Pop’s $6M yearly contract tied for fifth among all sports coaches

With the recent retirement of Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson, Gregg Popovich now is tied for second among the NBA’s highest-paid coaches.

Forbes Magazine reports thattrails only the new five-year deal recently signed by Boston’s Doc Rivers among NBA coaches. That contract will pay Rivers $7 million per year. New York Knicks’ coach Mike D’Antoni also makes $6 million per year.

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick is the highest-paid coach, according to industry analysts quoted by Forbes. Belichick is estimated to be making $7.5 million per season.

Forbes . It reads: “The NBA version of Belichick, Popovich just keeps winning year after year, bagging a few titles along the way.”

Here is Forbes’ list of the highest salaries for North American sports head  coaches

Bill Belichick, New England Patriots                     $7.5 million

Mike Shanahan, Washington Redskins                 $7 million

Doc Rivers, Boston Celtics                                        $7 million

Pete Carroll, Seattle Seahawks                                 $7 million

Gregg Popovich, San Antonio Spurs                     $6 million

Lovie Smith, Chicago Bears                                       $6 million

Mike D’Antoni, New York Knicks                            $6 million

Ken Whisenhunt, Arizona Cardinals                     $5.75 million

Tom Coughlin, New York Giants                             $5.25 million

Mike Tomlin, Pittsburgh Steelers                            $5 million    

Source: Forbes  Magazine

Spurs’ Newman interviews with Suns

Spurs assistant Don Newman is one of a handful of candidates who have interviewed with the Phoenix Suns for a to-be-created spot on head coach Alvin Gentry’s bench.

In a story first reported by the , Gentry is looking for an aide to be a de facto “defensive coordinator.”

A veteran of seven seasons under Gregg Popovich in San Antonio, Newman is one of at least three coaches who have spoken with Gentry about the position, according to the Republic. One of the others is former Rockets assistant Elston Turner.

Nowitzki leads late rally as Mavs tie series 1-1

By BRIAN MAHONEY
Associated Press

MIAMI — Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks put a stunning end to their misery in Miami.

Now they can win their first NBA title without ever coming back to South Florida.

Nowitzki made the tie-breaking layup with 3.6 seconds left, and the Mavericks roared back from 15 points down in the fourth quarter to beat the Heat 95-93 on Thursday night and tie the NBA finals at one game apiece.

Capping a furious rally by scoring Dallas’ final nine points, Nowitzki made two late baskets left-handed — despite a torn tendon on that non-shooting hand. He finished with 24 points.

Dwyane Wade had 36 points for Miami, but his desperation 3-pointer was off at the buzzer.

“I thought defensively we really got into them,” Nowitzki said of the rally. “We pressured them full court and we scrambled defensively. We even gave up some offensive rebounds, but we kept scrambling.”

Game 3 is Sunday in Dallas.

Seemingly out of the game when the Heat led 88-73 with 7:15 remaining, Dallas held the Heat to just one field goal from there, a 3-pointer by Mario Chalmers with 24.5 seconds that tied it just 2 seconds after Nowitzki’s 3 had made it 93-90.

But after a timeout, Jason Kidd ran the clock down before getting the ball to Nowitzki, who drove into the lane, spun back to the left and made the layup.

Jason Terry, largely silent since the first half of Game 1, fueled the comeback with a couple of jumpers and finished with 16 points. Shawn Marion had 20 points for the Mavericks, who had lost four straight finals games in Miami since taking a 2-0 lead in the 2006 series.

They were about to go down 2-0 this time before Nowitzki, who insisted his injured finger wouldn’t hinder him, led a rally even more amazing than the one that won Game 4 of the Western Conference finals, when the Mavs trailed Oklahoma City by 15 in the fourth quarter before pulling it out in overtime.

LeBron James scored 20 points for the Heat.

He and Wade were running by and over the older Mavs for three quarters, and it appeared the only thing that could slow them down was that big trophy they would soon be holding.

Not so fast.

Wade angered the Mavs, particularly Terry, when he held his follow through after his 3-pointer from the corner with 7:15 left capped a 13-0 run and made it 88-73.

The Heat suddenly went cold, holding the ball too long on possessions and forcing James and Wade to attempt long jumpers with the shot clock winding down, instead of playing to their strengths and driving into the lane.

A series of those missed jumpers eventually ended with the Mavs getting possession, and Nowitzki making a layup that tied it at 90 with 57 seconds to play.

The Heat lost for the first time in 10 games at home in the playoffs and will have to win at least once in Dallas to force the series back here.