Corona on Trial

Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    First female basketball coach in Japan eyes NBA

    Just 157 centimetres tall, Natalie Nakase has never let her size stand in the way of her big dreams on the basketball court.

    And now the 31-year-old American and first female head coach in Japan's professional men's league, has her sights set firmly on the NBA.

    If her dream comes true, it would be another breakthrough for women in sport as the National Basketball Association, the sport's premier league based in North America, has never had a female head coach or assistant coach.

    There have only been some women in such positions in the NBA's minor league.

    "I'm starting to realise that I have the responsibility of giving women hopefully a chance to see that they can do it too, even not in basketball," the five foot two Nakase said. "It could be in a working field."

    "Being a part of a programme in the NBA, reaching the highest level in your sport, I think, that's definitely a goal of mine," said the former point guard from the University of California at Los Angeles.

    Nakase has been piloting the Saitama Broncos of the Japanese league since November when she was promoted from assistant coach to replace Dean Murray when he was fired.

    But things are not going all that well at the moment.

    The Broncos lost 94-84 to powerhouse Osaka Evessa at home on Sunday to leave them languishing second from bottom in the league's 10-team eastern conference with nine wins and 23 defeats in the October-April season.

    They have never finished above fourth place in the seven years the league has been going in a country where baseball, sumo and football tend to push others out of the limelight.

    But Nakase remains hopeful. "Our confidence is growing as we're playing close to some of these high ranking teams," she said. "It's still a long way ahead."

    Her life as a coach began in the women's top league in Germany in 2008 after a knee injury cut short her playing career.

    A three-year captain at UCLA, she also played for two seasons for San Diego and San Jose in the now defunct National Women's Basketball League.

    She coached a women's team in Germany for two seasons before coming to Japan -- where her grandparents were born -- in 2010 to visit her friend Darin Maki and his wife.

    Maki was playing for the Tokyo Apache and he introduced her to their coach, American Bob Hill, who has previously coached four NBA teams.

    Nakase served as an assistant coach under Hill for one season before the Apache folded. She joined the Broncos for the current season.

    "I think it's all about being able to connect with players and learning about how to manage different personalities -- more than men versus women," she said, comparing her experiences with women's and men's teams.

    "Men are just more competitive and outspoken, which is a good thing."

    Her former coach at UCLA, Kathy Olivier, has told the Los Angeles Times that Nakase has the persistence to survive in the men's game.

    "Only Natalie can do that," said Olivier, who now coaches at Nevada Las Vegas. "She's tiny but her heart's as big as a six- (foot) eight (inch) (203 cm) kid."

    Nakase said she remained in close contact with Hill, who now works in China, through emails "once or twice a week."

    "I wouldn't bet against her," Hill told the daily about Nakase's NBA dreams. "She's beaten the odds her entire life."

    Like many other teams in the Japanese league, the Broncos are coached by a foreigner and led by American players such as former NBA point guard Kenny Satterfield and one-time West Virginia standout John Flowers.

    Of the 13 players on the Broncos roster, eight of them speak Japanese only. Nakase does not speak the language.

    "When I get so intense I say a lot of bad words," she laughed. "My translator gets really into it. When I'm fired up, he's fired up."

    "Japanese players are sincerely raised in their culture. Whatever the coach says, they'll do. I like this," she said. "I haven't had any problem with them."

    How do you feel about this article?

     

    59 comments

    • eric  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      this is manga!
    • gilazkals FC  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      Asian invasion in NBA...Erik Spoelstra,Yao Ming, Jeremy Lin and possible itong Japanese-American na si Natalie Nakase....

      JBL and BJ league in Japan is really developing and improving....unlike sa counterpart nila d2 sa Pilipinas na medyo backward pa rin ang mindset ng PBA board...puro business interest and politics ang pinapairal...

