — even after he left the Magic.

Family and close friends gathered in the massive kitchen while the gymnasium filled for a celebration that was tinged with a bit of sadness.

“This is a bittersweet day on behalf of the family,” said O’Neal’s mother, Lucille Harrison. “It’s been 19 years, but the 19 years have gone by so quick.”

Dale Brown, who coached O’Neal at LSU, sat on Shaq’s left. Brown told a slew of stories, including one when Shaq asked permission to eat peanuts from a hotel minibar, not even considering the liquor. Brown lauded how O’Neal was raised and his charitable work, much of which Shaq does not reveal publicly.

O’Neal was so moved by Hurricane Katrina that he arranged for tractor-trailers to bring supplies to storm-ravaged New Orleans and personally oversaw distribution efforts. And after that, Shaq considered signing with the New Orleans Hornets, thinking his mere presence in the city would help recovery efforts even more, but the deal simply fell through.

“He’s an unbelievable person,” Brown said. “He’ll stay that way.”

O’Neal’s immediate future is uncertain. He’ll likely work in television, but his health comes first. Injuries derailed him this season, and if his injured Achilles’ doesn’t improve soon, surgery may be unavoidable. He said he promised his family he would get his body right.

The ways he changed the game were countless, beginning with his unique combination of size, strength and athleticism. He was the first big man to become a marketing giant. He spent huge money — $650,000 one year in Miami — to play Shaq-a-Claus for underprivileged kids at Christmas.

Everything wasn’t always perfect. He clashed with teammates like Kobe Bryant, clashed with coaches like Stan Van Gundy. Nonetheless, those in the league still hold him in high esteem.

“A living legend,” Heat guard Dwyane Wade said.

O’Neal said he leaves with some regrets, foremost among them not being able to reach 30,000 points. And while everyone knew what he would say Friday, he was anxious, something his mother gently chided him for afterward.

“I was nervous, Momma,” O’Neal said. “I’m sorry.”

Everyone laughed, as they did several times throughout the ceremony. He joked that the New York Knicks were calling, wanting him to interview for their general manager job. He cited his work in “award-winning movies, such as Kazaam.”

He turned serious at times, thanking coaches like Phil Jackson and Doc Rivers, and proudly saying that his doctorate will be completed by January at Barry University in Miami Shores, Fla.

He’ll then be called Dr. O’Neal.

Good thing, because all his famous nicknames — Shaq-Fu, The Big Aristotle, Diesel and especially Superman — are now retired along with him, he said.

Henceforth, he’ll call himself The Big AARP, which that organization couldn’t have been happier to hear.

“If you’re like most of our members — half are still working, many more give back to their communities — you’re not done yet, either,” AARP CEO A. Barry Rand said in a statement. “There’s plenty left to do, enjoy, and figure out after ’retirement,’ so let us know if you want help figuring out what’s next.”

Shaq’s got a long time to figure that out.

Former Spurs star Mitchell dies of cancer

Mike Mitchell, a 1980s-era Spurs forward known for his inspired play against the in the playoffs, died Thursday morning after a two-year battle with cancer.

The San Antonio resident was 55.

Mitchell spent 10 seasons in the NBA, averaging 19.8 points and 5.6 rebounds.

With the Spurs, he averaged 20.1 in seven seasons. His 9,799 points rank sixth in franchise history.

On the floor, Mitchell was deadly with a mid-range jumper.

Off it, he was known to have battled substance-abuse issues. But Mitchell also never wavered in displaying stand-up accountability.

Those close to the Spurs during the 1980s remember No. 34’s gentle demeanor and an outrageously loud, baritone laugh.

“Don’t ask me no more questions,” Mitchell would tell the media, playfully jousting with reporters in the locker room.

Then, dripping sweat in the cramped dressing quarters at HemisFair Arena, he would patiently talk with the assembled press corps until the last question was asked.

A one-time, NBA All-Star with the , Mitchell was a first-round draft pick out of in 1978.

He played in the All-Star Game at home at the Richfield Coliseum in 1981.

But within a year he would be shipped off to San Antonio to join the Spurs and coach , who had served as coach in Cleveland for one season.

Playing for the Albeck-coached Spurs, Mitchell made an immediate impact.

The 6-foot-7, 215-pound forward teamed with All-Star guard and later with to help the franchise win back-to-back Midwest Division titles.

After the Spurs claimed regular-season, division titles in both 1982 and ’83, Mitchell enjoyed perhaps the greatest moments of his career in playoff battles against the Los Angeles Lakers.

Both years, the Lakers with and eliminated the Spurs in the Western Conference finals.

But not before Mitchell would have his say in the matter. Both years, the former Atlanta high school standout lit up the Lakers, averaging more than 25 points in each series.

He averaged 25.7 and 8.3 rebounds in the 1982 West finals, when the Spurs were swept 4-0.

Bolstered with the addition of the 7-2 Gilmore in the 1983 series, the Spurs put up more of a fight before falling in six games to the defending NBA champions.

Once again, with Lakers perimeter defenders and focused on Gervin, Mitchell broke loose with his mid-range game to average 25.6 points and 10.3 rebounds.

The ’83 series finale was a heartbreaker for Mitchell, who took the last two shots in the closing seconds of a 101-100 loss.

Johnson deflected one shot. The second one, hoisted from about 10 feet with the 7-2 Abdul-Jabbar defending, skidded off the rim.

The horn sounded with Gilmore under the basket, trying to get off a shot.

The Lakers, beaten twice on their home court in the series, had won for the third time within a span of eight days at the sold-out, downtown arena.

Afterward, Mitchell did not hide from reporters in the locker room.

He said the deflection on his first attempt might have thrown him off rhythm, but he said he had a clean look on his second try.

“I had an open shot and I blew it,” Mitchell said.

Four years later, Mitchell suffered a career low when he checked himself into a treatment center in California. Spurs management confirmed it was for drugs. He would miss the last month of the 1986-87 season.

His career with the Spurs, and in the NBA, essentially was over.

He played one more season in silver and black and joined the team briefly in 1989-90 before embarking on a second career in Europe.

In all, he played 22 years in professional basketball.

In recent years, Mitchell worked as a counselor with at-risk youth in San Antonio.

“We run after-school programs and on Saturdays at the juvenile detention center,” he told of clevelandcavaliers.com. “We deal with kids 13- through 16-years old.”