Fans remember Gregg Popovich as the gruff genius behind five Spurs championships and a league-record 1,422 wins. Trouble started on November 2, 2024, when a mild stroke hit him right at the team’s arena before a game against Minnesota.

Assistant Mitch Johnson jumped in as interim coach, guiding San Antonio to a 31-45 finish that season despite injuries like Victor Wembanyama’s shoulder issue.

April 2025 brought another scare at a Ruth’s Chris Steak House in San Antonio. Witnesses called 911 after Popovich grew unresponsive, then barely responsive, leading to a stretcher and ambulance ride.

Details emerged later through audio releases, painting a tense picture, though sources stressed it was non-life-threatening and he went home soon after. These back-to-back events piled on, forcing the 76-year-old to rethink his role after nearly three decades on the sideline. ​

By May 2025, Popovich spoke publicly for the first time since the stroke during a presser introducing Johnson as permanent head coach.

He admitted progress but said his condition fell short for the grind of NBA coaching, calling it time for a shift to full-time president of basketball operations. Former stars Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili joined him, underscoring the family vibe he built in San Antonio. ​

Fans Flood with Love After Viral Walk

Videos from January 24, 2026, at the Austin Spurs G-League game lit up social media, showing Popovich leaning on a cane to cross the H-E-B Center court.

He waved to roaring fans, shook hands, snapped photos, and drew a standing ovation that spread online fast. Some spotted him chatting with players at halftime, hinting his coaching instincts linger despite the limp.

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Gregg Popovich (Credit: NBC)

Reactions poured in, mixing heartbreak over his shaky steps with praise for his grit. Posts called it tough to watch the once-fiery “El Jefe” move so carefully, yet celebrated his return to basketball’s front lines. Spurs Nation sees this as proof that Popovich, Hall of Famer and U.S. Olympic coach, won’t fade quietly.

Under Johnson, the Spurs sit near the top this 2025-26 season with a 31-14 mark as of late January, chasing wins around Wembanyama’s rise. Popovich’s front-office presence keeps his influence alive, from scouting to culture-building.

Spurs Shift Points to New Era

Stepping away, let Popovich dodge the 82-game travel and stress, focusing on recovery while shaping strategy behind the scenes.

Johnson, a Spurs lifer since 2016 with the Austin squad, earned the gig through steady leadership and player buy-in. The franchise honored Pop with a simple rafters banner last fall: “Pop 1,390” topped by five championship stars.

Wembanyama posted thanks for 29 years of wisdom, signaling respect across generations. Popovich’s legacy towers: turning a 3-15 mess into a dynasty with Duncan, Robinson, Parker, Ginobili, and Leonard.

Now, his rare outings like the G-League night remind everyone the fire burns on, cane or not. Healthy enough to mentor, present enough to inspire, he’s adapting on his terms as San Antonio surges forward.

Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse at the Minneapolis VA, joined anti-ICE protests Saturday morning at 26th Street and Let Avenue. Federal agents shot him dead around 11 a.m., marking the second such fatality this month after Renee Good’s killing two weeks prior.

Pretti held a valid Minnesota firearms permit and carried a handgun legally, but the family insists videos show him with a phone, aiding fellow demonstrators.

Chaos followed fast. Hundreds marched through south Minneapolis, facing tear gas and flash bangs from officers dispersing the crowd. Local rapper Nur-D faced rough detention nearby, and reporter Jana Shortal reported being shoved and pepper-sprayed.

Governor Tim Walz called it sickening, urging President Trump to pull thousands of agents from the state right away.

This stems from Operation Metro Surge, a Trump push netting claims of 10,000 arrests since his January 2025 inauguration. Protests boiled over after Good’s death, with businesses shuttering on Friday in a no-work, no-shop strike across the Twin Cities. Walz activated the National Guard amid fears of more violence.

Feds vs. State: Probe Battle Heats Up

Authorities clashed over the scene. Minnesota’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension arrived with a judge-signed warrant, only for federal agents to block access and allegedly remove items. Superintendent Drew Evans slammed the move, while Walz vowed a state-led investigation, doubting federal accounts.

Trump fired back on Truth Social, posting gun photos from the site and accusing Walz and Mayor Jacob Frey of inciting insurrection with weak policing.

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Alex Pretti (Credit: BBC)

He questioned why locals stayed on the sidelines as agents faced a “confrontational crowd.” DHS labeled Pretti a domestic terrorist, a tag his parents called sickening lies, contradicted by bystander footage.

A Minnesota judge slapped a temporary restraining order on federal agencies to preserve evidence. AG Keith Ellison vowed legal fights to boot ICE and Border Patrol statewide. Senate Democrats, led by Chuck Schumer, pledged to block DHS funding bills lacking ICE reforms.

Protests Swell as Raids Roll On

Sunday vigils drew crowds chanting Pretti’s name at the shooting spot, blending grief with calls to halt raids. Hundreds of businesses stayed closed, and events were canceled as resistance grew statewide. Doctors and friends hailed Pretti’s sharp mind and love for the outdoors, painting him far from the agitator the feds described.

Mayor Frey pushed for court relief to end the “harmful operation,” while cold snaps did little to chill turnout. Walz’s White House plea went unanswered publicly, but tensions spiked with every flashbang echo.

Raids continue, pitting Trump’s deportation drive against sanctuary-city pushback in a flashpoint city. Pretti’s family seeks truth amid dueling narratives, as Minnesota braces for whatever comes next on these frozen streets. One nurse’s stand became a rallying cry, drawing national attention to the divide.