For any NBA rookie, the first year is challenging. There is the adjustment to travel, the pressure to perform and all that comes with being a professional.
It can be overwhelming — even for a seasoned coach. No, nothing has come easy for David Blatt, who has had a tumultuous journey with the Cavaliers to the NBA Finals.
Handed a star-studded squad, but no handbook, Blatt managed high expectations and the world’s best player, ignored critics and battled a brutal case of homesickness.
For Blatt, leaving his family in Israel so he could chase his dream was more difficult than he imagined.
“It’s been really rough,” he said following a recent practice, clearing emotion from his throat.
“I’ve been away from my kids, who I’m used to seeing every day, hugging and kissing them,” he said. “It’s not even the fact that I’m away for a long time, it’s just not having that close contact with the people I care about so much.”
The Boston-born coach came back overseas with no assurances he would succeed in the NBA — too much risk to justify uprooting his wife and children from well-established lives in Israel.
Yet after a season of scrutiny, constant speculation about his future and a still-hard-to-decipher relationship with megastar LeBron James, Blatt is four wins from a championship.
It is a personal victory for the international coaching legend, who led pro teams in Israel and Italy to titles and the Russian national team to an Olympic bronze.
Despite an impeccable overseas resume, Blatt has been ridiculed for missteps in Cleveland. He endured it all, guiding a Cavs team that started 19-20, were overhauled by trades and hurt significantly by post-season injuries.
He could gloat. He will not.
“I told somebody recently I’m not a vindictive person,” he said. “So I don’t feel the need for vindication in any way.”
Blatt has taken shots about his personality, coaching choices and play calling.
During the season, James pushed Blatt out of the way while he argued with a referee in Phoenix, an awkward moment that led to questions about who was in charge.
In the closing seconds of a playoff game against Chicago, James changed an inbounds play moments after Blatt tried to call a timeout he did not have, sparking even more rumors that the Cavs might be poised for another coaching change.
Blatt outlasted the storm.
Former Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy said he is amazed the “coaching pinata” has succeeded.
“No one was giving this guy any credit,” Van Gund said. “He took all the blame and the players took all the credit for the wins.”
Yes, the Cavs were transformed by two mid-season trades, but Van Gundy believes Blatt’s ability to adjust made the difference.
“He was masterful in that he simplified the game,” Van Gundy said. “He might have had one idea of how he was going to come in and play, and then he saw what the players could do, should do and were willing to do, and he modified his approach, and it’s been very successful.”
While the Cavs’ turnaround has been impressive, so is the way his players have warmed to him.
In January, with Cleveland on a losing skid, James was given a chance to endorse his new coach and did not, saying: “I don’t pay no bills around here.”
The heat grew so intense that general manager David Griffin called an impromptu news conference to say Blatt’s job was safe.
However, on Monday, James offered effusive praise for his boss.
“Anytime someone is scrutinized really for nothing, I’m able to relate,” James said. “People love reading the negative things more than the positive things, so I think he’s handled his situation unbelievably. Being a rookie coach in the NBA, being able to take his team to the Finals, I think he’s done a hell of a job.”
Blatt believed he would have time to develop a young team when he was hired last summer, but then James returned, Cleveland acquired Kevin Love and the Cavs were instant title contenders. There would be no grace period, no honeymoon. It was win, and win now.
“It was a big change,” Blatt said. “The only thing that helped me is that I’ve been in situations where I was expected to win immediately, but that was a real shift in focus and in challenge.”
Blatt said a piece of advice from a former coach helped him navigate around the noise.
“He told me: ‘The moment you start listening to the guy who is sitting in the third row, you’ll quickly find yourself sitting right next to him. Go your own way,’” Blatt said.
Blatt has done just that, to the Finals.
‘SU-PENKO’: Hsieh and Ostapenko face a rematch against their Australian Open final opponents, the same duo Hsieh played in last year’s Wimbledon semi-finals Taiwanese women’s doubles star Hsieh Su-wei and Latvian partner Jelena Ostapenko on Wednesday survived a near upset to the unseeded duo of Sorana Cirstea of Romania and Russia’s Anna Kalinskaya, setting up a semi-final showdown against last year’s winners. Despite losing a hard-fought opening set 7-6 (7/4) on a tiebreak, the fourth seeds turned up the heat, losing just five games in the final two sets to handily put down Cirstea and Kalinskaya 6-3, 6-2. Nicknamed “Su-Penko,” the pair are next to face top seeds Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic and Taylor Townsend of the US in a reversal of last
Taiwanese tennis veteran Hsieh Su-wei (謝淑薇) and her Latvian partner Jelena Ostapenko finished runners-up in the Wimbledon women's doubles final yesterday, losing 6-3, 2-6, 4-6. The three-set match against Veronika Kudermetova of Russia and Elise Mertens of Belgium lasted two hours and 23 minutes. The loss denied 39-year-old Hsieh a chance to claim her 10th Grand Slam title. Although the Taiwanese-Latvian duo trailed 1-3 in the opening set, they rallied with two service breaks to take it 6-3. In the second set, Mertens and Kudermetova raced to a 5-1 lead and wrapped it up 6-2 to even the match. In the final set, Hsieh and
Taiwanese tennis veteran Hsieh Su-wei and her Latvian partner, Jelena Ostapenko, advanced to the Wimbledon women’s doubles final on Friday, defeating top seeds Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic and Taylor Townsend of the US in straight sets. The fourth-seeded duo bounced back quickly after losing their opening service game, capitalizing on frequent unforced errors by their opponents to take the first set 7-5. Maintaining their momentum in the second set, Hsieh and Ostapenko broke serve early and held their lead to close out the match 6-4. They are set to face the eighth-seeded pair of Veronika Kudermetova of Russia and Elise Mertens
Outside Anfield, the red sea of tributes to Diogo Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, has continued to grow this week, along with questions over whether Liverpool could play at Preston today, their first game since the brothers’ tragic loss. Inside Anfield, and specifically a grieving Liverpool dressing room, there was no major debate over the pre-season friendly. The English Premier League champions intend to honor their teammate in the best way they know how. It would be only 10 days since the deaths of Jota and Silva when Liverpool appear at Deepdale Stadium for what is certain to be a hugely