Fil-Am coach pays tribute to Heats heart
June 16, 2006 | 12:00am
MIAMI Theres a Filipino-American sitting on the Miami Heat bench in the National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals and his biggest regret is declining an offer to play in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).
Erik Celino Spoelstra, 35, is on his 11th season with the Heat franchise and fifth in his role of assistant coach/director of scouting. He began working for the team as a video coordinator in charge of preparing scouting tapes and heading the information technology department of the coaching staff in 1995. Spoelstra also served as assistant coach/advance scout for two years.
Spoelstras Irish-Dutch father Jon was a long-time NBA executive involved with the Portland Trail Blazers, Denver Nuggets and New Jersey Nets. His grandfather Watson was a Detroit Tigers beat writer. His mother Fe Celino is from San Pablo, Laguna.
Born in Portland, Spoelstra said hes been to the Philippines only once.
"Im embarrassed to admit Ive visited the Philippines only when I was three years old," said Spoelstra. "Im definitely planning to go again. I have lots of relatives who live just outside Manila. Im hoping that someday soon, Ill be able to visit and maybe, do some coaching clinics so I can share whatever I know about basketball."
Spoelstra said hes aware of how basketball is loved by Filipinos.
"I know about the PBA," continued Spoelstra, a bachelor. "I know Billy Ray Bates played there. Jim Kelly invited me to play in the PBA some years ago and I think it was for the Coca-Cola team. I wouldve been eligible to play as a local."
Kelly coached in Germany, where Spoelstra played as an import for two years, and was a PBA coaching consultant before joining the Toronto Raptors. Kelly is married to a Filipina.
Spoelstra was the starting point guard for the University of Portland for four years, averaging 9.2 points, 2.4 rebounds and 4.4 assists. He was named the conference Freshman of the Year and graduated in 1992 with a degree in communications.
"After college, I wanted to see the world and play ball," said Spoelstra. "Germany was my first stop. And I planned to play in other countries, including the Philippines."
Spoelstra was exposed to coaching in the German league as a playing coach for the Tus Herten club. When he returned to the US from Germany, Spoelstra was hired by the Heat and retires as a player.
Among his responsibilities with the Heat are supervising the teams summer development program and working extensively with Miamis perimeter players. He was cited by Sports Illustrated (May 30, 2005) for his work in honing star guard Dwyane Wades shooting balance and smoothing out his release after the Flashs return from the Athens Olympics. Spoelstra said working with coach Pat Riley and predecessor Stan Van Gundy has been an awesome learning experience.
"Its basically the same system were using with coach Pat that coach Stan started," said Spoelstra. "Theyre both excellent coaches. Pat is a great motivator, very creative and prepares extremely well for a game."
Spoelstra said this years Heat squad is special because the players never give up.
"Weve had games where weve come back from double digit deficits in the fourth period to win so in Game 3, I wasnt surprised we did what we did," said Spoelstra. "This team has a lot of heart."
Spoelstra said with 1.4 seconds to go in last Tuesdays cliffhanger, Wade didnt deliberately miss the second of two free throws and explained why Riley benched Shaquille ONeal in the last 1:03 minutes.
"Dallas had a small lineup on the floor with Dirk (Nowitzki) playing the five position so we thought of putting in a quicker guy in the middle," said Spoelstra.
The gamble almost didnt pay off. Nowitzki attacked the rim with 1.4 seconds left and Miami on top, 97-95. There was no ONeal to intimidate Nowitzki. Udonis Haslem fouled Nowitzki who sank his first charity but flubbed the second. Wade got the rebound, was fouled by Nowitzki and converted 1-of-2 free throws. Josh Howard pulled down the rebound off Wades miss from the line and Dallas coach Avery Johnson called a timeout with 1.0 second to go.
Nowitzki inbounded and tried to alley-oop it to Howard in a catch-and-shoot situation but Wade deflected the ball, preserving Miamis two-point lead.
