Avery Johnson wins 2005-06 NBA Coach of Year 
NBA News  | Apr. 25, 2006 
 Dallas Mavericks coach Avery Johnson has been named  the  winner  of the Red Auerbach Trophy as the NBA Coach of the Year for the 2005-06 season, the NBA announced today.
  
In  his first full season as the Mavericks head coach, Johnson received 419
points,  including  63 first-place votes, from a panel of 124 sportswriters
and  broadcasters  throughout  the  United  States and Canada. Coaches were
awarded  five  points  for  each  first-place  vote,  three points for each
second-place  vote  and  one point for each third-place vote received.  The
2004-05 Coach of the Year Mike D’Antoni of the Phoenix Suns was second with
247  points  (27  first-place votes) and the Detroit Pistons’ Flip Saunders
was third with 223 points (18 first-place votes).
  
Johnson, the first coach in Mavericks history to receive the honor, led the
Mavericks  to  a 60-22 (.732) record, the third-best mark in the league and
tied for the best season in franchise history. Johnson, named head coach on
March  19,  2005, was the fastest coach to 50 wins (50-12) and recorded the
best start by a first-time coach in league history, winning 66 of his first
82  games.  Johnson led the Mavericks to a 34-7 mark at home, tied with the
San Antonio Spurs for the best home record in the Western Conference.
  
Johnson’s  focus  on  defense  guided the Mavericks to the third-best point
differential  in  the  league,  as  they  posted 99.1 points per game while
holding opponents to a franchise-low 93.1 points. This year marked only the
seventh  time in the franchise’s 26 years that the Mavericks held opponents
under  100  points  per  game.  After  being outrebounded last season, they
tallied  3.9  more  rebounds per game than their opponents this season (3rd
best  in  the  league),  pulling  down  42.2  boards  per  game and holding
opponents to 38.3.
  
After  retiring  as  a  player  on Oct. 28, 2004, Johnson began the 2004-05
season as an assistant coach with the Mavericks. In 16 NBA seasons, Johnson
played  1,054  games and averaged 8.4 points, 5.5 assists, 1.7 rebounds and
25.3  minutes.  Johnson  spent  the  majority  of his playing career in San
Antonio  (1992-2001),  where  he was part of the 1999 NBA Championship team
and remains their all-time leader in assists.
  
The  NBA Coach  of  the  Year  Award is named after legendary coach and Hall of
Famer  Red  Auerbach  who  guided the Celtics to nine NBA Championships. In
1996,  Auerbach  was honored as one of the Top 10 Coaches in NBA History as
the NBA celebrated its 50th anniversary.
 
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