Palatial and Castles

             Royal offices are still used within the Grand Palace, and state visits and royal ceremonies like the Royal Birthday Anniversary of the current King Bhumibol Adulyadej are held there each year. This was also the official residence of Thai kings from 1782 to 1925 and counts numerous buildings, halls and pavilions set around open lawns and manicured gardens.

(Travel + Leisure)Quick, imagine a castle: it probably looks a lot like Germany’s Neuschwanstein Castle, the turreted inspiration for Walt Disney’s Sleeping Beauty Castle.

Each year, more than 1.5 million travelers are inspired to make the steep walk or catch a horse-drawn carriage to reach this castle perched on a rocky outcropping in the Bavarian countryside.

“People have always been interested in celebrities and powerful people and their homes,” says Cordula Mauss, PR officer for the Bavarian Administration of State-Owned Palaces. “Immediately after the death of Ludwig II in 1886, the first tourists came and wanted to see what their king had built as his private residence.”

While castles, palaces and châteaux naturally pique such curiosity, not all have Neuschwanstein’s European fairy-tale looks. Some of the world’s most-visited palaces, found across Asia, feature red exteriors, pagodas, gates and carvings.

Consider Bangkok’s gold-spired Grand Palace, where Thai kings lived for 150 years, and where 8 million annual visitors now traipse through ornate rooms, manicured gardens and temples, including one that houses a revered Buddha carved from a single block of jade.

Travel + Leisure: See more of the world’s most visited castles

Some longtime royal residences have been repurposed as museums. St. Petersburg’s riverfront Winter Palace, for instance, is the sixth-most-visited castle, thanks to the appeal of masterworks by Titian and da Vinci along with lavish restored interiors, where Catherine the Great once held court.

America’s closest approximation is California’s Hearst Castle, though it fell short of Travel + Leisure’s top 20 list with only 750,000 annual visitors. And while Windsor Castle squeaked in at No. 19, Buckingham Palace didn’t make the grade (567,613 annual visitors), nor did Romania’s Bran Castle (542,000) or a single Irish castle. Ireland’s most visited, Blarney Castle, received 365,000 in 2013.

That said, there can be a downside to having too many visitors — these are delicate, historic structures that have existed for hundreds of years, and some, like Neuschwanstein, limit daily entries. But it’s hard to stem curiosity when it comes to the lives of the blue-blooded.

As Mauss puts it: “Who didn’t want to be a prince or a princess or at least a knight when he or she was a child?”

The Methodology: To tally up the world’s most-visited castles, T+L gathered the most recent data supplied by the attractions themselves or from government agencies, industry reports and reputable media outlets. In most cases, it was 2013 data.

Here are the top 10:

No. 1 The Forbidden City (Palace Museum), Beijing
Annual Visitors: 15,340,000

Each day, tens of thousands of visitors pour through the Forbidden City to see the 178-acre walled compound that once shielded the Imperial Palace from public view — while housing Chinese emperors and their extensive entourages. (To handle the volume, the government has started requiring advance ticket sales during festivals and holidays and prohibiting annual ticket holders from visiting during peak seasons).

Bright red buildings topped with golden pagodas exemplify traditional Chinese architecture, while the Palace Museum showcases art, furniture and calligraphy.

Source: China National Tourist Office

No. 2 The Louvre, Paris
Annual Visitors: 9,334,0000

The largest and most famous museum in the world — displaying masterpieces like La Gioconda (the Mona Lisa) and the Winged Victory of Samothrace — got its start as a palace. The U-shaped Louvre housed generations of French kings and emperors beginning in the 12th century, and the remnants of the original fortress that occupied the site (built for King Philippe II in 1190) can be seen in the basement of the museum.

The building was extended and renovated many times. Head to the decorative arts wing for a glimpse of Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie’s opulent state apartments, built between 1854 and 1861.

Source: Atout France, the France Tourism Development Agency

No. 3 Grand Palace, Bangkok
Annual Visitors: 8,000,000

Royal offices are still used within the Grand Palace, and state visits and royal ceremonies like the Royal Birthday Anniversary of the current King Bhumibol Adulyadej are held there each year. This was also the official residence of Thai kings from 1782 to 1925 and counts numerous buildings, halls and pavilions set around open lawns and manicured gardens.