      Gaya ng BCAP(basketball coaches Association of Phil) na ubod ng talangkang ang mentality they don't improve our basketball...ayaw nila na may foreign coach and player na makapagtrabaho sa PBA.....sa Japan,China and Korea walang isyung ganyan na pinu-pulitika ang mga foreign coaches and players para sa development ng kanilang and national team ang importante.

      noong nag-exit si Toroman sa Gilas dahil raw tinangihan nya yung offer bilang consultant ng national para in favor of local coaches na mag handle ng national squad......nung umalis si Toroman biglang lumuwag ang PBA sa pagpapahiram ng mga players sa national team.

      isa sa mga player ni Toroman sa Gilas yung naturalized center na si Douhit naglalaro ngayon as an import...only in the Philippines na ang isang kinikilalang naturalized Filipino citizen ay tinatratong banyagan sa sariling bansa...

      kahit may sariling bylaws ang PBA na dapat ay may filipino blood lang pwedeng magpa draft sa kanila...maliwag na nilabag pa rin nila ang civil rights ni Marcus Douhit bilang filipino..
      • Speedy-D 2 months ago
        Do you think Spoelstra would have been an NBA coach kung lumaki sya sa Pilipinas?

        He owes everything he has to the Home Of The Brave.
      • darrene 2 months ago
        They are all American (except yao ming which is Pure Chinese) with asian heritage you Idiot... Their home country provide them opportunities not they country of heritage
    • max  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      If I were on the other team I would gladly lose the game for a date with her.
    • henryl  •  Cagayan de Oro, Northern Mindanao  •  2 months ago
      sounds good, but this wont work.. im not undermining her coaching skills, im talking about all other factors.. in WNBA probably she'd make it, but in the NBA, its a whole different jungle..
    • Ramon Lim  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      former point guard usually end as a good coach
      • AJ 2 months ago
        We'll they're both play-making roles.
    • grace  •  2 months ago
      more on latest sports news, sports feature and editorial sports pls pls
    • abNOY  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      hot....
    • marcul  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      if she's good,why not? :)
    • c  •  2 months ago
      Sorry to say, but it won't work. Unless she goes to a very desperate team that's just looking for a gimic. In which case, she would just turn that team into even more of a laughing stock. American players are totaly diffrent from players over seas. The ego's are way bigger and the personalities on any one team are far more elaborate. In other countries there may be teams that have a guy insane like Artest, sensitive like Paul Gasol and Lamar Odom, or egotistical and controling like Kobe. But I bet you won't find that collection on any one team like you will here in the US. I just don't think she would be able to command the respect from American players it would take to make it work in the NBA. Honestly there are probably only five or six women, Sherrill Miller and Pat Summit (lady Vols coach) to name a few, that NBA players would consider equals and give that level of respect to. The last line of this article pretty much sums it all up :
      "Japanese players are sincerely raised in their culture. Whatever the coach says, they'll do."
      yeah, thats probably true about MOST other players over seas. This is America, a place where the Jordans and the Kobes sometimes have more say so than even the coach does. Where the players force lock outs and refuse to play if they aren't getting paid enough. She would get eaten alive in any veteran NBA locker room.
    • TheBlackBolt  •  2 months ago
      Don't you think that before you eye on the NBA the greatest Basketball Leauge of all time shouldn't you be the top team in Asia first ?

      Think big but then think bigger !
    • willi  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      your beautiful coach mwaah
    • willi  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      go with lakers and give them a grand slam again
    • michaelM.D.  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      Hoy coach ka rin sa baranggay namin ha... may paliga kami next month..
    • who_am_i_areyousureyouwan ...  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      damn so pretty coach..
      mahirap maging coach yan.. matutulala ka sa kanya when instructed of a play...
    • Wake me up before you go ...  •  2 months ago
      Hello coach!
    • jeth  •  2 months ago
      pwede cguro private practice kami?
      hahahha
    • tj  •  Paris, France  •  2 months ago
      she's hot.
    • mabel  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      girl power :)))
    • ed  •  2 months ago
      she can sets her sights as long as she can it will never happend
    • floby  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  2 months ago
      bring it on!
    POLL
    Loading...
    Poll Choice Options