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Wizzle
05-09-2009, 08:08 AM
Daly led Pistons to pair of titles

DETROIT -- Chuck Daly, who coached the original Dream Team to the Olympic gold medal in 1992 after winning back-to-back NBA championships with the Detroit Pistons, died at age 78 Saturday morning, the Pistons said.

He was renowned for his ability to create harmony out of diverse personalities at all levels of the game, whether they were Ivy Leaguers at Pennsylvania, Dream Teamers Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley, or Pistons as dissimilar as Dennis Rodman and Joe Dumars.

"It's a players' league. They allow you to coach them or they don't," Daly once said. "Once they stop allowing you to coach, you're on your way out."

The Pistons announced in March that the Hall of Fame coach had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and was undergoing treatment.

Daly was voted one of the 10 greatest coaches of the NBA's first half-century in 1996, two years after being inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame. He was the first coach to win both an NBA title and Olympic gold.

"I think Chuck understood people as well as basketball," former Pistons guard Joe Dumars told The Associated Press in 1995. "It's a people business."

Daly did famously at the Barcelona Games with NBA superstars such as Magic Johnson, Jordan, Larry Bird and Barkley, using a different lineup in every game.

"I played against Chuck's teams throughout the NBA for a lot of years. He always had his team prepared, he's a fine coach," Bird said shortly after Daly's diagnosis became public.

"Chuck did a good job of keeping us together," Bird said. "It wasn't about who scored the most points, it was about one thing: winning the gold medal."

Daly humbled the NBA superstars by coaching a group of college players to victory in a controlled scrimmage weeks before the Olympics.

"I was the happiest man in the gym," Daly said afterward.

Daly also made the right moves for the Pistons, who were notorious for their physical play with Bill Laimbeer and Rick Mahorn leading the fight, Rodman making headlines and Hall of Fame guards Isiah Thomas and Dumars lifting the team to titles in 1989 and 1990.

Former Piston John Salley gave Daly the nickname Daddy Rich for his impeccably tailored suits.

Daly had a career regular-season record of 638-437 in 13 NBA seasons. In 12 playoff appearances, his teams went 75-51. He left Detroit as the Pistons' all-time leader in regular-season and playoff victories.

Despite his success, Daly wasn't part of a Coach of the Year presentation until he handed the trophy to then-Detroit coach Rick Carlisle in 2002.

"This is as close as I've ever been to that thing," Daly said, looking at the Red Auerbach Trophy.

Born July 20, 1930 in St. Mary's, Pa., Charles Jerome Daly played college ball at St. Bonaventure and Bloomsburg. After two years in the military, he coached for eight seasons at Punxsutawney (Pa.) High School and then spent six years as an assistant at Duke.

Succeeding Bob Cousy as coach at Boston College, Daly coached the Eagles to a 26-24 record over two seasons and then spent seven seasons at Pennsylvania, leading the Quakers to the Ivy League championship in 1972-75.

Daly joined the NBA coaching ranks in 1978 as an assistant under Billy Cunningham in Philadelphia. His first head coaching job was with Cleveland, but he was fired after the Cavaliers went 9-32 over the first half of the 1981-82 season.

In 1983, Daly took over a Detroit team that had never had two straight winning seasons and led the Pistons to nine consecutive winning seasons. He persuaded the likes of Rodman, Thomas, Dumars, Mahorn and Laimbeer and to play as a unit and they responded with back-to-back championships in 1989 and 1990.

Far from being intimidated by the Pistons' Bad Boys image, Daly saw the upside of it.

"I've also had players who did not care," he said a decade later. "I'd rather have a challenging team."

After leaving Detroit, Daly took over the New Jersey Nets for two seasons and led them to the playoffs both times.

He left broadcasting to return to the bench 1997 with the Orlando Magic and won 74 games over two seasons, then retired at the age of 68 because he said he was weary of the travel.

Daly joined the Vancouver Grizzlies as a senior adviser in 2000.

In retirement, he split time between residences in Jupiter, Fla., and suburban Detroit.

The Pistons retired No. 2 to honor their former coach's two NBA titles in January 1997.

"Without you, there wouldn't be us," Mahorn said to Daly during the ceremony.