The palace’s Temple of the Emerald Buddha is considered one of the most sacred sites in Thailand. Its Buddha was carved from a single block of jade, and his garments, made of pure gold, are changed in a royal ceremony three times a year to reflect the Thai seasons.

Source: Thailand Tourist Services

No. 4 Palace of Versailles, France
Annual Visitors: 7,527,122

When Louis XIV built Versailles in the late 1600s, it became the envy of other European monarchs in Europe, and the opulent estate retains an unmistakable allure. Versailles gets seven times the visitors of any other château in France (apart from the Louvre); it helps that it’s easily accessible from Paris.

No other palace in the world can match the grandeur of Versailles’s Hall of Mirrors, dripping with chandeliers, and Marie Antoinette’s bedroom, decorated with hand-stitched flowers. The vast grounds are free most days and an attraction in themselves, with 50 water fountains, a parterre (formal garden), a grand canal and other sites like the Grand Trianon, built for Louis XIV as a refuge from court life, and Marie Antoinette’s Petit Trianon.

Source: Versailles Press Office

No. 5 Topkapi Palace, Istanbul
Annual Visitors: 3,335,000

With a lovely setting overlooking the Bosporus and Sea of Marmara, Topkapi Palace was the royal residence for about 400 years until the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the 1920s. The sultan lived with his wives, concubines, mother and children in the harem, under the fierce protection of eunuchs.

Look for the Privy Chamber of Murat III, with its indoor pool, gilded fireplace and walls decorated with blue, white and coral Iznik tiles from the 16th century. The Palace Kitchens reopened in September 2014, displaying fine china and large cookware. And the complex also includes courtyards, gazebos, gardens and the Imperial Treasury. An emerald-and diamond-studded bow and quivers sent by Sultan Mahmud I to the ruler of Persia is just one example of the lavish gifts on view.

Source: Go Turkey, Official Tourism Portal of Turkey

No. 6 The Winter Palace (State Hermitage Museum), St. Petersburg, Russia
Annual Visitors: 3,120,170

Catherine the Great and Nicholas I are among the Russian royals who occupied this green-and-white baroque palace along the Neva River from 1762 to 1917.

Today, the palace is a museum with one of the finest collections in Europe, including works by Titian, Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci (Benois Madonna). Much of the palace was destroyed by fire in 1837, but the beautifully restored interiors speak to the opulent tastes of the Russian elite. St. George Hall (a large throne room) features two tiers of windows, double Corinthian pink marble columns, patterned parquet floors and gilt bronze details.

Source: State Hermitage Museum Press Office

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No. 7 Tower of London
Annual Visitors: 2,894,698

This medieval fortress on the north bank of the River Thames was built to intimidate Londoners and keep out foreign invaders. The oldest part of the structure, the White Tower, dates back to the 12th century. While it originally served as a royal residence, the tower has become notorious for its use as a prison and the site of executions that included Henry VI and Lady Jane Grey.

Millions flock to the tower today to see historical reenactments as well as the British Crown Jewels, among them, the Sovereign’s Sceptre containing the Great Star of Africa, the largest colorless cut diamond in the world. In 2014, the tower’s moat was filled with 888,246 ceramic red poppies in remembrance of British soldiers who died in World War II — an example of art installations and events held regularly.

Source: Association of Leading Visitor Attractions

Travel + Leisure: World’s most-visited tourist attractions

No. 8 Schönbrunn Palace, Vienna
Annual Visitors: 2,870,000

Austria’s most-visited site is this Rococo palace, a summer retreat for Hapsburg emperors from the 1700s until 1918. Of the 1,441 rooms, the most famous is the Mirror Room, with white and gold Rococo decoration and crystal mirrors, where Mozart is said to have performed his first concert at age six.

The palace’s elaborate gardens can claim the world’s longest orangerie and the site of the first zoo (est. 1752). The guided Grand Tour provides access to all 40 rooms open to the public, including the Gobelin Salon with tapestries from Brussels and the Millions Room, an office paneled in rare rosewood.

