After Olympics, Brown just happy to be back coaching Pistons



Detroit is the defending league champion.
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) -- Larry Brown didn't have much time to enjoy his first NBA title.
After coaching the Detroit Pistons to a surprising victory over the Los Angeles Lakers, Brown focused all his energy on getting the U.S. basketball team ready for the Olympics.
Much to his dismay, the Americans came home with just a bronze medal.
"As much fun as I had winning the championship, I feel just as terrible that we didn't win gold," Brown said. "I feel miserable about it. I still haven't gotten over Athens -- and I don't think I ever will."
But the Pistons might help their Hall of Fame coach get over his misery.
Found home in Detroit
After leading nine teams over 31 seasons, Brown found basketball heaven last year in his first season with the Pistons -- a collection of talented players willing to listen, learn and play hard.
"We talked every day on the phone during the Olympics and toward the end, Larry said he had a much fuller appreciation for our team and the way we played the game last season," said Joe Dumars, Detroit's president of basketball operations. "When he got back, he spoke to each guy and told them how much he appreciated them."
As a member of the Pistons and a member of America's sixth-place team at the 2002 world championships, Ben Wallace understands why Brown was so thankful to come back to Detroit.
"When you see the game played in a certain way like we did for him last year, it's tough to go through what he had to in the Olympics," Wallace said. "By the end of last season, we were doing exactly what he wanted us to do as a true team. Then, he had to start all over and do it without a lot of practice with a bunch of guys that are used to being stars, not role players."
Complicating matters, many of the best players in the NBA decided they didn't want to play in Athens, and that left the U.S. scrambling to put a group together.
LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony, coming off spectacular rookie seasons, clashed with Brown because they came off the bench -- barely sometimes. The U.S. squad lacked a true point guard and pure outside shooters, and was unable to effectively use center Tim Duncan.
"I was seriously thinking about retiring after we won the championship -- if we won the gold -- because I couldn't think of a better way to go out," said Brown, who turned 64 in September. "But when I thought about that dressing room and what winning the championship meant to all those guys, I wanted to be with them some more."
Detroit's starting lineup returns this season, but for the first time in Brown's storied career he will be coaching the defending NBA champions. He knows it will be a challenge.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.