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Sparks Put an End to Bibby Era

Team will announce the firing of its coach today, but in the middle of it all L.A. loses to Sacramento, 72-63, under assistant Bryant.

August 17, 2005|Mike Terry, Times Staff Writer

The Henry Bibby Era with the Sparks is over.

Bibby, who was not on the bench for the Sparks' 72-63 loss to Sacramento at Staples Center on Tuesday, will be fired as coach today after a meeting with team President Johnny Buss.

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No team official would comment publicly on Bibby's situation Tuesday, and a statement issued before the game said "further comment would be issued tomorrow afternoon." But according to sources high within the organization, Buss decided to make the change with five games left in the regular season.

Bibby's absence from the game Tuesday was termed for "personal reasons." Joe Bryant, who joined the staff three weeks ago, was given the head coaching duties for Tuesday's game. Shelley Patterson and Bob Webb, assistants under Bibby, were on the bench with Bryant.

Coincidence or not, Laker star Kobe Bryant, Joe's son, was at the game.

Joe Bryant said he was notified about 30 minutes before the game that he would be running the team. He did not consider Tuesday's effort an audition.

"There wasn't much time to think about too much," Bryant said. "I still had butterflies out there so I still love the game. But, like I told you guys a long time ago, I didn't come into this for this position. I'm here for the joy of the game and to help the girls. And it's really still the same thing."

Like Bryant, the players were also told the situation just before the game, according to guard Tamecka Dixon.

"We were surprised," said Dixon, who played nine minutes and scored two points. "You prepare to play the game, and to come and find that out right before the game ... of course, it was on everybody's minds."

Bibby, who reportedly had a two-year deal, will end his only season with a 13-15 record. He is the third coach in franchise history, along with Linda Sharp in 1997 and Karleen Thompson, to last a season or less. He is the third Spark coach to have a losing record.

Bibby's season was sabotaged as much by injuries to key players -- from Lisa Leslie and Nikki Teasley to Mwadi Mabika and Laura Macchi -- as it was by the Sparks' inability to string a winning streak longer than three games. Los Angeles is fighting to make the playoffs and trying to avoid its second losing season.

That dubious distinction drew one game closer with the Sparks' third defeat in four games to Sacramento this season. The loss was doubly felt considering Phoenix, holding the fourth and final playoff spot in the West, defeated Detroit. Minnesota also won Tuesday, moving past the Sparks into fifth place by percentage points.

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