I picked up Nick Nurse’s hard cover book from the deep discount table at my local Book City. It was an impulse buy and my expectations were low, but what a story and what an interesting guy. Nurse’s passion for basketball is clear, as evidenced by the twenty odd years he spent chasing his dream to coach in the NBA: first kicking around second rate leagues in the UK and Belgium before creating an opportunity for himself to lead a development league team in the US. He didn’t get to the NBA until his mid-forties, when the Raptors took a chance on him, and the rest as they say is history. But the years he hustled to make ends meet - when quitting and getting a real job would have been so much more logical and easier - reminds me of Fred VanVleet, the undrafted star for the Raptors whose motto is: bet on yourself. Those years of hard graft, where he visited other programs in an effort to constantly improve his skill set, helped him to develop a steeliness, an inner conviction, and a self awareness you don’t always associate with professional sports (although basketball in particular can produce some interesting characters, see Phil Jackson). The man refreshingly knows his own mind. He’s not afraid to challenge convention - whether it be adopting what are perceived to be outdated or amateurish methods if the situation demands it (famously guarding one of the best shooters in NBA history with a scheme most players last used in High School), or helping to advance the thinking on the types of shots an offence should take to maximize efficiency. He’s also a great teacher: it’s been a real pleasure to watch the players under his guidance develop and excel into superstars, and the teams he puts on the floor to constantly punch above their weight. He also deserves a ton of credit for successfully assimilating Kawhi Leonard, a notoriously tricky personality, into the squad that won the NBA Championship in his first year as a head coach. The Raptors are a very easy organization to cheer for, well run from top to bottom. The city of Toronto is lucky to have coach Nurse: long may the relationship continue.