Jerry Sloan, the coach who took the Utah Jazz to the NBA Finals in
1997 and 1998 on his way to a spot in the Basketball Hall of Fame,
died Friday. He was 78.
The Jazz said he died from complications related to Parkinson’s
disease and Lewy body dementia.
Sloan spent 23 seasons coaching the Jazz. The team – with John
Stockton and Karl Malone leading the way in many of those seasons –
finished below .500 in only one of those years. Sloan won 1,221
games in his career, the fourth-highest total in NBA history.
Utah went to the finals twice under Sloan, both times falling to
Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls.
Sloan entered the Hall of Fame in 2009.
He spent 34 years in the employ of the Jazz organization, either as
head coach, assistant, scout or senior basketball adviser. Sloan
started as a scout, was promoted as an assistant under Frank Layden
in 1984 and became the sixth coach in franchise history on Dec. 9,
1988, after Layden resigned.
”Like Stockton and Malone as players, Jerry Sloan epitomized the
organization,” he Jazz said in a statement. ”He will be greatly
missed.”
—
More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA and
https://twitter.com/AP-Sports
###
Copyright © 2020


Comments