Jokic’s beloved Serbian coach always knew the big man was destined for greatness

NBA

Just four minutes and thirty-eight seconds into the second quarter of Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals, Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokic retreated to his team’s bench having committed his third foul of the game. That’s when the team knew their 7-foot passing savant was in trouble.

Five-thousand miles away, Dejan Milojevic, Jokic’s beloved Serbian coach, had already concluded that — well in advance of the referee’s whistle. Milojevic had tracked his former pupil carefully on his big-screen television as he went through pregame warm-ups, and noted, with some dismay, that the big man’s mannerisms were uncharacteristically jittery.

“He was nervous,” Milojevic said. “That’s why he had so many fouls. I watched that happen and thought, ‘I hope no matter what is going wrong on the court, he will stay calm.'”

But Jokic’s apprehension was palpable from the Serbian coach’s living room.

“I know his face,” his coach replied. “I can tell what he is thinking. I watched these guys several hours a day for many, many years. When I see that look, I know what it means.”

It meant a Game 1 drubbing in which Jokic logged just 25 foul-plagued minutes, followed by a heartbreaking Game 2 loss where Anthony Davis snuffed the Nuggets’ upset intentions with a clutch jumper at the buzzer. While there was much hand-wringing over the miscommunication that gave Davis a clean look, Denver’s woeful box-out skills and the missed free throws, Milojevic was buoyed by what was trending in those final minutes.

Jokic scored the final 11 points of the game for his team, and, if not for Davis’ game-winner, the unorthodox center would have been the cause celebre du jour of the bubble.

“I know people are mad they lost,” Milojevic said, “but they proved they can play with these Lakers. Their defense was excellent. They should have much confidence.”

Milojevic coached Jokic from 2012-15 in Belgrade for Mega Basket (now Mega Soccerbet), and was a major influence in honing the center’s skills so he could fulfill his NBA dream. While the coach felt certain Jokic had the talent to succeed, there were many who were skeptical he possessed the personal discipline to make it. “I heard too much of, ‘No, Jokic, he can’t do it,'” Milojevic said. “They said, ‘Look at him.’ I did — and I saw someone special.”

Serbia’s celebrated coach spoke to this ESPN reporter on Tuesday, but because Serbia is six hours ahead of Orlando (Game 3 started at 3 a.m. in Jokic’s homeland), Milojevic received special dispensation to skip in-game analysis. He attempted to stay up earlier in the playoffs, but when halftime hit around 4:30 am, Milojevic said he would inevitably nod off during the break. Now he goes to bed at a normal hour and watches first thing in the morning without knowing the results, free of commercials and lengthy coaches challenges.

Like Jokic, Milojevic was once a Serbian center, a rugged undersized big man whose deft skills and tenacity on the glass earned him the nickname “The Serbian Barkley.” He was a sturdy player who lifted weights in his kitchen. He was not adverse to mixing it up on the court should the need for a physical presence be required. “I only started fighting if I was defending someone else,” he insisted.

Milojevic had been known for his exceptional footwork, a skill that he passed along to Jokic. “I showed him some things,” his coach said, “and after a week he had already passed me in ability.”

Jokic’s unusual skill set is a testament to his creativity. Yet Tim Connelly, Denver’s head of basketball operations, insists Milojevic’s fingerprints are all over Jokic’s game.

“I’ve spent so much time in countless gyms all over the world, but Dejan quickly jumps out as completely different,” Connelly said. “He’s not teaching Nikola to ‘dribble, dribble, to the left shoulder.’ It’s ‘dribble, dribble, and reach under the elbow to shoot with the left hand.’ There’s no cookie-cutter learning. He’s teaching his guys to become unique players.”

Jokic exhibited patience on the court from the time he picked up the basketball and preferred to share the ball rather than dominate it. He was never a chiseled specimen, and Milojevic discovered he could easily become disengaged during conditioning unless there was something at stake.

“Our conditioning drills all had winners and losers,” Milojevic said. “I made them as competitive as possible. I got Nikola’s best effort when I did it that way.

“People always talk about Nikola and whether he’s in good shape. I say, ‘It depends on what you call good shape.’ Nikola is much stronger than people think. His body frame is…you see what you see. People look at him like he’s chubby, like he’s some fat guy that is not able to run. But that is not so. If you think that, he will beat you.”

