BlankJerry Sloan, Guard and Coach in Basketball Hall of Fame, Is Dead at 78. By
Richard Goldstein.
An All-Star with the Bulls, he became an immensely successful coach, turning
the Utah
Jazz into a powerhouse and a postseason perennial. Jerry Sloan, who entered the
National Basketball Association as an unlikely prospect for a Hall of Fame
career but
carved out one nevertheless, as an All-Star guard with the Chicago Bulls and
one of
the winningest coaches in league history, died on Friday at his home in Salt
Lake
City. He was 78. The Utah Jazz, a team he coached for 23 seasons, said the
cause was
Lewy body dementia and Parkinson's disease. Both illnesses were diagnosed in
2015, as
the team had announced at the time.
Sloan had a low profile when he arrived in the N.B.A. in 1965. He had played
for a
small-college N.C.A.A. school, and, though he was tenacious on defense, he
wasn't a
brilliant scorer. But he became a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame after
forging
an N.B.A. career spanning a half-century. He became the fourth-winningest head
coach
in N.B.A. history and No. 2, behind Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs,
for
longest tenure with one team. Only Don Nelson, Lenny Wilkens and Popovich have
compiled more regular-season N.B.A. coaching victories than Sloan, whose teams
won
1,221 games and lost 803 in his 26 seasons, three with the Bulls before he
became
head coach of the Jazz. Sloan coached the Jazz to 15 consecutive playoff
appearances, from 1989 to 2003, with teams featuring Karl Malone at power
forward and
John Stockton at point guard in his pick-and-roll offense. His Utah teams
reached the
N.B.A. finals in 1997 and 1998 but were beaten both times by Michael Jordan's
Bulls.
Sloan was inducted into the Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., together with
Stockton, in 2009. Malone joined them there in 2010.
The 6-foot-5 Sloan was selected by the Baltimore Bullets in the first round of
the
1965 N.B.A. draft out of Evansville College of Indiana (now the University of
Evansville), which he led to the 1964 and 1965 tournament championships in the
N.C.A.A. small-college division, now known as Division II. He averaged 17.6
points
per game as a senior but was coveted mostly for his defensive skills.
After Sloan's rookie season, the Bulls obtained him in the 1966 draft that
stocked
their inaugural team. Playing 10 seasons for Chicago, he was a two-time
All-Star and
was selected six times as an all-N.B.A. defensive player. Sloan suffered a
string of
knee injuries and retired as a player after the 1975-76 season. He averaged 14
points
a game for his career.
He was offered the head coaching post at Evansville early in 1977 and agreed to
take
it, but he changed his mind a few days later, feeling that his future lay in
the pro
game.
He was working as an assistant coach with the Bulls that December when a plane
carrying the Evansville basketball team, head coach Bobby Watson and his staff
crashed on takeoff from the Evansville airport en route to a game in Tennessee,
killing everyone aboard.
"I had just talked to the team the week before," Sloan told Sports Illustrated
in
1997. "It made me realize that basketball wasn't everything in life."
Sloan became the Bulls' head coach in the 1979-80 season. He took them to the
playoffs in his second season in Chicago but was fired during his third season,
having compiled an overall record of 94 victories and 121 losses.
After serving as an assistant coach with the Jazz, he became head coach in
December
1988, replacing Frank Layden, who moved up to team president.
On the sidelines Sloan was by turns unassuming and intense, collecting his
share of
technical fouls but commanding loyalty from his players.
"The game is extremely important to him, how it looks, how it's played,"
Stockton
told The New York Times in 2000. "I think he gets technicals because he's
standing up
for the game more than anything else. I think it's his non-self-promoting
demeanor.
He's not out there telling you what a great coach he is."
Malone, also in a Times interview, said: "He wants you to come, work hard, do
what he
tells you to do. I won't play for another coach. Me and him clash every now and
then,
but it's one of those things in the end where I want what he wants. -- to win.
And he
realizes that."
Gerald Eugene Sloan was born on March 28, 1942, in McLeansboro, Ill., near a
rural
area called Gobblers Knob, where his family had a farm. He was the youngest of
10
children. His father died when he was 4, and he joined with his brothers and
sisters
in helping their mother with the chores.
Sloan was an all-state basketball player at McLeansboro High School, then
played for
three seasons at Evansville and became a second-team All-American. Through his
years
in the pros, he retained touches of his upbringing as a farm boy. He liked to
wear
John Deere caps, and he collected and restored tractors.
Sloan had only one losing team in his 23 seasons as the Jazz coach and posted
an
overall regular-season record of 1,127-682 with Utah. He resigned in February
2011,
at least in part because of his contentious relationship with his star guard
Deron
Williams, who wanted more freedom to create plays. Soon afterward, Williams was
traded to the New Jersey Nets.
But Sloan's tenure with the Jazz wasn't over. He returned to the team as an
adviser
and scouting consultant in 2013.
Sloan's survivors include his second wife, Tammy Jessop; his son, Brian, and
his
daughters, Holly Parish and Kathy Wood, from his marriage to Bobbye (Irvin)
Sloan,
who died in 2004; and a stepson, Rhett Jessop.
When Stockton and Malone neared the end of their careers, Sloan acknowledged
that he
would be disappointed to miss out on an N.B.A. championship.
"I know this, though," he told Sports Illustrated in 2002. "A lot of guys will
show
their rings to you who didn't have anything to do with winning a championship.
There's something to be said for coming back after you lose, for putting
yourself on
the line, for having the will to try it again and again, for putting every
ounce of
energy into achieving something after you've fallen short. That's the kind of
guys
we've always had here."