Jim O’Brien’s career coaching stops
1974-75: Wheeling Jesuit (assistant)
1975-76: Pembroke State (assistant)
1976-77: Maryland (assistant)
1977-78: St. Joseph's (assistant)
1978-82: Oregon (assistant)
1982-87: Wheeling Jesuit head coach, 74-69
1987-89: New York Knicks (assistant)
1989-94: Dayton head coach, 61-87
1994-97: Kentucky (assistant)
1997-01: Boston Celtics (assistant)
2000-01: Took over as Boston Celtics head coach for Rick Pitino and went 24-24). 5th in Atlantic Division. Reached the conference finals
2001-02: Boston Celtics head coach, 49-33. 2nd in Atlantic Division. Reached the conference semifinals
2002-03: Boston Celtics head coach, 44-38. 3rd in Atlantic Division.
2003-04: Boston Celtics head coach, 22-24. Resigned during season
2004-05: Philadelphia 76ers head coach, 43-39. 2nd Atlantic Division. Reached the first round of the playoffs
2007-08: Indiana Pacers head coach. 36-46, 3rd Central Division.
2008-09: Indiana Pacers head coach. 36-46, 4th in Central Division
2009-10: Indiana Pacers head coach, 19-39 through 58 games.
INDIANAPOLIS — You may not know this — Jim O’Brien acted as if he didn’t — but when the University of Dayton won a first-round game in the NCAA tournament last season, it was the first time the Flyers had done that since 1990, when O’Brien was the coach.
O’Brien, now head coach of the Indiana Pacers, says he does not follow UD today.
“Not at all,” he said matter-of-factly during a recent interview at Conseco Fieldhouse.
His reaction to the fact that he was the last guy before Brian Gregory to lead UD to an NCAA victory was just as subdued.
“Really,” he said, making more of a statement that posing a question. “Huh.”
O’Brien turned 58 on Feb. 11 and is working his eighth season as an NBA head coach, with his third team. He has done well with all of them, the current plight of the lowly Pacers notwithstanding.
He recently took a few minutes following a game-day shoot-around to reflect on his past and talk about his current job, addressing each topic sincerely and without emotion as he stood in a tunnel leading from the Pacers’ home court to the locker room and his office. He neither smiled nor frowned.
Only a little more gray at his temples suggested it had been 16 years since he coached the Flyers.
O’Brien sprinkled his comments about most of his stops with thoughts on relationships. He mentioned without going into detail ones he did and didn’t have in Dayton, where athletics director Tom Frericks hired him and five years later Ted Kissell let him go.
“It was tremendously painful,” O’Brien said in an even tone. “Not that they let me go. There were situations that happened that just added to the failure of what happened there. It was very disappointing.”
Highs, lows at UD
From a euphoric first season, in which UD went 22-10 and beat Illinois in the first round of the 1990 tournament before losing to Final Four participant Arkansas by two points in the second round, the Flyers tumbled to 14-15 and 15-15 seasons, then bottomed out at 4-26 and 6-21.
It is the measure of O’Brien’s private but pleasant personality that Kissell, now retired, continues to speak highly of him.
“Jim O’Brien was a great fit at the University of Dayton,” Kissell said. “It (the firing) didn’t have anything to do with anything but the state of the program, and the trajectory of the program. You don’t keep your job when you win 10 games and lose 47 in a two-year period.”
Kissell said he was under pressure to fire O’Brien after the 4-26 season, then had no choice after the Flyers failed miserably again. Even then, Kissell was surprised at O’Brien’s reaction to the decision.
“In my recollection, we sat around somewhere between an hour, two hours, just talking,” Kissell said. “He couldn’t have been more professional. He told me, ‘You’re making a mistake.’ It wasn’t in any way disagreeable, or brief.”
Kissell said he’s only talked to O’Brien one time since that meeting, when he called his former coach to notify him of the tragic death of former Flyer Chris Daniels, one of O’Brien’s recruits.
“He appreciated the call,” Kissell said.
A friend of O’Brien’s, Duane Lapp, who hired several Flyers during summers in his roofing and sheet metal business, said O’Brien called him to get the details about Daniels’ death.
Lapp also believes that following the legendary Don Donoher, then winning big in his first season, may have been too much, too soon for O’Brien.
“Maybe that was a no-win situation,” said Lapp, who now lives and owns businesses in Hilton Head, S.C. “Then he won a game in the NCAA and lost by two to Arkansas, one of the best teams in the country. That set the bar pretty high.”
Bouncing back
Since leaving Dayton, O’Brien has been a winner.
He was an assistant coach on Kentucky’s national championship team in 1996 and its 1997 runner-up.
He helped rebuild the Boston Celtics franchise before walking away in what was a difference of opinion with a new ownership group — a move, he said, that prolonged his coaching career.
“I was a lame duck,” O’Brien said. “They had decimated the team and it was very difficult to win. I would have been fired and I don’t know if I ever would have gotten another job.”
He resurrected the Philadelphia 76ers to a 43-39 record and playoff appearance in 2005, then was fired when the general manager hired a buddy.
He currently is working his third season with the Pacers, where team president and basketball legend Larry Bird is backing him through a rebuilding process.
Some Pacers fans want O’Brien removed — maybe because the flash is not there — yet Bird has said he’ll make roster changes before he’ll fire O’Brien, whose father-in-law, hall-of-fame coach Jack Ramsay, encouraged him toward the pros, even though he began his coaching tenure as an assistant at several colleges.
O’Brien then spent five years as head coach at Wheeling Jesuit and two years as a New York Knicks assistant to Rick Pitino before he was hired by UD.
His goal, though, always was the pros.
“I wanted to coach at this level,” O’Brien said. “I liked the fact there were so many games. You’re always competing. It’s pure basketball. There’s no recruiting. There’s no worrying about academics.
“Another thing is, it’s a way to coach and really be rewarded financially, which is also a factor.”
‘Unbelievable person’
Sometimes, even money can’t buy happiness. In 2004, during his fourth season as coach of the Celtics and during a difference of opinion with the new management of the team, O’Brien said, “I walked away from, frankly, $6 million, which was about well over three times my worth at the time.”
Bird, at least, thinks he’s worth it now, as do O’Brien’s friends.
When injuries decimated the 1992-93 UD team, O’Brien scoured the campus for walk-on practice players. Mike Scovic, who played at Fairborn, was a senior and answered the call.
“I was the last guy on the end of the bench,” said Scovic, now a financial adviser in Cincinnati. “But to me, he’s just a good guy, a family man. We just clicked.
“He helped get me into UD’s law school when I was on the bubble. Then I moved to New York and Boston, when he was there, and we became good friends. He embraced me and my wife’s family. He came to our wedding and we only had 55 people.”
Lapp repeats many of the same kinds of stories. He also notes two O’Brien traits that stand out:
“The guy is a nonstop worker. And he’s always got a positive attitude. Unlike a lot of guys in that business, he doesn’t have a humongous ego.”
O’Brien certainly doesn’t come off as a man who craves the spotlight. He seems content to just, well, coach. And his roller-coaster ride at UD seems like a lifetime ago.
“I follow Louisville because of Rick Pitino,” O’Brien said. “I follow Kentucky because we were there. I follow a number of colleges where very good friends of mine are coaching.
“After the (NBA) season, I spend a lot of time studying college (players).”
And UD?
“It was a chapter that I learned from, and I moved on.”
Contact this reporter at (937) 225-2157 or mkatz @DaytonDailyNews.com.
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