When his pro playing career ended after he appeared in five games for the Timberwolves last season, veteran guard John Lucas III knew exactly where he wanted life to take him.
Into the family business.
His father, John, has coached 12 years in the NBA, most or all of six seasons as a head coach. Included were four seasons in the 1990s when he coached San Antonio and Philadelphia and hired a young, ambitious assistant named Tom Thibodeau.
"I've known Thibs, it seems like forever," said Lucas, who was just 9 when they first met.
So when it became clear that his playing career was over after he played for six NBA teams in parts of eight seasons, Lucas turned down a couple of other opportunities and returned to the Wolves, this time as an assistant coach focused on player skills development.
He said he did so to work with Thibodeau, for whom he played parts of two seasons in Chicago and part of another in Minnesota.
"I always felt like I wanted to learn from one of the best coaches there is around," Lucas said. "I want to pick his brain about every little bitty thing because I do want to be a head coach one day. Why not be around somebody who has done it on multiple levels? As an assistant, as a head coach and now being a head coach and a president of a team."
A nationally ranked tennis player in his youth, Lucas chose to pursue basketball instead, starting when he was a college freshman. A No. 1 overall NBA draft pick in 1976, his father, too, played tennis and basketball and was an All-America in both at Maryland. He chose the latter professionally, just as his son would do many years later, by embarking first upon an NBA playing career sidetracked by drug and alcohol abuse.