Larry Bird was not only a Hall of Fame basketball player, he also had success as a coach in the NBA.
Bird coached the Indiana Pacers from 1997-2000, leading them to Eastern Conference finals in 1998 and Finals in 2000. They lost to the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls and Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant Los Angeles Lakers.
During his brief stint on the sideline, Bird earned a reputation for having strict rules.
"As a coach, be on time, play unselfish and play hard," Mullin said during an appearance on the All The Smoke podcast with Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson. "Sounds silly but I was there three seasons. We had one guy late one time and that's it."
Mullin told a story of how Bird made an example of key players Travis Best and Dale Davis when they were late for a team flight in 1997.
"We're playing preseason, Larry's first year coaching," Mullin said. "We're leaving Indiana going to Nashville for a preseason game. It's like 10:58, everyone's on the plane. David Craig, the trainer, comes up to Larry, `Travis (Best) and Dale (Davis), they're in the jetway or whatever."'
Here's what Bird said when Craig told him they were late: "Wheels up."
Mullin said the plane headed down the runway.
"Travis and Dale are running after the plane literally," Mullin said. "We took off. Everyone was like, `Save Dale, Save Dale.' After that day, though, no one ever late again."
Shandel Richardson is the publisher of Back In The Day Hoops On SI. He can be reached at shandelrich@gmail.com
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