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.”

Rockets tab McHale as coach

By Jonathan Feigen
jonathan.feigen@chron.com

HOUSTON — There were better matches, at least in terms of style and strengths. There were far greater coaching résumés and more tested coaches. Kevin McHale, however, became the Rockets choice to succeed Rick Adelman as coach because of a quality they could not resist.

“I’d put Kevin’s intelligence level about basketball up there with anybody’s,” said Danny Ainge, the Celtics executive vice president and McHale’s friend since the two helped the Celtics defeat the Rockets in the NBA Finals 25 years ago.

“I think that Kevin, though he lacks front-line coaching experience, has watched as many games and as much tape as anyone, and has learned about basketball from some of the great minds.”

The Rockets and McHale quickly agreed on Friday to a four-year contract, the final season the team’s option. McHale, who went 39-55 during two coaching stints with Minnesota while working as the Timberwolves’ vice president from 1995-2009, expressed reluctance at one time in becoming a career coach. But after a second stint in which he earned good reviews from his players, he reversed that position.

A key to the choice of McHale will be the selection of a strong lead assistant to run the defense and handle many of the finer points of preparation and practice, with McHale being more big-picture and player-development oriented.

Minnesota assistant Kelvin Sampson, Memphis’ Dave Joerger and New Orleans’ Michael Malone, who were early head coaching candidates in the Rockets’ wide-open search, are among the team’s top choices for the position, according to a person familiar with the process. Sampson and Malone could still be head coaching candidates, and Malone might join Mike Brown’s staff with the Lakers. Though Joerger is not officially a lead assistant, the Grizzlies likely will try to keep him.

Chris Finch, the coach of the club’s Development League Rio Grande Valley Vipers, will be promoted in part because he spent the past two seasons running the offense that worked well for the Rockets under Adelman.

Rockets owner Leslie Alexander and general manager Daryl Morey chose McHale over finalists Dwane Casey and Lawrence Frank on Thursday after several conversations with McHale, mostly about the structure of the coaching staff. McHale had been interviewed twice by Morey before he became the third candidate to meet with Alexander.

Twice the NBA Sixth Man of the Year winner, McHale averaged 17.9 points and 7.3 rebounds and became part of one of the greatest frontcourt in league history with Larry Bird and Robert Parish.

“I view him on the level of my favorite great coach, Adelman,” Rockets guard Kevin Martin said. “We just found a big piece to our puzzle. Now I can go back to my summer workouts and rest peacefully at night knowing we have a great coach that will elevate everyone’s game.”

Heat fade in 4th, lose home-court edge

By TIM REYNOLDS
Associated Press

MIAMI — From up by 15 points with 7 minutes left, to losing home-court advantage in the NBA finals.

In a season of challenges for the Miami Heat, here comes the biggest task — recovering after blowing a chance to take a two-game lead over the Dallas Mavericks.

Ahead 88-73 after Dwyane Wade made a 3-pointer with 7:14 left, Miami had the home fans roaring. Dirk Nowitzki’s game-winning layup with 3.6 seconds remaining left them silenced, and now all Dallas needs to do to win the NBA title is win three games on its home court, starting with Game 3 on Sunday night.

Final score: Mavs 95, Heat 93, and the Heat left in sheer disbelief. After that 3-pointer by Wade, Dallas closed the game on a 22-5 run.

Struggling to win close games was one of Miami’s biggest challenges all season. The Heat went 5-14 in games decided by five points or less in the regular season, but in the playoffs, fourth-quarter closeouts had become one of Miami’s calling cards.

The Heat had outscored teams in the fourth quarter of their last five playoff games.

Not on Thursday: Dallas outscored Miami 24-18 in the last 12 minutes, which was bad enough. How the Mavericks did it made it seem even worse for the Heat, who missed 10 of their last 11 shots.

That’s right, the Heat shot 53 percent in the first 41 minutes, and 9 percent the rest of the way. Mario Chalmers’ 3-pointer with 25 seconds left tied the game, but Nowitzki drove down the lane for the winner on Dallas’ final possession.

Wade tried a desperation 3-pointer at the end, bouncing away as he tumbled to the court, one of his rare missteps in a night where he finished with 36 points.

It’s the 12th time since the NBA went to the 2-3-2 finals format that teams split the opening two games. Teams holding home-court advantage recovered to win eight of the previous 11 series, including last year when the Lakers topped the Celtics in seven games.