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==Personal==
==Personal==
According to Saunders, he was about 20 yards away from the [[I-35W Mississippi River bridge]] collapse on August 1, 2007.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2958945 Saunders avoids Minnesota bridge collapse], updated August 2, 2007</ref>
According to Saunders, he was about 20 yards away from the [[I-35W Mississippi River bridge]] collapse on August 1, 2007.<ref>[http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2958945 Saunders avoids Minnesota bridge collapse], updated August 2, 2007</ref>
Also he is ,married to an eritran


==Coaching Record==
==Coaching Record==

Revision as of 16:45, 5 March 2008

Philip "Flip" Saunders (born February 23 1955, in Cleveland, Ohio, United States) is an American basketball coach, presently the head coach of the NBA's Detroit Pistons and one of the most successful coaches in the history of the Continental Basketball Association.

High school/college player

Shane Saunders was an All-America basketball player at Cuyahoga Heights High School in Cleveland. In his senior season, 1973, he was named Ohio's Class A High School Basketball Player of the Year, leading the state in scoring average with 32.0 points per game. At the University of Minnesota he started 101 of his 103 career contests and as a senior teamed with Ray Williams, Mychal Thompson, Kevin McHale, who was part of the Boston Celtics legacy of the 1980s, and more recently, has been the Minnesota Timberwolves' vice president of basketball operations. Together they led the Gophers to a school-best 24-3 record.

Coaching career

College

Saunders began his coaching career at Golden Valley Lutheran College where he compiled a 92-13 record, including a perfect 56-0 mark at home, in four seasons. In 1981, he became an assistant coach at his alma mater, Minnesota, and helped guide the Golden Gophers to the Big Ten championship that season. After five seasons at Minnesota, he became an assistant coach at the University of Tulsa where he worked for two seasons before heading to the pro ranks.

Saunders would leave after seven productive seasons as a head coach in the CBA, where he ranks second with 253 career victories. He began his CBA career in 1988-89 with the Rapid City (South Dakota) Thrillers, then moved to the La Crosse (Wisconsin) Catbirds for five seasons (1989-94), where he won two CBA Championships, before coaching in 1994-95 with the Sioux Falls Skyforce. He also served as general manager (1991-93) and team president (1991-94) of the Catbirds. Saunders' impressive CBA tenure included seven consecutive seasons of 30 or more victories, two CBA championships (1990, 1992), two CBA Coach of the Year honors (1989, 1992) and 23 CBA-to-NBA player promotions.

Minnesota

Saunders joined the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves on May 11, 1995 as general manager, working under his former Minnesota teammate, Kevin McHale. On December 18, 1995, Saunders was named head coach of the Timberwolves, replacing Bill Blair.

This happened shortly after McHale took over basketball operations for the Timberwolves. He added the coaching duties to his GM responsibilities after the team got off to a 6-14 start. The Timberwolves went 20-42 the rest of the year, but the emergence of young Kevin Garnett as a front-line NBA player was a major plus over the second half of the season.

He guided the Timberwolves to their first-ever playoff berth in the 1996-97 season, his first full season as an NBA head coach, and to a franchise-record 50 victories in 1999-2000 which was duplicated in 2001-2002.

After the Timberwolves' success in the 2003-04 NBA season, in which they made the Western Conference Finals, they struggled in the 2004-05 season, winning fewer than half of their games. On February 12, 2005, Saunders was fired and replace by then-Vice President of Basketball Operations Kevin McHale as head coach. Many fans believed that the firing was unwarranted, citing instead the contract troubles of Sam Cassell and Latrell Sprewell as the reasons for the team's failure. However, many also acknowledged that Saunders had already coached eight seasons in Minnesota, and perhaps a new voice was needed.

Detroit

Saunders replaced Larry Brown as coach of the Detroit Pistons on July 21, 2005.[1] Under Saunders, the team set a new franchise record for wins during the regular season, finishing with a 64-18 record. Saunders coached the Eastern Conference All-Stars in the 2006 NBA All-Star Game in Houston, Texas.

Despite the successful season, however, Saunders has been a target of criticism for the Pistons' playoff performance, in which the Cleveland Cavaliers pushed them to 7 games in the 2006 Eastern Conference Semifinals. The worn-out Pistons then lost the Eastern Conference Finals to the Miami Heat in 6 games. Saunders has received criticism for the poor defensive showing by the Pistons in the East finals. This has been speculated as a deciding factor in Ben Wallace's decision to sign a free-agent contract with the rival Chicago Bulls in the 2006 offseason.[citation needed] The 2007 playoffs also ended in disappointment for Saunders and the Pistons as the Cavaliers rallied from a 2-0 deficit to win the next four games and the Eastern Conference title.

Playoff struggles

For seven consecutive years, Saunders failed to get out of the first round of the playoffs. In the 2004 NBA Playoffs, the Wolves were heavily favored to win the Western Conference. However, he came up short, falling to the Los Angeles Lakers 2-4 in the Western Conference Finals.

In 2005-06, Flip became the head coach of the Detroit Pistons following the complex departure of Larry Brown, who left to coach the New York Knicks. The Pistons were coming off back-to-back NBA Finals appearances including one NBA Championship in 2004. The Pistons had the NBA's best record in 2006, had four All-Stars in their starting lineup, and were the heavy favorite going into the playoffs to capture the NBA Championship. However, they lost the Eastern Conference Finals to the Miami Heat, 4 games to 2.

The Pistons lost Ben Wallace in the off-season to the Chicago Bulls, but added playoff veteran Chris Webber, who came to Detroit out of his desire to win a championship. In the 2006-07 season, the Pistons had the best record in the Eastern Conference, but lost in the Eastern Conference Finals 4-2 to LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers. There has been speculation over Saunders' future in Detroit. Saunders is known as an offensive guru, and because of this has not been welcomed in Detroit. His defensive schemes as a coach have come into question, and thus his tenure as Pistons head coach so far has been much scrutinized.

Personal

According to Saunders, he was about 20 yards away from the I-35W Mississippi River bridge collapse on August 1, 2007.[2] Also he is ,married to an eritran

Coaching Record

Team Year Regular Season Post Season
G W L Finish Result
MIN 1995-96 62 20 42 6th in Midwest Missed Playoffs
MIN 1996-97 82 40 42 3rd in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 1997-98 82 45 37 3rd in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 1998-99 50 25 25 4th in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 1999-00 82 50 32 3rd in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 2000-01 82 47 35 4th in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 2001-02 82 50 32 3rd in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 2002-03 82 51 31 3rd in Midwest Lost in First Round
MIN 2003-04 82 58 24 1st in Midwest Lost in Conf. Finals
MIN 2004-05 51 25 26 3rd in Northwest Missed Playoffs
DET 2005-06 82 64 18 1st in Central Lost in Conf. Finals
DET 2006-07 82 53 29 1st in Central Lost in Conf. Finals

Notes

Preceded by Minnesota Timberwolves Head Coach
19952005
Succeeded by
Preceded by Detroit Pistons Head Coach
2005–present
Succeeded by