A big moment in NBA coaching history is looming. It might happen Friday. Maybe on Sunday. Maybe sometime next week. But it's going to happen, and it's going to be something the likes of which the league won't see again for at least a few years.
Rick Carlisle is going to get his 1,000th career win as a coach.
It should be a moment to savor, although Carlisle — the Indiana coach who is now 999-878 in his career — typically doesn't want much fanfare directed his way. He'll become the 11th coach in NBA history to reach that milestone, joining Gregg Popovich, Don Nelson, Lenny Wilkens, Jerry Sloan, Pat Riley, George Karl, Doc Rivers, Phil Jackson, Larry Brown and Rick Adelman. With the exception of Rivers, who is still coaching, they're all in the Basketball Hall of Fame.
''It was a tough game. Great to win it,'' Carlisle said Monday night after Indiana held off Sacramento, 116-105. ''We've got some time to practice this week, so we'll make the best of that. And, more tough games coming.''
He sounded the same — focused, direct, matter-of-fact — after a game between two sub-.500 clubs as he did last season when the Pacers were contending for a title.
Getting to the 1,000-win mark is a capper to a 2025 worth savoring for Carlisle, who took the Pacers to the NBA Finals last spring before they fell to the Oklahoma City Thunder in a Game 7 that still has a pronounced effect on the team. That was the game where point guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his Achilles, an injury that means he won't play this season. The Pacers went from one win shy of a world title to being a team in the throes of a reloading season, just like that.
The lineup this season is very different. Carlisle isn't. He evolves, sure, but he doesn't change. Styles of play come and go, but an insistence on playing the right way is a constant.
''I can't say enough about him and the respect I have for him,'' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said during those finals last season. ''I think the whole is better than the sum of the parts. Almost consistently across every year he's ever coached, the team is better than their sum. I think that's a reflection of him. His teams play a clear identity, stay in character through all the ups and downs.''