Spoelstra said the Heat will go all out to tie the series in Game 4 this morning (Manila time) and ensure at least a Game 6 in Dallas.
Erik Celino Spoelstra, 35, is on his 11th season with the Heat franchise and fifth in his role of assistant coach/director of scouting. He began working for the team as a video coordinator in charge of preparing scouting tapes and heading the information technology department of the coaching staff in 1995. Spoelstra also served as assistant coach/advance scout for two years.
Spoelstras Irish-Dutch father Jon was a long-time NBA executive involved with the Portland Trail Blazers, Denver Nuggets and New Jersey Nets. His grandfather Watson was a Detroit Tigers beat writer. His mother Fe Celino is from San Pablo, Laguna.
Born in Portland, Spoelstra said hes been to the Philippines only once.
"Im embarrassed to admit Ive visited the Philippines only when I was three years old," said Spoelstra. "Im definitely planning to go again. I have lots of relatives who live just outside Manila. Im hoping that someday soon, Ill be able to visit and maybe, do some coaching clinics so I can share whatever I know about basketball."
Spoelstra said hes aware of how basketball is loved by Filipinos.
"I know about the PBA," continued Spoelstra, a bachelor. "I know Billy Ray Bates played there. Jim Kelly invited me to play in the PBA some years ago and I think it was for the Coca-Cola team. I wouldve been eligible to play as a local."
Kelly coached in Germany, where Spoelstra played as an import for two years, and was a PBA coaching consultant before joining the Toronto Raptors. Kelly is married to a Filipina.
Spoelstra was the starting point guard for the University of Portland for four years, averaging 9.2 points, 2.4 rebounds and 4.4 assists. He was named the conference Freshman of the Year and graduated in 1992 with a degree in communications.
"After college, I wanted to see the world and play ball," said Spoelstra. "Germany was my first stop. And I planned to play in other countries, including the Philippines."
Spoelstra was exposed to coaching in the German league as a playing coach for the Tus Herten club. When he returned to the US from Germany, Spoelstra was hired by the Heat and retires as a player.
Among his responsibilities with the Heat are supervising the teams summer development program and working extensively with Miamis perimeter players. He was cited by Sports Illustrated (May 30, 2005) for his work in honing star guard Dwyane Wades shooting balance and smoothing out his release after the Flashs return from the Athens Olympics. Spoelstra said working with coach Pat Riley and predecessor Stan Van Gundy has been an awesome learning experience.
"Its basically the same system were using with coach Pat that coach Stan started," said Spoelstra. "Theyre both excellent coaches. Pat is a great motivator, very creative and prepares extremely well for a game."
Spoelstra said this years Heat squad is special because the players never give up.
"Weve had games where weve come back from double digit deficits in the fourth period to win so in Game 3, I wasnt surprised we did what we did," said Spoelstra. "This team has a lot of heart."
Spoelstra said with 1.4 seconds to go in last Tuesdays cliffhanger, Wade didnt deliberately miss the second of two free throws and explained why Riley benched Shaquille ONeal in the last 1:03 minutes.
"Dallas had a small lineup on the floor with Dirk (Nowitzki) playing the five position so we thought of putting in a quicker guy in the middle," said Spoelstra.
The gamble almost didnt pay off. Nowitzki attacked the rim with 1.4 seconds left and Miami on top, 97-95. There was no ONeal to intimidate Nowitzki. Udonis Haslem fouled Nowitzki who sank his first charity but flubbed the second. Wade got the rebound, was fouled by Nowitzki and converted 1-of-2 free throws. Josh Howard pulled down the rebound off Wades miss from the line and Dallas coach Avery Johnson called a timeout with 1.0 second to go.
Nowitzki inbounded and tried to alley-oop it to Howard in a catch-and-shoot situation but Wade deflected the ball, preserving Miamis two-point lead.
Spoelstra said the Heat will go all out to tie the series in Game 4 this morning (Manila time) and ensure at least a Game 6 in Dallas.
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