| Coaching Hoops       For
                alumni Chad Forcierand Ritchie McKay, the game has become a profession.
 
 
             ONE REPORTER CALLED the Pistons-Pacers NBA playoff
              series in June “gritty.” Chad Forcier ’95, assistant coach for
              the Pacers, describes it as a “grind-it-out struggle.” 
 
              
 
              
 
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                 | Assistant Coach
Chad Forcier ’95 (right) goes one-on-one with Indiana Pacers forward James Jones.
“Sometimes I can’t believe I’m supporting
my family on the game of basketball,” Forcier admits. 
 
 |  |  The profession of coaching can be similar: long hours and endless
              striving for the perfect season, all with the nagging knowledge
              that your job just might not be there tomorrow. On the other hand,
              when you least expect it, you’re intoxicated again with pure love
              for the game — in this case the game that Presbyterian minister
              James Naismith invented in 1891 and that has grown to become a
            worldwide industry.  So what motivates someone to make a living on
              the basketball court, grooming professional or college players
              for wins and encouraging them after losses? Is there more to coaching
              than the pursuit of championships?The answer is yes for two Seattle
              Pacific University alumni: Forcier and Ritchie McKay ’87, who heads
              the men’s basketball program at the University of New Mexico. Although
              they took very different routes to their coaching careers, the
              two share an important quality, says Jeff Hironaka, men’s basketball
            coach at SPU. That quality is principled leadership.  “The days
              of yelling and screaming as a coach are over,” explains Hironaka,
              who’s known McKay for many years and Forcier by reputation. “What
              counts is the ability to understand each individual and to get
              all of the individuals to bond as a team. As Christian coaches,
              we hope our walk and talk can impact the lives of our players.
            It’s how Ritchie and Chad act that is making a difference.”  The Long-ShotWhile
              a student employee with the NBA’s Seattle SuperSonics in 1992, Chad
              Forcier spent most of his time slicing and dicing apples, oranges
              and pears and juicing them to improve players’ nutrition. But the
              Seattle Pacific sophomore and former high school basketball player
              longed to be a coach, so he peppered Head Coach George Karl and his
              staff with questions.
 “I was probably a complete nuisance to all those
              coaches because I was a basketball junkie starving to learn more
              about the game,” says Forcier. “I was asking questions of anyone
              that would give me a second — the head coach, the assistants, the
              trainer, the video coordinator. I always kept a pen and notebook
              and wrote down all the play diagrams and all the game plans. I saved
              copies of scouting reports and read everything I could.” Forcier pursued
              this entrepreneurial approach for five years with the Sonics. “Over
              time, my job evolved to the point where I became what Coach Karl
              described as a special assistant,” he recalls. “I ended up helping
              out the coaching staff and the players on the floor and at all pre-game
              workouts.”  His efforts paid off. Today, although he never played
              college or NBA basketball, Forcier serves as an assistant coach
              for one of the league’s hottest teams, the Indiana Pacers. Indiana compiled
              the best regular-season record in the NBA this year, winning 61 games
              before losing to Detroit in the Eastern Conference finals. That Detroit
              ultimately became the 2004 NBA champions made the loss easier. “It’s
              always great to see the team that knocks you out of the race win
              it all,” he says. Forcier’s non-traditional path to the NBA went through
              Seattle Pacific. He landed the initial Sonics position with the help
              of SPU’s Student Employment Office. “Seattle Pacific is so highly
              respected in the business community of Seattle,” he says, “that it
              opens a lot of doors for students. Had I not been at SPU, and in
              a city like Seattle, I would never be where I am right now.” After
              his tenure with the Sonics, Forcier served as a varsity assistant
              and junior varsity coach at Lake Washington High School in Kirkland,
              Washington, and as an assistant coach at Oregon State University
              and the University of Portland. While at Oregon State, he volunteered
              to help at the highly regarded Pete Newell Big Man Camp in Honolulu.
              There he met Rick Carlisle, then an assistant coach with Indiana. When
              Carlisle was named head coach of the Detroit Pistons after the
              2001 season, he hired Forcier as an assistant. When Detroit fired
              Carlisle in 2003, he was hired as Indiana’s head coach and took Forcier with
              him. “Most people don’t believe I’m an assistant coach in the NBA,
              because I’m 31 and I look 20,” says Forcier. “When they learn that
              I didn’t play in college or in the NBA, it becomes even harder to
              believe, and understandably.” Though his lack of college or professional
              playing experience makes him a minority among NBA coaches, Forcier
              says he feels respected by the players: “They quickly develop a sense
              for your feel for the game and whether you know what you’re doing — in
              the simplest of terms, whether you work hard and whether you’re working
              on their behalf.”  Many former high school and college players still
              keep in touch with Forcier, which is testament to his influence.
              But influence, he says, is harder to measure in the NBA, where
              players are adult, independent men living in the high-stakes world
              that is professional athletics. Nevertheless, Forcier takes his
              position of leadership seriously and applies his Christian principles
              on the court as well as at home. “It’s something I’m conscious of,” he says. “I
              just try to look at different ways to sow the seed. Whether it’s
              landing on fertile ground or landing on rock, you just don’t know.” Forcier’s
              duties include watching film of the Pacers and their opponents to
              find an edge that will help the Pacers win. He also gives players
