July 6, 1929 - November 11, 2015
Scotty
Stirling, a Bay Area native who went from covering sports to holding
executive positions with the Raiders, Warriors, Kings and the NBA, died
Wednesday November 11, 2015. in Sacramento. He was 86.
“Scotty
was a highly regarded NBA league executive who dedicated more than 35
years of his life to our game,” said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver in the
statement. “He exuded passion for basketball. With his vast knowledge
and keen eye for talent, he earned the respect of his peers and
colleagues.”
Mr. Stirling, a former sports talk-show host, left a job as a sportswriter for the Oakland Tribune
— during which time he is widely credited as being one of the creators
of fantasy football — to become the general manager of the Raiders in
1967. He shifted to basketball in 1968-69 as the GM of the ABA-champion
Oakland Oaks. The team’s top player that season was Rick Barry, who had
sat out the previous season in a contract dispute with the Warriors.
During his one season with the Oaks, Barry averaged 34 points per game.
Mr.
Stirling was an assistant to the president with the Warriors from 1976
through ’82 and was the NBA’s vice president of basketball operations
for three years before becoming the Knicks’ GM in 1986-87. He joined the
Kings in 1987 and spent the next 27 years with them, 24 as their
scouting director.
“I
was extremely saddened to hear the news of Scotty’s passing,” said Al
Attles, who was the Warriors’ head coach throughout Mr. Stirling’s time
with the team and remained close to him afterward. “Scotty was an
incredible person, who had a tremendous love for the game of basketball
and the people associated with it.
“Personally,
he was someone who I leaned on heavily during my career as a coach and
as an executive in the front office. He was a true confidant for me and
one of the key figures to the success of professional basketball in the
Bay Area and Northern California, in general. He’ll be dearly missed.”
Mr. Stirling retired from the Kings in 2013 — a year after he had been named to the El Cerrito High School Hall of Fame.
Mr. Stirling, who served in the Army, earned a B.S. degree from USF and an M.A. in sports management from Adelphi University.
Survivors
include his wife, Pam, sons Gordon, Donald and Kevin, sister Helen
Boak, brother Archie, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Private services will be held.
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