ESPN
Gregg Popovich became the all-time winningest head coach in the NBA with 1,336 victories.
Popovich surpassed Don Nelson, who previously held the record for most wins in NBA history, with the
San Antonio Spurs'
104-102 win over the
Utah Jazz on Friday night.
"Very happy for Pop," longtime Spurs point guard Tony Parker told ESPN. "Very happy. That is a helluva achievement. Well-deserved. That shows his hard work ethic and longevity."
Popovich, 73, is in his 26th season with the Spurs, the longest tenure of any head coach in all four of the U.S. major sports leagues.
All-Star point guard
Dejounte Murray said the Spurs did not discuss Popovich closing in on the record but that the players were ready to celebrate the feat.
"Pop doesn't like praise," Murray said. "He doesn't like any of that. It's kind of a good thing. But you also want to remind him of his success because it's rare. Because he's a guy that just wants to focus on winning and every day. He never brings up anything to praise himself.
"We don't talk about [the record], but we damn sure going to enjoy it when we do get it for him because he's a great man and he deserves it. He pushes all his players, whether you're the first guy, last guy, G-League player, 10-day contract, he embraces you from Day 1. He deserves everything."
Popovich, who was named to the NBA's top 15 greatest head coaches of all time in February, has won five championships and is a three-time Coach of the Year winner. He has a record 23 consecutive winning regular seasons and also had a streak of 22 straight playoff appearances.
After coaching at Pomona-Pitzer in Claremont, California, Popovich joined Larry Brown's Spurs staff in 1988. After four seasons with the Spurs, Popovich joined Nelson's staff in Golden State in 1992 as an assistant.
"He's just the greatest coach to ever lace them up," Nelson told ESPN. "When I hired him as an assistant coach [in Golden State in 1992], I figured he could learn something from me. But I learned more from him than he learned from me, that's for sure."
Popovich was with Golden State for two seasons before returning to San Antonio as the general manager and VP of basketball operations in 1994.
During the 1996-97 season, Popovich moved back to the bench, taking over as head coach, where he has remained ever since.
"It's like a no-brainer," said Milwaukee head coach Mike Budenholzer, who spent 17 seasons as a Spurs assistant coach. "If you want to do the top three or the Mount Rushmore [of coaches], I don't think there's any doubt where he is and where he belongs. The success, consistency and the longevity, and the impact he's had on an entire organization, on individual players, on coaches, on GMs, on scouts, on equipment guys, on families. He's been incredibly impactful in just so many ways that go way, way beyond the wins and the games and the championships and all those things.
"Just the consistency to have it, not now, but for 20 years to be a championships contender, playing for championships and playoffs, I just don't think you will ever see that again from one organization, from one coach. That run, the [New England] Patriots kind of similar, I think that is the thing that I know I am probably the most in awe of."
With the Spurs in a rebuilding phase, wins have been tougher to come by for Popovich this season. But those close to him point out that this is just another example of his greatness -- his ability to adapt to the times, the changing game and talent and skills on his roster.
"I think he's adjusted, he's adapted," Hall of Fame center David Robinson told ESPN. "He's won under different circumstances with different mixtures of teams. We were a dominant defensive team, to [the teams] with Kawhi [Leonard] and all those guys, they were dominant offensively. They had a nice mix [on both sides]. And even now, you see how he's had to adjust to a very, very different team.
"I think that's what's made him great. How do you win 67% of your games or whatever it is for 25 years? It's ridiculous. It's pretty amazing."
Popovich has long had the respect from his players and his peers. Besides his coaching success, Popovich has always been vocal about what he believes in, taking a stand for social justice and racial equality.
And while Popovich has now won more games than any other NBA coach, some of his players and staff members also remember how he did some of his best work after excruciating losses by keeping his team together.
After an overtime loss in Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals, when the Spurs lost in part due to Ray Allen's iconic 3-point shot, Popovich gathered his team for dinner in Miami and consoled each of his devastated players. The Heat beat the Spurs in seven games, but San Antonio bounced back to beat them in the Finals the next season.
"After losing Game 6 when it was almost the championship won, his phrase was [often], 'Win it together. Lose it together. Man's got to eat.' So we ate together," longtime Spurs forward Manu Ginobili told ESPN. "We talked and basically cried together, and we looked at each other and he went one table at a time with different players, had conversations and tried to cheer us up when we were devastated. That was another great example of leadership and trying to hold us together and optimistic about the next one or trying to find answers."
ESPN's Marc Spears, Dave McMenamin, Brian Windhorst and Baxter Holmes contributed to this report.