Bee: Players and fans alike will miss 'Coachie' Carril

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Players and fans alike will miss 'Coachie' Carril

The former Kings assistant wants to head back to East Coast

By Joe Davidson -- Bee Staff Writer

Published 2:15 am PDT Sunday, May 14, 2006

Pete Carril is leaving Sacramento.

And he does so with his trusty collection of game-day bow ties, his John Wayne and spaghetti Western flicks, a stack of coaching manuals and scouting reports, maybe even one last satisfying stogie that he's not supposed to have anymore.

And the man who goes by "Coachie" departs from his Kings coaching tenure with dignity - and with plenty of shuffle left in his shuffle. He'll also polish a résumé that already glistens like few others. Carril said he seeks an assistant-coaching gig for an Eastern Conference team in an effort to be grounded to his two loves: coaching and his New Jersey/Princeton roots.

The Hall of Fame coach, who became famous for his work at Princeton and was adored by Kings players and fans as the Yoda-like mentor, tendered his resignation last week. He said longtime confidant Geoff Petrie, the Kings' president of basketball operations, asked him to reconsider.

Carril, 75, said thanks but no thanks. This chapter is closed.

"I resigned right after the season," Carril said. "I knew it was over for me. I didn't want to be the only one back from the staff. It was time. I knew it."

Carril said family and friends called when they learned Rick Adelman would not return for his ninth season as Kings coach. They expressed concern and outrage. But the old coach was quick to say he's not bitter, that he moves on under his terms, that this is a business of change.

And this: "I plan on not jumping off a bridge. At 75, getting fired was the last thing I was worried about. I tell my friends and family they shouldn't feel remorse. I feel great about what we did here."

Carril said he has had feelers from two Western Conference teams, but he yearns to return to the East Coast, where his son, Peter, works on Wall Street, and his daughter, Lisa, teaches middle-school French in New Jersey.

"I'm building good roots here but losing the roots where I will finish," Carril said. "I'll coach again. I don't want to be the Hall of Fame guy who just looks good and pretty. I've always been a working coach. I have a lot to offer, a lot of energy. I'm not ready to quit."

Carril said he nearly left the Kings twice before. The first time was in 1998 when Eddie Jordan was let go as coach, thus ushering in the Adelman era. Carril stuck around because of his loyalty to Petrie. Now he admits of any chance of joining Jordan's staff with the Washington Wizards: "I wouldn't mind that at all."

Carril said he anticipated coaching two or three seasons with the Kings, not nine. He always was hands on, content with some cones, two willing players and a straight rim.

"Or one willing person, one cone and maybe not even the hoop," said Jerry Reynolds, the Kings' director of player personnel who became close to Carril. "I'm going to miss him. He's been great for this franchise, and he's been great to me, personally. He's been a real treasure, a remarkable coach."

Kevin Martin also will miss Carril. Martin credits Carril for his improvement.

"When I wasn't playing last year, he was trying to get my on-the-court game ready, but he was trying to keep me wanting to do it, too," Martin said. "Coming from a man like that, he just knows how to do it. He survived in this business all these years, you'd better listen to a man like that."

Petrie was unavailable for comment. He said earlier this season he does not look forward to the day Carril moves on, like losing a member of the family. Carril said he already has found the breakup process to be an emotional one.

"I don't know if it's because I was a part of the Kings, but it was amazing the depth of kindness people showed me," Carril said. "I go to Raley's, and I haven't seen a scowl in 10 years. The gardeners who speak Spanish, the security guards, the guy who makes the chicken soups, the doctors who became my friends, everyone has been wonderful."

Carril will meet with one of those doctors Wednesday.

"If he says I'm all right," Carril said, "I'm scootin' on."

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Not sure words can express how much I respect Carril as a coach. I heard this story the other day that he quit before it all went down and he is truely someone we are going to miss.
 
The Hall of Fame coach, who became famous for his work at Princeton and was adored by Kings players and fans as the Yoda-like mentor, tendered his resignation last week. He said longtime confidant Geoff Petrie, the Kings' president of basketball operations, asked him to reconsider.

I found this very interesting. Coachie tendered his resignation BEFORE Adelman was dismissed. Petrie asked him to reconsider. How awful would it have been for him to do so, only to be swept out with the same broom that heralded the end of the rest of the coaching staff?
 
Coachie is THE man. He will coach until he passes. Hell he'll probably die right on the court at some point. That would probably suit him just fine to. He'd die happy.
 
I had the pleasure of meeting Coachie a few years back during one of their 'Chalk Talk' sessions, when I was running the Kings affiliate radio station in Las Vegas. He is definetely the classiest of the classy, and as real as real is, as a person. Very humble. Definetely will miss ya Coachie!;)
 
Coachie is on 1140 right now with Grant and Mike. I'm working, so I can't do a transcript. Sorry.
 
Wish we could have kept him- would love to see Price and Garcia benefit from him, among others. Looks like his work with Martin really paid off! We will miss you in Sac Coachie!
 
I got out of the gym at 5 30 and heard Coachie was on in the 4 o clock hour. Pretty bummed that I missed that. They should put that interview up in the Audio Archives for us to hear. Any mention of that?
 
they said they were going to replay it in the 6:00 hour. I assume they will put it up as well.
 
Another great leaves the Kings. We were very lucky to have had him with us for 9 wonderful years. Coachie, I'll miss you a ton. Godspeed!!
 
I was always a fan even before he came to the Kings. I'll definitely miss him (possibly more than Adelman) but its not surprising he tendered his resignation prior to Adelman's departure. His offense was on the way out and I'm sure he'd rather go somewhere his system is being utilized than just be the senior assistant here.
 
I will miss him alot.

I guess this is a truely a end of great era. I wonder if we will see any Princeton offense next year? If not will Petrie be around to see this change through? Its looks like all of the people Petrie liked are gone. (Rick, Pedja and Yoda)
 
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