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Phil Jackson (1) (1945–)

Author of Sacred Hoops: Spiritual Lessons of a Hardwood Warrior

For other authors named Phil Jackson, see the disambiguation page.

9+ Works 1,473 Members 19 Reviews

About the Author

Phil Jackson was born in Deer Lodge, Montana on September 17, 1945. He graduated from the University of North Dakota. He played professional basketball for 11 seasons with the New York Knicks. After coaching in the Canadian Basketball Association and serving as the Chicago Bulls assistant coach for show more two years, he became the Bulls coach from 1989-1998. He coached the Bulls to six championships in the eight seasons between 1990-91 and 1997-98. He was the coach for the Los Angeles Lakers from 1999-2004 and from 2005 to 2011. He has written several books including The Last Season, which describes his point of view of the tensions that surrounded the 2003-04 Lakers team, and Sacred Hoops: Spiritual Lessons of a Hardwood Warrior, which is about mindful basketball and delineates his personal philosophy as well as his coaching and leadership style, based on Eastern and Native American principles. Jackson is also the author of Eleven Rings: The Soul of Successs. (Bowker Author Biography) Phil Jackson is a seven-time world champion NBA coach (six times with Chicago, once with Los Angeles). As a player he spent most of his career with the New York Knicks. His previous books are "Maverick" (with Charley Rosen) & "Sacred Hoops: Spiritual Lessons of a Hardwood Warrior" (Hyperion, 1996), a national bestseller, with Hugh Delehanty. (Publisher Provided) show less
Image credit: Keith Allison

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20 reviews
As coach of the Chicago Bulls and then the Los Angeles Lakers, Phil Jackson won a total of eleven NBA championships. Eleven Rings is both a memoir and a self-help/management book. However, Phil doesn’t go into much detail on his personal life. He mostly mentions it when it directly relates to what was going on with his basketball life at the time. The main focus of the book is his coaching philosophy and what has influenced it. Phil is a student of many teachers. He reads a lot and seems show more especially drawn to Native American and Buddhist philosophy.

I actually got this book when it first came out because I was a huge Chicago Bulls fan back in the Michael Jordan days. Like most of the books I acquire, it promptly went into my TBR pile. I dug it out after watching the docuseries about Michael Jordan’s last season with the Bulls, The Last Dance, on Netflix. I wanted to know more about Phil Jackson and his coaching because it was clear from the documentary that his players loved him.

I enjoyed learning more about Phil’s unorthodox style, from the infamous triangle defense, to teaching his players to meditate. Every season, he gave each player a book that he had chosen especially for them that he thought would speak to them in some way or have something to teach them. It could be anything – non-fiction, a novel or poetry. How cool is that? They didn’t always read them but at least he tried.

He doesn’t go into detail about his players’ personal lives but he is quite candid about challenges he had coaching various players. Of course he struggled with Dennis Rodman, but he also had trouble with others, including quite a bit with Kobe Bryant, who was still a teenager when he started with the Lakers. I was impressed by how he handled each player differently according to the guidance they needed. He didn’t subscribe to a one-size-fits-all approach in anything he did. That’s not to say that he was a perfect coach. He messed up sometimes and he admits his mistakes in this book.

You don’t need to be a hard-core basketball fan to enjoy Eleven Rings. There are technical details about basketball of course, but I feel like a lot of the coaching skills he uses can be applied in everyday life as well. Recommended.
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Phil Jackson, ex-NBA player (he was twice champion, in 1970 and 1973, with the Knicks) was one of the greatest coach American basketball ever knew. Having supervised players as difficult as Michael Jordan, Dennis Rodman, Scottie Pippen, Shaquille O'Neal, or, Kobe Bryant, he was the one who made the Bulls the mythic team that it was (6 NBA Championships between 1989 and 1998) and who launched the Lakers into the same legendary status.

He here reveals the secrets behind such a success, and show more that lies upon an unorthodox view of the game. One word: spirituality.

He studied philosophy, psychology, religions, and, influenced by a deep Christian education, Zen Buddhism, and the mysticism from the Sioux Lakota, he will use this whole heritage to shape the teams under his control. Beyond the cynicism and selfishness ruling within high level sports, he firmly believed indeed that athletes are not motivated by greed or fear, not even by money, but by a passion for the game, for competition, and for their surrounding team.

From there flows a democratic view of what is a team, where players are forced to stop being obsessed by stats and ego, to transcend instead the 'I' into 'we', a philosophy fully translated onto the triangle offense that he contributed to develop.

Here's a book dealing mostly with basketball, but which also is a gate opened upon spirituality (Zen especially) and from which transpires such a modesty, wisdom, depth, that it's hard to don't recommend it enough.
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Picked this up after seeing "The Last Dance" documentary to get more perspective on the story. It did not disappoint in that regard. I had great nostalgic feelings for the 90s Bulls while reading. Beyond this though, it gave me some insight into the 00s Lakers, which I did not pay close attention to at the time, and detailed Phil's origin story including his time on the Knicks, which I was curious about. Interspersed throughout these recollections, are tidbits on mindfulness, managing egos, show more and confronting mistakes. They are ingrained in a way to be relevant and not overbearing. show less
This was an enjoyable read across basketball history with one of the prime movers. It was interesting to get some off-court, during-practice looks at the personalities and personal journeys of some of the great(est) players, as well as hearing how Jackson incorporated the eightfold path in achieving his eleven rings. Selfishness, selflessness, mind(fullness) over matter, personal growth, teamwork...I would have appreciated hearing a little more about the struggles, doubt, conflict that led show more to this devotion to Buddhist principles, but that maybe says more about my story than Phil's. show less

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