Source: Schönbrunn Palace

No. 9 Alhambra y Generalife, Granada, Spain
Annual Visitors: 2,315,017

Refined and expanded over centuries, this hilltop palace and fortress complex combines fortifications, gardens, churches and several palaces, notably the Alhambra, and the Generalife, the country estate of the kings of Granada and Andalusia. Both are remarkable examples of Islamic architecture from Spain’s medieval period.

Expect intricate arabesques, honeycomb vaunted ceilings (muqarnas) and courtyards with pools and fountains. Generalife’s Moorish gardens feature large boxwood trees, rosebushes and willows and cypresses. Numbers swell in the spring and summer; to beat the crowds, consider a January visit.

Source: Communications Office of the Alhambra and Generalife

No. 10 Shuri Castle, Okinawa, Japan
Annual Visitors: 1,753,000

Shuri Castle was the seat of the kings of Ryukyu for more than 400 years. The castle was completely destroyed during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945, and reconstruction work was only completed in the early 1990s.

The results include eight Chinese-style gates or entrances, plus gardens, a study and a main hall with red-colored tiles on two layered roofs. The three-story red building houses two throne rooms and the royal family’s private apartments. Ponds, bridges and miniature islands make up the royal gardens, added in 1799.

Source: Japan National Tourism Organization

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Zayn Malik: I’ve let the fans down

(CNN)Former One Direction member Zayn Malik spoke for the first time since leaving the group this week — and said he’s sorry for the pain he’s caused.

“I feel like I’ve let the fans down, but I can’t do this anymore,” he told the UK’s outlet The Sun. “It’s not that I’ve turned my back on them or anything, it’s just that I just can’t do that anymore, because it’s not the real me.”

Fans hysterical after Zayn quits One Direction

 

He said that he had been feeling uncomfortable in recent months and that his departure was best for everyone concerned.

“I did try to do something that I wasn’t happy doing for a while, for the sake of other people’s happiness,” the 22-year-old said.

But now, he added, “I’ve never felt more in control in my life. And I feel like I’m doing what’s right — right by myself and right by the boys, so I feel good.”

iReport: Fan says ‘We need Zayn’

He’s getting along fine with the other members of the band, he observed.

According to Us magazine, Malik has started working on a solo project.

One Direction, which also included Harry Styles, Louis Tomlinson, Niall Horan and Liam Payne, will continue as a foursome. The group’s hits include “Best Song Ever.”

The band’s announcement Wednesday that Malik was leaving caused mass disbelief among fans all over the world, with many taking to the Internet to express their sadness and devastation.

 

