Tag Archives: LeBron James

Coach K on Lebron, SI Sportsman of the Year

Sports Illustrated announced today that Miami Heat forward LeBron James will be the magazine’s 2012 Sportsman of the Year.

This comes a year after Duke basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski shared the award with Tennessee women’s basketball head coach Pat Summitt. Coach K passed the NCAA Division I all-time wins record last season while Summitt is the all-time winningest coach in college basketball.

And James and Coach K share a connection—Krzyzewski has coached the U.S. Olympic basketball teams in 2008 and 2012, which James was on. Both teams won the gold medal.

In Lee Jenkins’ piece in Sports Illustrated announcing James as the Sportsman of the Year, he quotes Coach K in a few different instances:

“The game is a house, and some players only have one or two windows in their house because they can’t absorb any more light,” says Mike Krzyzewski, head coach of Team USA. “When I met LeBron, he only had a few windows, but then he learned how beautiful the game can be, so he put more windows in. Now he sees the damn game so well, it’s like he lives in a glass building. He has entered a state of mastery. There’s nothing he can’t do. God gave him a lot but he is using everything. He’s one of the unique sports figures of all time, really, and he’s right in that area where it’s all come together.”

“He’s not smart,” says Krzyzewski. “He’s brilliant. And I don’t like to use that word.”

“Over the years LeBron has learned that it’s not just what a leader says but how a leader looks that counts. It’s the non-verbal communication that can sometimes carry the day. His body language and facial expressions were so strong that day. He put us on his back.”

It happened again in the gold medal game [against Spain]. He had four fouls, and I had to take him out. I didn’t want to. That was our vulnerable spot because we didn’t have many big guys. He had to guard a center. Late in the second half, I couldn’t wait any longer to put him back in. I can still see him driving and dunking, and taking that three. He made the winning plays for us.

For all of Coach K’s quotes and Lee Jenkins’ entire piece on James, check out SI.com.

Krzyzewski soundbites from his arrival at RDU

Duke basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski arrived at Raleigh/Durham International Airport yesterday after leading the USA men’s basketball team to a gold medal in 2012 Olympic Games in London.

With his second consecutive Olympic gold medal, also winning as the head coach in the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Krzyzewski spoke to the media at the airport, in addition to Blue Devil divers Nick McCrory and Abby Johnston, who separately earned medals in synchronized diving at the games.

Here are some highlights from Krzyzewski’s press conferences, courtesy of The Chronicle’s sports photography editor Elysia Su, whose photos from the event can be viewed in our post from earlier today.

Duke basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski spoke to the media at Raleigh/Durham International Airport about being the head coach of the USA men's basketball team, which won the gold medal in the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

On his reaction to winning, whether it was more excitement or relief:

“It’s more excitement, in the last couple minutes, I don’t think my reactions on the sidelines were out of relief. It was like, ‘Whoa, this is unbelievable.’”

On Duke basketball assistant coaches Chris Collins and Steve Wojciechowski’s importance to the success of the team as assistants in London:

“Having these guys is one of the changes we made in USA basketball. There was one practice—you have to be credentialed to get in—and most of the places we practiced you didn’t have to be credentialed. We had one practice and it’s Nate [McMillan, myself, Jim [Boeheim] and Mike [D'Antoni]. It was not good. We all had great ideas. It was like a bunch of old professors and we said do it, but it’s better to actually have someone else do it. So we’re trying to run the drills and the players are laughing. Chris Paul and LeBron pushed us out of the way and said ‘We know the drills. We’ll run them.’”

On the teamwork of the players on Team USA:

“Everybody worked as a team—the cooperation of our players was unbelievable. We were the most athletic [team], but the most together one, really. Our guys really got along.”

“It’s such an honor to win this thing and the way they won it makes it even better.”

“No country has ever won the Olympics, the world championships, then the Olympics three-in-a-row, so we’re all very proud of that.”

“We had five players who averaged double figures. [Kevin] Durant was the leading scorer, [Kevin] Love was the leading rebounder, actually LeBron [James] led us in assists and Chris Paul led us in steals. It was a team that did what it really needed to do to make it work. We looked real small out there at time—talented, don’t get me wrong.”

On the style of play, defenses and rebounding in international basketball:

“I wonder how many teams put a box-in-one on a team LeBron was on and he wasn’t the one, or Kobe [Bryant] wasn’t the one or Carmelo [Anthony] wasn’t the one.”

“We averaged 37 threes a game and made about 16 of them, and that was a key part. And I didn’t know this going in if we would be a good rebounding team and we ended up being a great rebounding team, averaging about 15 offensive boards per game. I think a large part of that is the long rebounds.”

On the unselfish nature of the players and Kobe Bryant’s 20-point second half against Australia to propel Team USA to the semifinals:

“One of the cool things about that game was Kobe was struggling a little bit and as soon as he hit that first shot—the whole bench, and these are guys who are so unselfish, said ‘shoot it’—then we got a steal and it was a 3-on-1 and he was about 25 feet away. ‘Shoot it!” And then he had about four threes in about 66 seconds.”

“They felt every shot their teammate shot was theirs.”

On repeatedly stating that this Olympics will be his last as the head coach of Team USA:

“I’m really sure. This is a huge a commitment. I thank Duke university, Dr. Brodhead, Kevin White, Joe Alleva before him for allowing me the opportunity to do this…. It’s time to pass the baton without letting it drop.”

On McCrory and Johnston’s success at the games and their commitment:

“The commitment an individual athlete has to make is outstanding. I’ve known Nick for a few years and Abby we’ve talked around the world championships a couple years ago and we’re following them during the Olympics. We can make a mistake, have a turnover and make up for it. When Abby and Nick are on their last dive and they have to hit it, they have to hit it. I can’t even imagine that pressure and for them to respond in the manner in which they did. It’s a lot better than what we did.

