http://www.broadbandnewsnet.com/newsmanager/anmviewer.asp?a=5063&z=1Shaq gets last laugh on Spurs? "cowardly hack" joke
Excerpt: Jerry Brown, East Valley Tribune
Thursday, October 30, 2008
SAN ANTONIO - With Shaquille O'Neal's "coward" comment still ringing in the ears of Spurs fans before Wednesday's game, a reporter asked San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich if he would consider a mock "Hack-a-Shaq" on the first possession of the game to jokingly prove that he wasn't backing down from his strategy in last year's playoffs.
Popovich stopped. He ran his fingers through his new white beard. And then he started to grin.
"You know, that's not a bad idea now that I think about it. It?s a better suggestion than any of our (assistant) coaches have had all summer," Popovich said. "I could get a couple of guys in front of me and act like they were holding me back - a typical NBA fight."
Funny guy. He was just kidding, of course. Right?
Sure enough, the Suns won the tip and ex-Sun Michael Finley wrapped his arms around O'Neal to stop play five seconds into the game - a nonshooting foul. O'Neal quickly looked over at Popovich, who gave him two thumbs-up and the two shared a laugh.
"Classic Pop. I loved it," Steve Nash said. "It would have been a fine if he didn't do it."
But after Matt Bonner picked up his third foul with 2:39 left in the first half and the Spurs down to only three big men due to injury, Popovich brought the hack back in earnest. Four away-from-the-ball fouls put O'Neal at the line four times, but he was able to hit five of eight free throws to help the Suns to a 49-46 lead at the half.
"I was ready and prepared. I have to just go up and hit them," O?Neal said. "(The Spurs) are probably going to make sure I hit them every game. From high school on, I've shot 50 percent make one, miss one.
I just have to try to make them both or not miss both."
But after most of the media had left his locker, O'Neal said he was knew what he was doing when he called San Antonio?s tactics cowardly and was just doing his part to stoke the fires for the season opener.
"When I say and do things it's all about marketing," he said. "Everyone will miss my 'quotatiousness' when I'm gone. It gets the media guys involved, it gets the fans involved. I
have a tremendous amount of respect for Mr. Pop, he's been taking care of me since I was 18 and I was a nobody living in San Antonio. It's all in fun.""You guys have been talking about it all week, a couple of fans (here) tried to fight me. It all works."