UK SURVIVES

http:// 2015 NCAA Tournament – March Madness – Men’s NCAA Basketball Tournament Kentucky climbs last major hurdle A scare against Notre Dame behind them, Wildcats now set for perfection Originally Published: March 29, 2015 By Ian O’Connor | ESPN.com 1972COMMENTS111EMAILPRINT Kentucky Tops Notre Dame On Free Throws Highlight Of The Night: Kentucky sank its final nine shots and Andrew Harrison connected on the winning free throws to defeat Notre Dame 68-66 and advance to the Final Four. Tags: NCB, Notre Dame Fighting Irish, Kentucky Kentucky NEXT VIDEO video Kentucky Survives To Improve To 38-0 CLEVELAND — The Kentucky Wildcats were always going to have to endure a crisis in this tournament, at least one, and Notre Dame was here to give them their come-to-Touchdown-Jesus moment. The Fighting Irish were not interested in putting up a fight, or in waking up the echoes with a performance destined to fall one basket short. The Irish were here to win. As soon as they dispatched Duke and North Carolina — in North Carolina, of all places — on back-to-back nights to win the ACC tournament, the Irish realized they were strong enough to take their first national championship, and to destroy Kentucky’s vision of a 40-0 season along the way. So it’s fairly obvious what this 68-66 victory in the Midwest Regional final means, right? If the Wildcats could survive that kind of effort from Notre Dame, and that kind of Jerian Grant go-for-broke shot with one second left that came straight out of South Bend Central Casting, they are not going to lose at the Final Four. [+] EnlargeAaron Harrison Gregory Shamus/Getty Images Along the way to perfection, Kentucky had to expect a scare. But the Wildcats found a way to win, and got to celebrate once more. You know what people are going to say now about these tall, willowy Wildcats: What doesn’t kill you makes you longer. Their extreme length, Notre Dame coach Mike Brey said, “shrinks the court” and “wears you out.” Liberated by this near-death experience, Kentucky can go ahead and reach past Wisconsin in the semis and past Duke or someone else in the final and complete the perfect season. The Badgers are a terrific team with NBA talent on their front line, and Frank Kaminsky and Sam Dekker will test this Kentucky team every bit as much as they tested Kentucky at the Final Four last season, when Aaron Harrison stole the game on his dagger of a 3. But nobody can push the Wildcats any more than Notre Dame pushed them Saturday night in Quicken Loans Arena. They knew this kind of challenge was lurking nearby, like a bogeyman in the closet, and one frightening enough to scare them right out of their dream season. They won’t be scared of any endgame drama with Wisconsin now, or of any endgame drama in a possible showdown with Duke, the one school the loyalists in Lexington can’t bear to lose to, not after Grant Hill threw that pass and Christian Laettner made that shot in a different life. Kentucky is by far the best team in the country, everyone knows that. Now the Wildcats are bigger, better and bolder for the Notre Dame experience, and the smart money says that’s going to be an unbeatable combination next weekend in Indianapolis. “We were just fighting to stay in the game, to be honest with you,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said when it was over, “and it was nice to see how it finished for these kids.” For most of the second half, the Irish seemed positive they were about to score their biggest upset since 1974, when they ended UCLA’s 88-game winning streak at the expense of John Wooden and Bill Walton. Notre Dame held a six-point lead with 6 minutes left, a five-point lead with a little more than 5 minutes left, a four-point lead with a little more than 4 minutes left. 2015 NCAA TOURNAMENT The 2015 NCAA tournament is heating up. Here’s everything you need to know. • Midwest Regional coverage • West Regional coverage • East Regional coverage • South Regional coverage • NCAA tournament bracket • NCAA tournament home • NCAA tournament schedule • NCAA basketball scores • ESPN Tournament Challenge • Recruit and return series Insider Pat Connaughton, possible starter in Buck Showalter’s future rotation for the Baltimore Orioles, threw some high and hard heat to set this tone early in the second half, slicing down the lane and rising high for a thunderous two-handed dunk that inspired Calipari to call a timeout. Connaughton swaggered toward his bench with his tongue out. Ashley Judd, Kentucky superfan, doubled over in agony and grabbed her blue cap, before New Jersey governor Chris Christie popped up on the videoboard dressed in Irish colors and mouthing, “Go Notre Dame,” while he undoubtedly readied himself to hug and high-five the nearest Notre Dame administrator he could find. But Kentucky punched back with everything it had, scoring 24 points inside the final 11 minutes, making every field goal it attempted (nine) inside the final 12 minutes, and shooting 75 percent from the floor in the second half. Tyler Ulis nailed a saving 3 out of a Calipari timeout, Aaron Harrison nailed the same kind of saving 3 he threw at Wisconsin and Michigan last year, and Karl-Anthony Towns, the 6-foot-11 freshman from New Jersey who scored one point against West Virginia (“Karl gave us ugats, nothing,” Calipari had said) delivered a monster 25-point night that might make him the first pick in the NBA draft, never mind the second. “He was unbelievable,” Calipari said. With Towns in foul trouble and playing less-than-intense defense, the coach ignored the aides who were telling him to get the big man off the floor. “He was the only guy scoring,” Calipari said. “I had to leave him in.” He was the second-best coach on the floor, or so Calipari himself suggested. Brey kept calling for pick-and-rolls on the wings, and Calipari took the blame for never coming up with an answer. “We had ’em where we wanted,” said Notre Dame’s Zach Auguste, who somehow finished with 20 points and nine rebounds against Kentucky’s towering bigs and matched Towns’ 10-for-13 from the field. “Our guys felt we had a great chance to win,” Brey said. Only with the score tied inside the closing minute, the exhausted Irish couldn’t get a shot at the basket and committed their first turnover of the second half with 34 seconds left. Andrew Harrison got fouled on his drive, made his free throws with six seconds left, and then yelled at Willie Cauley-Stein, all 7 feet of him, to track Grant as the Notre Dame star raced down the court and headed to the corner near the Irish bench. [+] EnlargeZach Auguste, Karl-Anthony Towns AP Photo/David Richard Notre Dame put up a fight, but Karl-Anthony Towns and Kentucky’s length were just too much. Grant double pumped as he fired over all those endlessly long Kentucky bodies jumping at him, and the shot never had a chance. “Desperation,” Harrison called the source of his team’s motivation on the defensive end. The lead changed 20 times on this night, all you need to know about the quality of the game. When the buzzer sounded, the Wildcats jumped into each other’s arms as the Notre Dame players planted their hands on their hips and heads. Calipari walked over to the broadcast table, exhaled, and mouthed the word, “Wow.” Someone carried out a ladder for the net-cutting ceremony, and soon enough the Wildcats were in their regional championship T-shirts and caps and accepting a trophy not quite as significant as the one most likely to come. “What a job Notre Dame did today,” Calipari told the crowd over a microphone. “Why don’t we give them a hand. What a great basketball team.” The coach went on to thank his players’ parents “for allowing this to happen,” and to praise his team’s “great will to win.” Calipari was more relieved than overjoyed. He knew he was seconds away from feeling the devastation Bill Belichick felt in February 2008, when the Patriots should have become the first 19-0 team in NFL history. “We’re undefeated,” Calipari said Saturday night, “but we’re not perfect. We showed that tonight.” The Kentucky Wildcats also showed they have the strength and poise to cover for their imperfections. Yes, they survived an arena full of Irish ghosts and goblins breathing life into the kind of Notre Dame mythology built on nights like these. It’s going to be fun to watch these really tall kids go 40-0.

