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Rumors

|George Karl
Jim Boeheim on criticism Carmelo Anthony received from former coaches: He made his teams better—sometimes that’s all you can ask

Jim Boeheim on criticism Carmelo Anthony received from former coaches: He made his teams better—sometimes that’s all you can ask


You often defended Melo throughout his NBA career when he got criticized in Denver and New York. How George Karl and Phil Jackson’s criticisms about Melo land with you? Boeheim: “Well, the thing I think about the NBA is that he made every team that he was on better than they were. Whether it was Denver or the Knicks, he made them better. They had to go up against the Lakers and the Spurs in Denver. They couldn’t do it, but he made the team better. That’s all you can do sometimes as players. You can’t make a team a championship team by yourself. You have to have a lot of parts to it. His time in Denver, there were some great teams with the Lakers and the Spurs. He made them better, and that’s all you can do as a player.”

SportsKeeda


Brandon Krisztal: I’m hearing that longtime Nuggets assistant Ryan Bowen is set to become the new Head Coach of the team’s G-League affiliate, The Grand Rapids Gold, and former Nuggets assistant Coach, Chad Iske, will serve as the GM of the Gold. Iske, returned to the organization as a Pro Scout in 2022 after a decade on the bench with the 76ers, Kings, Wizards & Hornets. He was an asst. for George Karl from 2007-2013. After retiring from basketball in 2009, Bowen also joined Karl’s staff in Denver from 2011-2013. He spent the next 2 seasons on the bench in Sacramento before returning to Denver’s bench in 2015.

x.com

Kenyon Martin on playing for George Karl: If we had a different coach, we win a championship


Kenyon Martin: I’mma keep harping on it. People gonna get tired of hearing me say it, probably... but if we had a different coach, we win a championship, bro. No doubt about it. I just said this earlier: your coach gotta get you one. If we had a different coach that was well-rounded—knew the game and people—not just the game and not just people, but both? Because it can’t just be one part. Nah.

YouTube


Kenyon Martin: So, did the man know basketball? Yeah. But it wasn’t in its totality. Not in-game situations. All the stuff you need—like, if you ain’t got no timeouts, or if they take something away, what are we going to do? We never worked on that. I played for this man for six and a half years. We never worked on end-of-game situations. Like, never worked on it, dog. So, we’re playing the Lakers—Western Conference Finals. We throw the ball away twice because we’re trying to zip Mello up. We didn’t run any action. Just zip him up, and they took it away. We turned the ball over.

YouTube

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George Karl: Jokic was the MVP again this season and …

George Karl: Jokic was the MVP again this season and it wasn’t that close. But I guess I’m the only former Nuggets coach who knows that.

x.com

“The Nuggets kind of drive me a little crazy,” George …

“The Nuggets kind of drive me a little crazy,” George Karl, the Hall of Fame basketball coach whose resume includes three division titles in Denver from 2004-2013, said of Nikola Jokic when I called him Tuesday. “You’ve got the best player in the game of basketball and I want him … I mean, I want a Nuggets championship for Denver, yes. But I really want (Jokic) to be recognized … as one of the top 10 players of all time. “And if he doesn’t win another championship, I don’t know if he’ll get that recognition.”

Denver Post

The Nuggets aren’t in a pickle. They’re in a hoagie of …

The Nuggets aren’t in a pickle. They’re in a hoagie of hurt, sandwiched between two of the deepest teams in the NBA right now. While Oklahoma City and Minnesota are tussling in a steel cage match to reach the NBA Finals, Chopper Circle is without a general manager, without a head coach, without a draft pick in 2025, and without much cap space. “Personally, I would pick his brain,” Karl said of Jokic. “Not only is (Joker) a (generational) basketball talent — he’s a very bright player, a very intelligent basketball player. And I think (I’d) want to be getting him revved up and juiced up for next year, to support whatever changes they make. I’d still do whatever (he) wanted me to do.”

Denver Post


His 74th birthday is approaching and Karl no longer looks or sounds like the barrel-chested, tornado of energy who stormed the sideline for 27 seasons while becoming the NBA’s sixth-winningest coach. Three bouts of cancer have withered his body, and his voice is raspy and weak. His nights are torture. He often awakens in a panic, fearful he is suffocating. Chronic mucus clogs his throat and lungs, a side effect from seven weeks of radiation treatments in 2009 to rid his head and neck of cancer. He has to suction the mucus out, much like a dental assistant, before returning to his pillow.

New York Times


In 2004, he was treated for prostate cancer. In 2017, he had more radiation treatment for ocular melanoma. He can’t see well. Hear well. Or speak well. He meditates to ease the anxiety of suffocating and admits that most days he fears dying. “But being a meditative guy, the Buddhist always believed the greatest evolution is dying,” Karl said. Cancer is not his only fight. Karl, nine years since leaving the NBA, wrestles almost daily with what he calls the love of his life. His struggle with basketball is twofold. He is concerned about the direction of the game, and haunted by his painful and controversial past.

New York Times

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His insomnia went deeper than style beating substance. He couldn’t help but see himself. For all of Karl’s fame, fortune and friendships gained throughout his playing and coaching career, he is haunted by the thought he is a failure. He won 1,175 games and was brilliant and innovative enough to advance to the game’s brightest stages. Yet, he never won the biggest game.

New York Times


He believes his opinion should carry weight, even if the radiation treatments have ravaged his voice box to a whisper. He doesn’t want to coach, and he doesn’t want to work full time. He just wants to be heard. “The league the last five to 10 years kind of runs how we played (in Denver),” Karl said. “And what’s funny is nobody comes to me and asks what the secrets are. And I’m going, ‘Oh, OK. You can figure it out all by yourself, eh?’ And I’m not saying you gotta buy my s—. I’m just saying, you might want to listen to my s—, you know?”

New York Times

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