San Antonio Spurs assistant coach Becky Hammon has made history by becoming the first woman to take charge of an NBA team when she took over after head coach Gregg Popovich was ejected.
Key points:
- Becky Hammon played 16 seasons in the WNBA and has been an assistant at the Spurs for the last six years
- She was the first woman to be in that role in an official full-time capacity in the NBA
- Hammon said while it was a “substantial moment”, she would have preferred to have won the game against the defending champions
Popovich received two technical fouls with 3:56 left in the second quarter of the Spurs’ eventual 121-107 defeat to the visiting Los Angeles Lakers.
“I did not walk into the arena thinking I would be coaching tonight, but that’s the way things go and you roll with it, and I would have liked a different outcome,” Hammon said.
“Overall, I would have loved to get a win tonight more than anything.”
Hammon did not know she would be put in charge if Popovich were to be ejected from a game.
“He officially pointed at me,” Hammon said. “That was it. He said, ‘You got ’em.’ That was it. Very Pop-like.”
San Antonio trailed by 11 points at the time Popovich was tossed.
“We all group together, [assistant coaches] Will Hardy, Mitch Johnson, ‘What can we do to help?’,” Hammon said.
“It was all about what can we do to help win. … It was a great team effort, and they are in my ear giving me suggestions and helping with substitutions and whatnot. When Pop gets tossed, we all come together and become kind of another team.”
Hammon, 43, has been an assistant coach for the Spurs since August 2014, the first woman to be paid for that job in an official, full-time capacity.
She had a 16-year playing career in the WNBA, 1999-2006 with the New York Liberty and 2007-14 with the San Antonio Stars, the latter team owned by the Spurs.
“Obviously, it’s a big deal, a substantial moment,” Hammon said of leading the Spurs.
“I’ve been a part of this organisation. I got traded here in 2007, so I’ve been in San Antonio and part of the Spurs … organisation with the Stars and everything for 13 years. So, I have a lot of time invested, and they have a lot of time invested in me in building me and getting me better.”
Reuters