[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 17, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H5369-H5370]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
USING WINNING FORMULA OF SAN ANTONIO SPURS ON AMERICA'S PROBLEMS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Madam Speaker, like many Americans, I was transfixed
by the magnificent victory not just in game five of the NBA finals, but
by every one of these amazing games, a superb effort against a very
good Miami Heat team, dominated by a person widely acknowledged to be
the best player in the NBA.
As a lifelong Portland Trail Blazers fan and one who remembers the
excitement of being a long-suffering season ticketholder who had the
joy of being in our coliseum when we won the NBA championship more
years ago than I care to remember, I appreciate the dynamic that is
involved with these five NBA championships over the last 17 years.
I confess, I have also become a fan of the Spurs, their organization,
their coach--Greg Popovich--but also their approach to the way they do
business. They have some important lessons for America.
I feel very strongly that we on Capitol Hill and, indeed, most
Americans could learn a great deal by paying attention not just to the
victories, but how the Spurs became the most successful sports
franchise in any sport over the last 2 decades.
My son was privileged to play for Coach Popovich when he was head
coach of the Pomona-Pitzer Sagehens, a Division III small basketball
program. In fact, they had to put two colleges together, Pomona and
Pitzer, to form one team. His values forged a small but excellent
college athletic program that is very much in evidence in the Spurs
today.
First, they look for talent wherever they find it around the globe.
It meant players not just from the United States, but I think there are
eight different countries represented on that roster.
There is a respect for each of them having a role as a team member,
their commitment to the larger concept of winning for the greater good.
Isn't it interesting that their postgame interviews are in six or seven
different languages and that these players have been able to come
together and meld into a unit?
The leadership of the coach is very much in evidence when you watch
them in action. Coach Popovich is not a celebrity vying for the
spotlight. Indeed, you could barely see him in the postgame victory
television interviews. It was focused on the team.
Today, Americans are facing challenges that they sometimes feel are
beyond our capacity. They are certainly beyond our capacity as
individuals to deal with. We are facing a challenge that is similar to
the rigors of a long, 82-game basketball season and a seemingly
interminable playoff schedule.
Our challenges of reducing gun violence, of saving the planet from
even greater carbon pollution and disruption from global warming,
empowering our kids to protect them from the scourge of illegal drugs,
rebuilding and renewing a country that is falling apart, these are
challenges today that actually we know how to fix. They are all areas
where progress is vital.
They seem to be intractable, but all could unite Americans to deal as
a country on things that, individually, we could not make progress on.
These all have characteristics in common with the success of Coach
Popovich and the Spurs. These are long-term issues. They require
careful thought. They require hard work and investment, and most of
all, they require working together with an eye on our ultimate goals.
I would hope that, in the midst of the partisan rancor here in
Washington, D.C., and the deep divisions among our citizens who yearn
for simple answers to complex problems--which politicians are all too
eager to provide--that we can think about the Spurs' success, a
visionary and patient coach bringing people together to work with
maximum effort, dealing with the fundamentals, and not quitting. That
is what America needs today.
Congratulations to the world champion Spurs. Let's try your winning
formula on America's problems.
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