Saturday, May 9, 2009

Chuck Daly, Pistons Coach, Dies at 78

Chuck Daly, who coached the Detroit Pistons’ Bad Boy teams to two consecutive N.B.A. championships, then coached the Olympic Dream Team to a gold medal at the 1992 Barcelona Games, died Saturday in Jupiter, Fla. He was 78.

Duane Burleson/Associated Press

Detroit Pistons head coach Chuck Daly yelled instructions from the sidelines during game four against the Milwaukee Bucks in Milwaukee on May 15, 1989.


Daly’s death was announced by the Pistons. In March, they said he was being treated for pancreatic cancer.

When Daly became the Pistons’ coach in 1983, the franchise had never won an N.B.A. championship since entering the league in 1948, representing Fort Wayne, Ind. In his nine seasons with Detroit, Daly’s teams made the playoffs every time. His Pistons swept the Los Angeles Lakers in the 1989 N.B.A. finals, then beat the Portland Trail Blazers in a five-game final the next year.

Daly was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., in 1994. When the N.B.A. celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1996, he was named one of the 10 greatest coaches in league history in balloting by members of the news media. The Pistons retired No. 2 in 1997 to commemorate his consecutive N.B.A. titles.

Daly’s Pistons featured scoring and flash in the backcourt, with Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars and Vinnie Johnson, and muscle up front, with Bill Laimbeer, Rick Mahorn, Dennis Rodman, John Salley, Mark Aguirre and James Edwards.

The Bad Boys were known as fierce defenders quick to toss an elbow or a body. Daly was a fast-talking figure who exuded energy and passion, but in dealing with these rugged sorts he used persuasion in place of an iron hand.

“If you’re going to be a coach, it’s going to be a selling job night in and night out,” he said. “I’ve had surgery on my right knee. It comes from bending a lot.”

As Brendan Suhr, an assistant to Daly, put it: “Chuck is a communicator. In the pro game, 95 percent of coaching is knowing the people. With Chuck, I’d raise that to 99 percent.”

Thomas once remarked: “Chuck Daly put a lot of trust in us. We had guys on the floor telling each other what to do, putting together game plans.”

When Daly assembled the first United States Olympic basketball team using professional players, he had enormous talent and egos to match. He blended the superstars on that Dream Team, led by Michael JordanLarry Bird and Magic Johnson, and they rolled to a gold medal.

For all the Olympic team’s scoring prowess, there were flashes of the Bad Boys aura. In the opening game, the 250-pound Charles Barkley drew a flagrant foul for smashing an elbow into the chest of a 174-pound player from Angola.

After the United States routed Croatia to win gold, Jordan remarked that “people said that no one plays defense in the N.B.A., but the biggest difference is our defense.”

Charles Jerome Daly, a native of St. Marys, Pa., grew up in Kane, Pa., and decided on his future while in high school.

“I remember telling my mother, ‘Mom, I’m going to be a basketball coach, and I bet I can make as much as $10,000 a year at it,’ ” Daly recalled. “I had read all the John Tunis sports books as a kid.”

Daly played basketball at St. Bonaventure and at Bloomsburg (Pa.) State College, then coached high school basketball for eight seasons in Punxsutawney, Pa. He went on to become head coach at Boston College (1969-71) and at Penn (1971-77), taking the Quakers to four consecutive Ivy League titles.

He entered the N.B.A. in the late 1970s as an assistant to Coach Billy Cunningham with the Philadelphia 76ers, and he was the head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers for part of the 1980-81 season.

Daly resigned as the Pistons’ coach after the 1991-92 season, then coached the Nets for two seasons, taking them to the playoffs each time. He worked as a pro basketball television analyst, then coached the Orlando Magic for two seasons before retiring for good with a 638-437 record over 14 seasons.

Daly is survived by his wife, Terry; a daughter, Cydney; and two grandchildren.

While Daly’s Pistons were known for rough-and-tumble play, he was an elegant presence at courtside in dark blue suits, nicknamed Daddy Rich for his taste in fine clothing.

“You read the article that said I had 199 blue suits?” Daly said before coaching the East against the West squad of the fashionable Pat Riley in the 1990 N.B.A. All-Star Game. “Now I have 200. I went into a store and sure enough I bought a blue one. Nobody ever looks bad in a blue suit.”

As for his interest in clothing, he said: “This is not a game where you upstage the players. This is a business like any other business. You get bored. I get bored. You do something for fun.”

1 comment:

coffee fan said...

it seems like there have been so many big sports figures passing on lately, tragic