As a coach, Lebron and Kobe and those guys are doing it for me. Those two youngsters are doing it on their own against the world.”

Check The Blue Zone tomorrow for quotes from McCrory and Johnston, who also spoke to the press.

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Quotes from our 1-on-1 with Coach K

A couple weeks ago, The Chronicle had the chance for a one-on-one interview with men’s basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski, prior to his departure to Las Vegas, where he and Team USA are currently practicing in preparation for next month’s 2012 Olympic Games in London.

The feature on Krzyzewski and how his relationship with Team USA affects Duke basketball and other aspects of his career can be read on The Chronicle‘s main page.

Below are some tidbits from the interview with Krzyzewski that did not make the story:

On getting to see so many former players this summer at the K Academy and other basketball camps at Duke:

“When you have 37 of your former players come back, it shows that they want to come back–it’s not like you pay them…. Because I’ve been here so long, I’ve been able to interact with guys from the 80s, 90s and last decade…. They end up becoming friends with guys from other eras and then we touch base again. And there is often some networking that goes on to allow them to transition to something good into their lives.”

On how much attention he pays to what the media says about some of the stars on the players of Team USA:

“I listen to the things that are said about them because I’m going to coach them. So, I have to get a feel for the world that they’re in.”

On if he’ll try to wear glasses at press conferences to fit in with the latest fashion trends as demonstrated by some of his players such as LeBron James:

“Those guys look good in anything they wear. And I learned a long time ago as a coach here that I should never try to do that. What looks good on them looks good on them because anything would look good on them.”

On how his relationships with NBA coaches and general managers affects what he can do with members of the Duke program:

“We can give our current players and our former players advice on what to do based on these relationships and what you learn from them.”

On how the last two seasons were derailed by injuries and health as a key to success:

“It’s not like [Ryan Kelly is] a great player. He’s a really good player, and it changes the dynamic of your offense. The year before, if we have Kyrie Irving the whole year, we’ve got a chance to win the whole thing. The year before that, we were healthy. That doesn’t mean if you’re going to be healthy that you’re going to win the whole thing. We had the best player in the country and he plays 11 games. If it were another school, that would be a different story. Believe me. Same thing with Ryan.”

On moving past last year’s loss in the first game of the NCAA Tournament to Lehigh:

“When you’re in this as long as I have been—if I were a younger coach, I would’ve used the end of last season differently than how I’ve used it, like maybe there would be a chip and give the score of the Lehigh game. I’m not going to do that. They needed to feel what they felt, whether it was coming back on campus or walking off the court. And now we need to use that in a positive way, in a productive way. That’s why we’ve had the spring we’ve had. We’ve bonded as a group very well.”

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Krzyzewski and staff announce 20-player USA Basketball pool

When head coach Mike Krzyzewski and USA Basketball travel to London this summer for the 2012 Olympic Games, he’ll be surrounded by familiar faces.

18 of the 20 players selected to compete for the 12 Olympic roster spots competed under Krzyzewski at the 2008 Olympic Games or the 2010 World Championships. The only newcomers are Los Angeles Clippers forward Blake Griffin and Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge.

There are no former Blue Devil players in the pool, which comprises Carmelo Anthony, Chris Bosh, Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard, LeBron James, Chris Paul, Dwyane Wade and Deron Williams from the 2008 Olympic roster and Chauncey Billups, Tyson Chandler, Kevin Durant, Rudy Gay, Eric Gordon, Andre Iguodala, Kevin Love, Lamar Odom, Derrick Rose and Russell Westbrook.

LeBron Follows Only One College B-Baller: Kyrie Irving

LeBron James only follows one college basketball player: Kyrie Irving.

LeBron James has, indisputably, one of the most scrutinized Twitter accounts of any athlete in the world. He gained 150,000 followers in just under seven hours after he created his account three months ago, and his tweets today from the handle @kingjames are repeatedly reported as news on shows like Sportscenter.

But who does Lebron follow?

The usual suspects: Rappers like Diddy, Drake and Nicki Minaj. Fellow NBA stars like Carmelo Anthony, Chris Paul and Chris Bosh.

And only one college basketball player: Kyrie Irving.

At Duke’s photo shoot yesterday, I asked Irving if he was aware that he is the only NCAA basketball player followed by James. He did not know, and he tried to shrug the fact off when I asked him what he thought of it.

“I’m very blessed,” he simply said.

LeBron Joins Wade, Bosh In Miami: Is Scheyer Next?

Will Scheyer join the Heat in the fall?

Minutes ago, LeBron James shocked no one (thanks, Chris Broussard and your unnamed sources!) in announcing that he will sign with the Miami Heat next season. James will join fellow superstars Dwayne Wade and Chris Bosh, both of whom announced their free agent decisions yesterday, in South Beach.

Now, what does this have to do with Duke?  Well, after going undrafted, Duke’s own Jon Scheyer signed a deal with the Heat and will play for them in the NBA Summer League.  And with the James decision, the Heat now only have five players on their roster for next season: James, Wade, Bosh, Michael Beasley and Mario Chalmers.  What’s more, Miami will have little, if any, salary cap space to fill out the rest of their roster, given that James, Wade, and Bosh are all expected to get near-max deals.

So where will the Heat find the rest of their team? Second round picks Da’Sean Butler, Dexter Pittman and Jarvis Varnado will likely get their shot.  But how about an undrafted rookie sharpshooter who just happens to be a proven winner? That’s right, folks—not being drafted might just end up being the best thing possible for Jon Scheyer, who could not only conceivably make the team, but see legitimate playing time as a shooter off the bench.

So, fans of Scheyer may need to send a big thank you to LeBron in the coming weeks.