Twenty-five years and 1,042 victories since he coached his first NBA game, the Timberwolves' Rick Adelman is expected to walk away from the sidelines after Wednesday's regular-season finale into retirement and toward a place in the Basketball Hall of Fame.
When he does, he will do so with almost no fanfare, without even the public presentation of a single rocking chair to wish him well.
He could quite simply — given his silence about the matter in this season's final weeks — just walk off into the mist.
"You know what? That's him," said Timberwolves guard Kevin Martin, who has played for Adelman in Sacramento, Houston and Minnesota. "That's how he has always been. It has worked for him. That's probably how he would want it."
A family man who often says little unless he is giving an honest answer to a question, Adelman clearly has been careful not to address his future in these days and weeks leading to Wednesday's regular-season finale against Utah at Target Center.
"You're right," Adelman said before Monday night's 130-120 loss at Golden State. "One more day."
Adelman is 67 and he is completing the third of three playoff-less seasons with the Wolves during which his wife, Mary Kay, has been treated for seizures. One season remains on the four-year contract Adelman signed in September 2011, but either he or the Wolves can choose to end it within a two-week window after Wednesday's game.
"It's a tossup right now," Wolves star Kevin Love said when asked about Adelman's future, "and everybody is feeling this could be it for him."