              information on opponents, and helps players in practice with shooting,
              ball handling and other skills. During the season, he often works
              seven days a week, sometimes 18–20 hours a day, with no free days
              to forget basketball. It can be difficult finding time for his wife,
              Kim Dalrymple Forcier ’92, and 14-month-old daughter, Ellie. “It’s
              a learning process,” he says. “I try to do as much of my job at home
              as possible, and Kim and Ellie attend all our home games. Ellie is
              already a basketball fan; her first legitimate word was ‘ball.’”  Despite
              the workload, Forcier isn’t complaining. He knows how far he’s come
              in the profession since taking a part-time job with the Sonics to
              help pay for his SPU education: “That was not only a job, but also
              a long-shot chance to learn a little basketball, which could — who
              knows — maybe turn into something more.” It certainly did.  The Purpose-Driven
              Life: Ritchie McKayThe fact that Ritchie McKay, head men’s basketball coach for
              the University of New Mexico Lobos still calls himself a Falcon is,
              at first, surprising. After all, being a UNM Lobo is practically
              in his genes. McKay was born and raised in New Mexico; his father
              was a noted basketball player for the NCAA Division I Lobos in the
              early 1960s; and when McKay was named UNM’s head coach in 2002, he
              declared, “To have a chance to coach at a place where I cheered,
              followed passionately and always wanted to play is quite a privilege.”Yet
              McKay’s roots at Seattle Pacific also run deep. He graduated from
              SPU in 1987 after three successful years on the Falcon basketball
              court. His record for steals — 10 in a single game — still stands,
              and he regularly follows Falcon men’s hoops. “I loved my playing
              experience at Seattle Pacific,” he recalls. “God knew I needed to
              be at SPU.” After high school, McKay attended an Arizona junior college,
              intending to transfer to a Division I school to play basketball.
              But he decided instead to transfer to a Christian university to
              find more support for his newfound Christian faith. Curious about
              the Pacific Northwest and armed with a catalog listing Division
              II schools, he wrote two Washington universities. Seattle Pacific
              replied, offering him a basketball scholarship.  McKay’s talent on the court quickly
              impressed former SPU Coach Claude Terry, who started McKay in 26
              games during his first year and in every game the next three years.
              Off the court, though, Terry was impressing McKay. The young man
              often saw his coach reading the Bible or writing in his journal. “Coach
              Terry and Professor Ken Leonard of the School of Business were men
              of great integrity,” McKay says. “They modeled it for me.” The lesson
              stuck.  Even before graduation, McKay was unexpectedly steered into
              coaching. “When I was a senior, Coach Terry told me about a graduate
              assistantship at the UW,” he recalls, “and I got the position.” Not
              finished playing, though, he next headed to New Zealand, where he
              was a player-coach — and one of the league’s top scorers.  When McKay
              returned to the States, he became an assistant coach at Queens
              College in North Carolina. In 1990, he returned to SPU, becoming
              the assistant to new Falcon Head Coach Ken Bone. Three years later,
              he returned to the University of Washington, and in 1997 he was
              the assistant coach at the World University Games in Italy, where
              the U.S. team won the gold medal.  Once McKay became a head coach,
              though, he took some heat from the media. Because he spent only
              two years each as the head coach for Portland State, Colorado State
              and Oregon State, reporters questioned his staying power. When
              he took the UNM position, ESPN.com reported that McKay “is known as one of the nicest coaches
              in the game, a spiritual man who is active in the Fellowship of Christian
              Athletes, but also as a mover who has yet to settle down.” McKay
              may have finally put that charge to rest.  Now beginning his third
              season with UNM, he points out that each of his moves made sense. “When
              we went to Oregon State, my father had been diagnosed with cancer,” he
              says, adding that the Oregon location put him closer to family during
              a difficult time. “God called us to each position, and now I’d love
              to build the UNM team and become a national power.” Already moving
              the Lobos toward national prominence, McKay says he won’t sacrifice
              his family for it. He and wife Julie have three children — 10-year-old
              Ellie, 6-year-old Luke and 4-year-old Gabriel — and he describes
              balancing coaching and family as a lesson in “surrender.” “It’s a
              discipline to get out of my bed each morning, get on my knees and
              pray,” he says. “Balance comes with being attentive to the Word.” He
              and Julie have made a weekly “date night” a priority, and once McKay
              leaves practice on weeknights, he doesn’t return to the office. Yet
              the demands of coaching became clearer than ever last year. In
              July 2003, a UNM player who had transferred to Baylor University
              was shot and killed. In August, another UNM player took his own
              life. “God’s
              Holy Spirit worked through me for our players,” he says about helping
              the team cope with their friend’s suicide. “This is now the closest
              team I’ve ever coached.”  With a rash of such tragedies touching numerous
              college basketball teams, the National Association of Basketball
              Coaches called a special meeting in October 2003. McKay brought
              300 copies of a book his wife had introduced him to: The
              Purpose-Driven Life by Rick Warren, a California pastor. He gave a copy
              to each coach. “Leadership is influence,” he says. “That is our charge, and
              our responsibility as coaches can be done without saying a whole
              lot.”  — BY GARY LIBMAN AND
                                                                         HOPE MCPHERSON— PHOTO OF CHAD FORCIER BY FRANK MCGRATH
 — PHOTO OF RITCHIE MCKAY COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
 
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