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Sloan on Technology

Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2009 8:48 pm
by The Sheik
Growing up in McLeansboro, Ill., Jazz coach Jerry Sloan's family didn't get a phone for the first time until his junior year in high school. So you can only imagine the fun Wednesday in trying to explain Twitter to the soon-to-be 67-year-old.

One of the local television stations asked Sloan about Charlie Villanueva sending a tweet (update) from the locker room at halftime of Milwaukee's game Sunday against Boston and the resulting fallout with Bucks coach Scott Skiles.

"I don't follow that," Sloan said. "I don't even have a computer. I don't know how to turn one on. I don't know what you're talking about. I'm going to be totally honest. How would you do that?"


Sloan was told that Villanueva could do it through his cell phone. This brought more confusion. "I have a phone, but I don't know how to use it that way," Sloan said. "I wish I did, but I didn't want to be aggravated. I've just kind of been that way all along."

Sloan has had a no cell phone rule on the team bus - - the Jazz's p.r. staff often has to text us with updates about practice times and whatnot - - but is realistic about how closely his players are adhering to it.

"I know they're back there on the bus, hiding around, doing that stuff," Sloan said.

Deron Williams walked by and was told we were trying to explain Twitter to Sloan. "Coach doesn't like it when we text," said Williams, who claimed to know little about Twitter. He said nobody would even think about doing it at halftime as long as Sloan was coach.

The Jazz did have a moment earlier in the season, Sloan said, when a player's phone went off during a meeting. "Years ago, I would have put my foot on it and squeezed on it," Sloan said. "I'm too old to do that. I'm afraid I'll slip off it and hurt myself."

When it comes time to promote Sloan for NBA Coach of the Year, the Jazz really should create a Twitter feed in his honor.

http://blogs.sltrib.com/jazz/index.htm

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2009 9:54 pm
by edfmx86
gotta love sloan

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2009 9:57 pm
by outerspacefella
I really want Sloan to coach for ever...

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2009 11:09 pm
by Soul Patch
For some reason I pictured Ostertag watching Sloan crushing his gameboy.

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 1:46 am
by hoops4life
Most teams have a no cell phone policy in the locker room and team bus for all people not just players.

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 3:58 am
by outerspacefella
Soul Patch wrote:For some reason I pictured Ostertag watching Sloan crushing his gameboy.

+1 :lol:

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 5:16 am
by carrottop12
I used to be friends with one of the local jazz writers who has moved on to a bigger paper, and he told me a story one time about when he was on the bus, and his phone was turned on. He had just happened to be sitting just across from Sloan on the short bus ride and sure enough he heard his phone going and he freaked out and got it out to shut it off.

The phone kept ringing, and buzzing and being a reporter, he couldn't just turn it off. So eventually after it kept ringing Sloan told him to answer it, he answered and it was Phil Johnson prank calling him, and Sloan had put him up too it.

From some of the stories like that I have heard Sloan appears to have a pretty good sense of humor and likes to play jokes on people.

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 12:58 pm
by Ming Kong!
As an IT Consultant you'd think I'd embrace technology like portable MP3 players and the things one can do with a PDA/cell phone today, but to be honest, with the more we advance in these portable devices, the more we seem to fall behind socially. I can't understand why kids today can't talk, interact, be damn social, face to face anymore, they tend to feel more comfortable doing everything via a cell phone, the web, and ignoring the world with their headphones on. I was on the Playstation Home thing yesterday, and after about 15 minutes of seeing guys trying to flirt with girls via some cyber world, I just had to get the hell out of there. Seriously, what's damn point of these stupid virtual social communities, and these stupid games like second life and most MMORPGs, they are so pointless IMO.

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2009 2:20 pm
by seejaydeja
Batronuj wrote:I used to be friends with one of the local jazz writers who has moved on to a bigger paper, and he told me a story one time about when he was on the bus, and his phone was turned on. He had just happened to be sitting just across from Sloan on the short bus ride and sure enough he heard his phone going and he freaked out and got it out to shut it off.

The phone kept ringing, and buzzing and being a reporter, he couldn't just turn it off. So eventually after it kept ringing Sloan told him to answer it, he answered and it was Phil Johnson prank calling him, and Sloan had put him up too it.

From some of the stories like that I have heard Sloan appears to have a pretty good sense of humor and likes to play jokes on people.



Poor reporter, I bet he shat himself.

Re: Sloan on Technology

Posted: Fri Mar 20, 2009 1:43 pm
by CAE15
Ming Kong! wrote:As an IT Consultant you'd think I'd embrace technology like portable MP3 players and the things one can do with a PDA/cell phone today, but to be honest, with the more we advance in these portable devices, the more we seem to fall behind socially. I can't understand why kids today can't talk, interact, be damn social, face to face anymore, they tend to feel more comfortable doing everything via a cell phone, the web, and ignoring the world with their headphones on. I was on the Playstation Home thing yesterday, and after about 15 minutes of seeing guys trying to flirt with girls via some cyber world, I just had to get the hell out of there. Seriously, what's damn point of these stupid virtual social communities, and these stupid games like second life and most MMORPGs, they are so pointless IMO.


It's a confidence thing, On the Net you can be whoever you want, with some exceptions, your not the "badass" in real life that you are online. Also kids are interacting with other kids who have similar interests, which is easier for them instead of hanging out with some other kids and hoping they have the same interests. Plus girls who play video games are pretty rare. Any kid that likes games that much thinks there is a chance a girl is just like him and loves the games that much also.

as for sloan. I kinda want to see what he could do if he learned to use technology.