[Chron]Alexander wants Van Gundy back
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/3795500.html
陸聞有大意翻譯:http://sports.tom.com/2006-04-15/0424/30558311.html
Alexander wants Van Gundy back
Rockets owner does expect coach to make changes
By JONATHAN FEIGEN
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
Rockets owner Leslie Alexander, while saying that no
one from the owner to the coaches could claim to have
done a "great job" in a season stuck at 33 wins, said
Friday he "absolutely" wants Jeff Van Gundy back as
coach.
Though he said Van Gundy's work this season could
not be judged because of a stream of injuries, he
indicated no loss of confidence in his coach.
"I think Jeff's a great coach," Alexander said, "and I
think he can take us to a championship."
A day earlier, however, when Alexander and Rockets
general manager Carroll Dawson took questions from
season-ticket holders in a 45-minute conference call,
Alexander steered clear of such praise.
While speaking optimistically about the future and the
reasons fans could look forward to next season, he
never mentioned his coach.
He said the return of Tracy McGrady and Yao Ming,
with the right additions, could make the Rockets
championship contenders, but he did not refer to Van
Gundy, whom he gave a contract extension after last
season.
"I think what I said was, 'You can't judge Jeff by this
season because of all his injuries,' " Alexander said
on Friday. "I said he will be judged like I would (judge)
C.D. (Dawson) and Bill Worrell (the team's television
announcer and host of the call), at the end of the season.
"You want me to say to the fans (that) Jeff did a great
job this season when we won less than .500? I didn't do
a good job. He didn't do a good job. We didn't do a good
job. Nobody did a good job. That's impossible. Last
year we won 51. I thought that was a great job. Nobody
did a good job this year. That's my theory."
Although Alexander said his planned post-season
evaluations are routine, he said there are things he will
expect Van Gundy to do differently. He did not
characterize those changes as conditions to remain as
coach and would not say what those expectations would
be.
"I'm going to tell him, not you," Alexander said. "What
I'm going to take to him, I'm going to take to him."
Alexander is likely to tell Van Gundy that he expects
him to no longer be as publicly critical of a team
currently 26th in the NBA in home attendance and
possibly to be more flexible with marketing efforts.
He said he would never tell a coach how to coach a
team.
Alexander did say he will not expect Van Gundy to turn jovial after losses.
"He's not going to be Pat Croce (the upbeat former Philadelphia 76ers team
president)," Alexander said. "Neither am I."
Only concern: Grizzlies
Van Gundy has two years remaining on his contract, and only next season is
guaranteed.
He has repeatedly said he is focused too much on preparing for each game to
concern himself with his future. But he has said he does want to return.
"My tenure is not based on just what I want," Van Gundy said. "I haven't
thought about it until I'm asked about it, because I'm just thinking about
tomorrow. I'm committed to absolutely fulfilling my job responsibilities
better and my contract. I want to coach the team better, and I want a better
team to coach. It's both.
"I don't even think in those terms. I like where I live. I like the guys I
coach. I love the guys I coach with. To be talking about me is really the
wrong tack."
Van Gundy does, however, have things he wants to discuss with Alexander.
"This is an organization that five of the last seven years has been in the
lottery," said Van Gundy, whose team will miss the playoffs for the first
time in the nine seasons he completed as coach. "There's much ... bigger
areas of concern than a coach's contract — talent level, bench depth,
finding championship-quality-type players — all those things are far more
important than any contractual situation.
"If I had a chance to sit down and talk with him, I'd much rather talk about
the importance of having three point guards on a team, the importance of
having bench depth, the importance of having more firepower, the importance
of adding a range-shooting four-man. All those to me are of much greater
concern."
A lengthy wish list
Van Gundy said he is not referring to the team's determination to avoid
paying a luxury tax.
"I'm not saying anything about spending," Van Gundy said. "I'm talking about
one thing: what we need to do to win. Those aren't my decisions, but that's
what we need to win.
"It (his status) is not the area the organization needs to concern itself
with. What we need to concern ourselves with is how do we go from the worst
home record to the best home record in the league? How are we going to be
able to withstand injuries? To do that better is with better depth, more
firepower to withstand McGrady's (injuries.) All those things are where our
focus should be, and I'm sure Les and Carroll feel the same way."
Alexander would not say where he believed the focus should be, but the more
each talked, the more they sounded alike.
Injuries not fully to blame
"I think we all share in the responsibility of the disappointment of this
year," Van Gundy said. "I certainly don't want to be given a free pass for
this year, nor do I deserve one. Nor do the players deserve one. I think once
you get into that ... you have to stay realistic. I think the injuries had an
impact on the year, most certainly. But it wasn't the only thing that went
wrong.
"This year we didn't do the job that we should have done from top to bottom.
That includes me."
Staff writer Fran Blinebury contributed to this report.
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