I have read a lot of Wright Thompson pieces over the years. Enough to notice that I finish them feeling slightly implicated โ like I have been shown something true about a person I thought I understood, and the showing has cost me something comfortable. Thatโs not a common feeling after reading sportswriting. Thompsonโs a different kind of sports writer.
His profile of Steve Kerr, published this week in ESPN, is a case study in how he does it.
Go read it now. Before you continue here. Go read it!
The opening line: โSteve Kerr walked into the lobby of the Beverly Wilshire with a secret.โ
Thompson doesnโt start with biography or context or the Warriorsโ season. He starts with dramatic irony โ we are placed inside a moment where the subject knows something we donโt, where the gap between public persona and private reality is already established before weโve gotten through the first sentence. We know, even before we know what the secret is, that the real story will be about what lives underneath the official one.
The secret is retirement. Kerr had made up his mind โ 95% certainty โ that this would be his last season. He checked in at the Beverly Wilshire, gave his room number, 516, as โJohnny Bench Joe Montana,โ and then leaned across the breakfast table and almost mouthed the words: โI think itโs over.โ
That room number detail is worth pausing on. It isnโt decoration. A man who has spent 40 years inside professional basketball has encoded legends into the passwords of his daily life โ Benchโs number, Montanaโs number, woven together as a mnemonic for a hotel room heโll forget in three days. Thompson drops it and moves on without comment. He never explains it. He doesnโt have to. The detail does its work the way a good poem does: you carry it with you, and it means more the longer you hold it.
This is the loaded object, and Thompson deploys it everywhere. Late in the piece, the coaches bond over the same memory trick on the road โ Thompson tells Kerr heโs in room 2225, โEmmitt Smith Rocket Ismail.โ The repetition isnโt accidental. Itโs Thompson showing us what the 82-game season actually is: a long chain of hotel rooms and encoded legends, a man building temporary homes out of other peopleโs greatness.
Thompson earns the loaded objects by earning the access. He spent the entire season alongside Kerr โ embedded, unhurried, a still presence at the edge of the frame. The piece has the texture of someone who was there for the small moments precisely because he wasnโt hunting the big ones. Heโs in the coachesโ locker room after losses, cracking Peronis on the team bus through the quiet midnight of Atlanta, at Pizzeria Bianco in Phoenix, at the Golden Gate Deli while Kerr eats his usual Honey Baked sandwich and texts โConflictedโ and then adds: โWhatโs Lulu think?โ โShe sees both sides.โ
That kind of detail โ the dog with two minds about retirement โ is available only to a reporter who has spent enough time with a subject that the subject has stopped performing. Thompson collects these moments. They are the material.
But access is scaffolding. The building is what Thompson does with it.
Midway through the piece, he lands the paragraph that reorients everything that came before it. On January 18, 1984, a gunman shot Malcolm Kerr โ Steveโs father, president of the American University of Beirut โ in the head. A family friend reached Steve in his dorm room at 3 a.m. Steve asked if his father was okay. There was a long pause. โYour father was a great man,โ the friend finally said.
Steve ran downstairs and pounded on his teammatesโ doors. Then he went and sat on the curb. โOn Speedway Boulevard,โ he says, still remembering the cold concrete and the empty street. Thompson gives us that street name. He tells us Steve started walking, and that he hasnโt slowed down since.
Suddenly the retirement question isnโt about basketball at all.
The sport is Thompsonโs vehicle. His real subject is always the wound underneath โ what drives a person to keep competing, keep building teams, keep moving, and what it means when the movement finally starts to slow. The question running beneath the entire Kerr piece isnโt โWill he stay or go?โ Itโs the question Malcolmโs assassination put into his son at 18, still unanswered 42 years later: what do you do when the thing that protected you from the worst moment of your life stops being available?
Thompson makes this explicit in one passage near the end. Kerr describes his fear about retirement: the coaching job, he says, doesnโt just feed his soul โ it helps him manage his chronic daily pain. The pain, weโve learned by then, is rooted in unresolved trauma. Kerr has spent a year journaling every morning about his fatherโs death and then deleting what he wrote, following a therapy program based on the idea that emotional wounds express themselves as physical ones. The back pain that plagued him for 12 years โ the migraines, the spinal leak, the decade of searching for relief from Mayo to Duke to England for stem-cell therapy โ began the same year he took the Warriors job. Writing opens the lines of communication. Winning keeps them open. Retirement threatens to seal them again.
Thompson doesnโt editorialize. He just lays this all out, piece by piece, until the architecture becomes visible.
Thereโs a moment in Minneapolis, late in the piece, that sticks with me.
The NBA has postponed a game after a nurse named Alex Pretti has been killed by federal agents. Kerr gathers the team in a hotel ballroom. Later, working through what to say publicly, he does something Thompson says heโs never heard him do before โ he invokes his father.
โMy father was killed by extremists,โ Kerr says, rehearsing lines. โI know how that story ends.โ
Thompson can hear his voice catch between sentences. โIโm crying right now,โ Kerr says.
At the press conference, Kerr doesnโt mention his father. He talks about the families who will never get their loved ones back. He didnโt have to say more. And Thompson, who was there for all of it โ the hotel ballroom, the phone call, the media room โ doesnโt have to explain the connection either. Heโs done the work of showing us who Malcolm Kerr was, what his assassination meant, how Steve has carried it. The press conference lands with the full weight of everything weโve already been given.
This is Thompson at his best: information as infrastructure, detail as detonator.
The piece ends not with a contract signing or a press conference. It ends with a granddaughter.
On the same day Kerr commits to returning โ the decision made, the call to Steph placed, the band getting back together โ his sonโs younger daughter, Charlotte, takes her first steps. Kerr watches her toddle around the room. He thinks about his son as a toddler. He looks at the photograph on the wall of Nick and his older daughter grinning in front of the Golden Gate Bridge. โIt all felt intertwined,โ Thompson writes. โBlood family, basketball family, family. A cocoon, like his old Arizona manager said.โ
That word โ cocoon โ has appeared once before. Itโs what the Arizona manager called the arena the night Steve played two days after his father was killed. The crowd forming a protective warmth around a boy who had just lost everything. The team as shelter.
42 years later, itโs still what Steve Kerr is building and protecting. Thompson knew to plant the word the first time so it could bloom at the end.
Thatโs the technique. Thatโs what I mean when I say reading him costs something. In a wonderful way. He shows you that the things people build โ teams, careers, dynasties โ are sometimes just very elaborate answers to questions they were asked at 18 on a cold curb on Speedway Boulevard. And then he leaves you with a baby taking her first steps, and you feel the whole weight of it all at once.
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