While Milojevic confesses he had no idea that Jokic would develop into an All-NBA talent, he always believed he had a chance because of the willingness to try nearly anything on the basketball court. Naturally, that came with some bouts of indigestion. Early in his career, Jokic threw no-look cross-court bullets, tried to thread the needle with nearly impossible, bounce passes, complete with backspin. His pass offerings came from between the legs, behind the back — even backwards over his head — a marvelous version of which was unveiled in the Game 7 win over the Clippers in the Western Conference semifinals.

Shortly after the Nuggets drafted Jokic, Connelly expressed his disappointment to the big man that he was being so conservative. “I told Nikola that I was so transfixed by passing,” Connelly recalled. “I said, ‘So why are you just reversing the ball like everyone else?’ He said, ‘In Mega, I throw the ball off my head and I still play. Here, it’s a turnover and I sit.'”

That early approach, confirms Milojevic, was completely accurate. “He made a lot of mistakes when he was younger,” he said. “I had to swallow a lot of things. He was throwing all these ridiculous passes — and it drove me crazy.

“But I saw something wonderful, so I didn’t want to focus his mind on mistakes. I let these things go so he could grow and learn from them.

“And now he stands out. There are many great players in the NBA league — superstars — but not many are making their teammates better. That’s all that Nikola ever wanted. He enjoys passing more than scoring. That’s what separates him — the creativity. That’s why when he was throwing the ball all over the place, I did not tell him ‘No!’ Not many players can do what he does. So why stop the guy?”

Jokic’s offensive capabilities include floaters, which he utilized to score Denver’s opening basket in Game 3, post-ups, even a one-legged fall-away shuffle (often off the wrong foot), like the one he sank over Anthony Davis in the final minute of the first half, which helped Denver stake a 63-53 lead.

Lately, Jokic has also dropped some accurate and lethal 3-point bombs. He’s shooting nearly 12% better in these 2020 playoffs (42.9) from 3 than during the regular season (31.4). His pick-and-roll actions with teammate Jamal Murray are pure basketball poetry.

“He’s very difficult to guard because he plays in a different way at a different speed,” Milojevic explained. “He shoots from the ground, which means the defense doesn’t have time to react. People see him and say, ‘He can’t jump.’ But what they should be saying is, ‘Look at that. When you play with two feet on the ground, you can release the ball more quickly and the defense doesn’t have time to react.'”

Milojevic is watching all the NBA playoff games closely, as he hopes to join their coaching ranks there now that his son Nikola (not named after Jokic, who was 7 years old when Milojevic’s son was born) has finished high school and aspires to play college ball in America. Milojevic enjoyed a 2018 summer league stint with the Houston Rockets and has garnered great respect throughout the league.

“In normal times he’d be snapped up right away,” Connelly said, “but with the pandemic, there are unique challenges in terms of travel and finances.”

While he contemplates his next move, Milojevic texts regularly with Jokic after, and sometimes before, each game. During the pandemic, Jokic attended a party in Serbia celebrating the career of Milojevic, who had announced a year earlier he would step down from Mega in 2020. It was there that Jokic contracted Covid. His coach tested negative, but still carries a smidge of guilt that others were infected during an evening to toast his success.

Jokic, who was asymptomatic, is in prime playoff form, anxious to put a win on the ledger for the Nuggets. The nerves, reports his old coach, have evaporated. Before he went to sleep, Milojevic predicted a Game 3 Nuggets victory. The key, he said, was for Jokic to continue to be unpredictable in where the ball was going — and to whom.

As Jokic’s mentor predicted, Denver prevailed 114-106 — clutch shooting by Murray and a career night from Jerami Grant (26 points) held off a furious fourth-quarter rally by the Lakers. Jokic did his part, chipping in 22 points, 10 rebounds and five assists. Milojevic believes the best is yet to come.

“He’s the best passer I’ve ever seen,” Milojevic declared, “so of course I am proud. Yes, we showed him drills to improve his vision, but you cannot practice the things he does. They are different, like him.”

MORE: MacMullan watching playoff basketball from afar:
Nuggets-Jazz Game 1 with John Collins
Lakers-Blazers Game 4 with Trevor Ariza
Bucks-Heat Game 2 with Milwaukee owner Marc Lasry
Raptors-Celtics Game 5 with Danny Ainge

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