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Posted on Wed, Oct. 11, 2006
Riley is the right-hand man to Nellie The coaching veteran is a No. 1 assistant for the first time in his 18-year NBA career By Geoff Lepper CONTRA COSTA TIMES OAKLAND - Last season, Warriors coach Mike Montgomery declined to name a first among equals from his group of four assistants. The question finally was put to rest in February, when Montgomery was ejected and Keith Smart took charge for the final 23.5 seconds of Golden State's 111-107 loss to the Seattle SuperSonics. This year, there is no doubt about the composition of the Warriors staff. When Don Nelson returned to Oakland as head coach, he brought only one man from his previous tenure in Dallas: Larry Riley, a 62-year-old who has become a No. 1 assistant for the first time in his 18-year NBA career. To Nelson, this was not an optional move but a mandatory one. "There's two things you have to do as a coach: You have to coach your players, and you have to coach your staff," Nelson said. "If I'm just alone with all new guys, it's just as hard to coach your staff as it is your players. So if you have somebody who knows what you're doing, which he does, then he makes that part of my job really easy. "And it's been a real easy camp for me. It would have been a hard one had I not had somebody that's been with me (before)." If Nelson is the big-picture visionary expected to spearhead the Warriors' resurgence, then Riley is the nuts-and-bolts man who makes sure all the pieces fit together smoothly. For example, written on the white board in Riley's office is a list of all the things the Warriors have covered so far in their training camp. And if the head coach isn't getting his theory through to his team during a chalkboard lesson, Riley is there to help translate and keep things on track. "If Nellie gets stuck on one thing, Larry will keep things going. He reminds him what they want to talk about and what points they want to make," center Troy Murphy said. "You can tell that they are really together with what they want to accomplish every day in practice." When told of that story, Riley self-deprecatingly said he was "slow-witted" enough to figure out where a player might get lost. But that's hardly the truth for a man who was steeped in basketball tradition from an early age. Riley grew up on a farm near the tiny hamlet of Whitewater, Ind., and in grade school, he and his twin brother, Mike, listened on the radio as Bobby Plump and little Milan High School bested the big-city boys from Muncie Central to win the 1954 Indiana high school basketball championship. After playing baseball and basketball -- he grudgingly admits to being better at the former -- at Chadron State in Nebraska, Larry Riley spent three years coaching high school hoops. Then he took a graduate assistant job at Southeast Missouri State, and when the Indians coach moved to Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Riley went with him. "At that point, it was definitely my purpose to stay in basketball as a lifetime career," Riley said. It took Riley an additional 18 years before he joined the NBA in 1988, as a scout and video coordinator for old friend Del Harris, who was then coaching the Milwaukee Bucks. Riley stayed in Milwaukee for six seasons, then spent six more in Vancouver as the Grizzlies' director of player personnel. Nelson brought him to Dallas in 2000 to be an assistant coach and NBA advance scout. For Riley, moving to Oakland provided him a chance to work with two of his favorite basketball minds: Nelson, and his brother Mike, who also joined the Warriors this summer as an advance scout. "Working with Nellie was such a great experience," Larry Riley said. "He causes players and assistant coaches to have to open up their mind, and really see the game beyond just the total structure." Nelson appreciates the balance Riley brings. "He's really good and we're lucky to have him," Nelson said. "This is the first time he's been a No. 1 assistant, but he's more than ready for it." |
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