Twice a year, for about 10 days each time, Jim Petersen will come out of the film room, leave the bench and step away from the microphone.
Maybe even rest.
For half the year Petersen, the former NBA post player, is a Lynx assistant coach, working with the team's frontcourt. His summers used to be spent golfing with stepson Sanjay Lumpkin. Now they are spent in dark film rooms and with the Lynx, adding some in-game cool to counterbalance fiery head coach Cheryl Reeve.
The other half of the year, Petersen slides over a few chairs. Days after the WNBA playoffs end, Petersen will start his 16th season broadcasting Timberwolves games.
Petersen, who is woven into Minnesota's basketball fabric, does this by choice. The son of a truck driver and a nurse, he grew up in St. Louis Park knowing the value of work. He had a heart attack in November of 2010 but was back behind the microphone three days later.
Besides, is it really work when you love every minute?
"They feed each other," Petersen said of his two lives, one looking at the game from the inside, the other from the outside. "The analyst feeds the coach, the coach feeds the analyst, and it's an unbelievably fulfilling situation."
A basketball life
For Petersen, 51, it's a continuation of a basketball life. He played in three state tournaments at St. Louis Park High. He was the state's first McDonald's All-America selection. In four years at the University of Minnesota, Petersen helped win the Gophers' last official Big Ten Conference championship in 1982. During his eight-year NBA career with the Rockets, Kings and Warriors from 1984 to '92, Petersen reached the NBA Finals in 1986 while backing up Hakeem Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson in Houston.