From Deseret News archives:
Jeff Hornacek: Gone, but never forgotten
Jeff Hornacek opens new chapter as full-time husband, dad
While trying to watch her kids' little league games, Stacy would field calls "every five minutes" on her cell phone Jeff, in some far-away NBA city, wanting the play-by-play and score. A few years ago, Stacy made a pillow case for Jeff to take on road trips. It is decorated with pictures of each of the children, along with their messages and drawings.
"That way he could sleep with them every night," says Stacy.
The retirement from basketball isn't about the bum knee and the 37 years, either; it's about being a dad. It's about a guy who, as every fan knows, says hello to his kids before every free throw 1-2-3 wipes of his right cheek, one each for Tyler, Ryan and Abigale.
"I am blessed to have him," Stacy once said. "Sometimes I think he's too good to be true."
But there is only so much a father and husband can do from his room in the Marriott. So, he will retire from the spotlight to drive carpools and sit in the stands at soccer games and tend kids while Stacy pursues her own aspirations as a writer. It's her turn, he says. What seemed to bother him most about his career was that it demanded that his family bend their lives to his schedule.
So there he goes, off into retirement, one of the most beloved Jazz players of all time, a better fit in Utah than even his popular Hall of Fame teammates; a warmer, naturally gracious person who is so ordinary in many ways that he is extraordinary. As one fan observed recently on a talk radio show, "He's one of us. He's like a neighbor."
Universally admired
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