Daly is survived by his wife, Terry, as well as daughter Cydney and grandchildren Sebrina and Connor.


sad sad day

Big Swami
05-09-2009, 08:57 AM
I really wanted today to be a good day, too. I really loved daddy rich, man. He did the impossible - bringing the Bad Boys together. Truly one of the absolute best, a true gentleman, and my favorite coach of all time.

Pharaoh
05-09-2009, 09:04 AM
It's really unfortunate and it just finishes this shitty season with another fucking sad thing.

At least he had a good life and was well respected by his peers and obviously his players. I once saw Dennis Rodman cry (might have been a clip from the Oprah show) when he was talking about all the shit Daly did for him.

Higherwarrior
05-09-2009, 09:57 AM
wow. for some reason he seemed so much younger than 78. this is a horrible day. RIP chuck. you were the greatest coach in pistons history and one of the best in NBA history.

we lost a great man today.

Glenn
05-09-2009, 10:19 AM
That's partly sad, partly a good thing.

He wasn't going to get better and it sounded like his q of life was poor.

He suffers no more.

DennyMcLain
05-09-2009, 10:29 AM
Chuck is in a better place now.

As we speak, he's screaming at Wilt to work on his fucking free throws, and working over Pistol Pete 'cause he's not applying himself to the D side of the ball.

And there's Lombardi, sitting in the stands, laughing his ass off.


On a related not, JoeD must be feeling it today, no matter how predictable this ending may have been. Let's hope that for one solitary day Joe decides he doesn't give a rats ass about anything but family, and CURRY calls at the exact wrong time and says something that pushes Joe D over the edge, and....

Tahoe
05-09-2009, 11:00 AM
Class act.

Big Swami
05-09-2009, 11:02 AM
Pancreatic cancer kills very quickly. A diagnosis is usually one of two things: it's either a cancer that will spread very fast, or it's a cancer that has just been detected in the pancreas but has already spread very far.

I think we should be thankful he did not have to suffer for long.

Joe Asberry
05-09-2009, 01:29 PM
damn cancer, RIP Chuck Daly

MoTown
05-09-2009, 01:46 PM
I think Curry should take the blame for this one as well. He killed both Davidson and Daly.

Tahoe
05-09-2009, 04:13 PM
79 years old. I didn't realize that. Thats not bad. I'd take living til I was 79 right now if I could.

D's Nuts
05-09-2009, 06:00 PM
Chuck is the first coach I ever really knew about and liked as a young kid. I am grateful for what he did for our team and what he has given to the sport of basketball.

I forgot that he coached the Magic in the mid 90's and quit because he didn't want to deal with the egos. I can only imagine what he thinks of today's players and the way the game is played.

D's Nuts
05-09-2009, 06:01 PM
Chuck is in a better place now.

Because he doesn't have to watch the atrocity of what the NBA has become? Agreed.

MOLA1
05-09-2009, 06:28 PM
R.I.P. Chuck "Daddy Rich" Daly.

Pharaoh
05-10-2009, 07:01 AM
Mo - I'm sure watching Curry "Coach" this team didn't help Daly and Davidson feel better.

Maybe he did have an impact, even if it was a small one.

Which would be just like Curry - dude only ever has a small impact on anything (Boxscore, Spying, Coaching)

Pharaoh
05-11-2009, 08:17 AM
There's an article on Yahoo about the final time Joe saw Chuck but I tried to type the link in here TWICE and it didn't work.

Maybe I'm out of practice after being gone so long...

Big Swami
05-11-2009, 11:58 AM
Ugh. (http://www.clickondetroit.com/parkersconfidential/19423492/detail.html#-)

DETROIT -- Joe Dumars called him, "charismatic.'' It fit Chuck Daly perfectly. Daly, the former Hall of Fame Pistons coach, indeed, had a special, inspiring quality of leadership.

Daly, who was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, passed away Saturday morning in Jupiter, Fla. His family was by his side. Daly was 78.
hi everyone i'm rob parker and i am KEEERRRRAAAAYZEEE FOR COMMAS

WTFchris
05-11-2009, 12:41 PM
That first paragraph is brutally worded.

Big Swami
05-11-2009, 12:49 PM
Hey, everyone. I'm still involved with sports journalism somehow. I wrote this column. Read it!

How about I punch myself in the cock instead?