Scott Skiles
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Scott Allen Skiles (born March 5, 1964 in LaPorte, Indiana) is a former professional basketball player and current head coach of the Chicago Bulls. Skiles holds the NBA record for assists in one game, with thirty. In 1990-91 he won the NBA Most Improved Player Award.
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[edit] High school and college
In 1982, Skiles led Plymouth High School to the Indiana State Championship. Plymouth, with no starter taller than 6'2", was considered to be the weakest of the final four teams in the tournament that year. Amazingly, they won the state title with a 75-74 double overtime victory over heavily favored Gary Roosevelt. In that game, Skiles scored 39 points to lead the Pilgrims past the Roosevelt Panthers. His long 22 foot field goal, that was well beyond where the current three-point line is (no three-point shot existed in 1982) as time expired sent the game into overtime. Many consider the game one of the most memorable finals from the era of classless basketball in Indiana, when all high schools in the state competed for a single championship regardless of enrollment. Indiana adopted a multiclass tournament in 1998, and prior to that it was much more difficult for smaller schools to compete and win the title. Plymouth was the smallest school to win the championship since Milan in 1954. (Milan's story has been immortalized in the movie Hoosiers.) Plymouth High School enrollment at that time was about 900 students attending grades 9 through 12. Skiles scored 25 of his 39 points in the championship game after the third quarter of play. During the 1982 season, Skiles led the state in scoring, averaging 30.2 points per game.
Skiles attended Michigan State University, where in his senior season he was a First Team All-America selection as well as the Big Ten Conference MVP and scoring champion. He left MSU as its all-time career scoring leader (2,145 points) and still holds the Spartans' record for most points scored in a season (850). While in East Lansing, he was arrested and charged with felony possession of cocaine and misdemeanor possession of marijuana. The cocaine charge was dropped when Skiles pleaded guilty to the marijuana possession. He was arrested and charged with drunken driving a year later and served 15 days in jail. During his senior season, Skiles committed a parole violation on an earlier marijuana conviction, and served a brief jail sentence[1].
[edit] Professional playing career
The Milwaukee Bucks made Skiles the 22nd overall selection of the 1986 NBA Draft and he was one of the draft's few bright spots in the first round. In ten seasons, he played for the Bucks (1986–87), Indiana Pacers (1987–89), Orlando Magic (1989–94), Washington Bullets (1994–95), and Philadelphia 76ers (1995–96).
In 1989, Skiles was selected by the newly-formed Orlando Magic in the NBA expansion draft. In that year Skiles would become a pivotal sixth man, and as backup point guard amassed 7.7 ppg, 4.8 assists per game, and twenty-one minutes per game. The following year he would transition to the position of starting point guard.
On December 30, 1990, Skiles racked up 30 assists in Orlando's 155-116 victory over the Denver Nuggets, breaking Kevin Porter's NBA single-game assists record (29).[2] He averaged 17.2 points and 8.4 assists per game that season, doubling his marks from the previous year and earning the NBA Most Improved Player Award.
In 1996, nursing a serious shoulder injury, Skiles left the U.S. for the European league and joined PAOK in Thessaloniki, Greece. At PAOK, expectations were high for the new arrival from the NBA. Midway through the season, however, injuries and contract problems with key players threatened to devolve into a disastrous season for PAOK and French coach Michel Gomez. Still struggling with injury himself, increasingly at odds with his coach, and fighting a custody battle in the U.S. for his two children, Scott asked to be released from his contract. Instead, President Lakis Alexopoulos fired Gomez and offered Skiles the job. Despite lacking three of their top players due to injury, Skiles led PAOK to a winning record as coach in the remainder of the '96-'97 season, and an unexpected 3rd place finish in the league tournament.
[edit] Coaching career
The following year Scott Skiles returned to the NBA as an assistant coach with the Phoenix Suns and was later elevated to head coach (1999). Under Skiles, Phoenix compiled a winning record (.595) and made the playoffs in two of his three years, including a first-round win over the defending NBA champion San Antonio Spurs in 2000. In 2003, after a two-year absence from the game, Skiles came to the Chicago Bulls as head coach where he focused on improving the young Bulls' defense and developing greater consistency in a talented but underachieving team. In the first full year under his direction, Chicago limited its opposition to an NBA-best .422 field goal percentage and held their opponents to a franchise record and NBA season-high 26 straight games below 100 points. Scott was named NBA Eastern Conference Coach of the Month for January 2005 after guiding the Bulls to an NBA best 13-3 mark in that month.
In 2006, Skiles led his Bulls to a 41-41 record (earning a 7th seed in the playoffs) and faced the Miami Heat (the 2nd seed) in the first round of the playoffs, losing in six games.
[edit] Quotes
- "If I had a dollar for every time someone asked me that question ... wait a minute, I do have a dollar for every time I've been asked that question."
- "My problem would not be 'can I play in the game?' It would be, 'can I get up the next morning?' That's one of the reasons I stopped playing. I got tired of crawling to the breakfast table the next morning."
- "“This is almost my 20th year [as coach and player] and I've never seen two players from the other team shoot more than our entire team.” - after a game with Cleveland in which Cavaliers stars LeBron James and Zydrunas Ilgauskas each shot more free throws than his Chicago Bulls
- When asked by a reporter in 2003 to describe what Eddy Curry could do to improve his rebounding, Coach Skiles responded: "Jump." [3]
[edit] References
- ^ "Sports People: Skiles enters jail", The New York Times, May 4, 1986. Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ "Scott Skiles: The Game I'll Never Forget". NBA.com (December 30, 2005). Retrieved on 2006-11-27.
- ^ Isola, Frank. "Laying it on the line", New York Daily News, October 29, 2006. Retrieved on 2006-12-20.
[edit] External link
- Career statistics - from basketball-reference.com
Preceded by Danny Ainge |
Phoenix Suns Head Coach 1999–2002 |
Succeeded by Frank Johnson |
Preceded by Bill Cartwright |
Chicago Bulls Head Coach 2004– |
Succeeded by Current coach |
Categories: 1964 births | Chicago Bulls coaches | American basketball coaches | American basketball players | Indiana Pacers players | Living people | Michigan State Spartans men's basketball players | Milwaukee Bucks players | Orlando Magic players | PAOK basketball players | People from Indiana | Philadelphia 76ers players | Phoenix Suns coaches | Washington Bullets players