How Nash found peace with retirement

March, 22, 201

LOS ANGELES — Ask him where his MVP trophies are and Steve Nash isn’t so sure.

Invite him to go back and figuratively rewrite the ending to the playoff heartbreak of his choice, just for the sport of it, and Nash says there’s no need.

Remind him of that Sports Illustrated cover, on which he’s bouncing giddily alongside Dwight Howard and a headline proclaiming how much fun was in store, and Nash can only acknowledge that “nothing worked out the way we intended it to work out.”

“It wasn’t as much fun as we thought,” Nash said with a chuckle meant as much as anything to convey chagrin.

Yet it’s not just imaginary do-overs that he shuns. He’s not looking for sympathy or convenient alibis, either.

Or your validation.

[+] Enlargenash

Noah Graham /NBAE via Getty ImagesSteve Nash bid adieu to the NBA as the No. 3 all-time assist leader.

He insists he can live with every barb about these three lost seasons with the Lakers — just as he’s always said he can take those no rings cracks — because he remains convinced coming to L.A. was the best way to properly cap nearly two decades of playing NBA basketball the way he imagined his net-circling hero Wayne Gretzky would have.

Nash firmly believes stepping into the cauldron of title-or-bust expectations in Hollywood, after the offensive revolution that sprouted in the desert and his time with the Phoenix Suns had come to an end, was the only way to play out his (mostly) storybook career.

“I had incredibly high hopes coming here,” Nash said as part of a 45-minute conversation Friday in his living room, some of which you might have already seen on SportsCenter.

“I wanted to do great things in this city,” he said. “And it didn’t happen. But a big part of why I came here was because I wanted to be in the fire. I wanted to be judged. I wanted to be under pressure in my last chapter. I didn’t want to fade off.

“And in some ways, I got bit by that. But that’s what I wanted. That is the way to end your career … [playing with] the most risk and the most reward. I accept it. It’s been a great experience, regardless of the noise out there.”

Nash insists, furthermore, that the static about how little his battered body allowed him to give the Lakers in exchange for a three-year contract worth nearly $28 million and the four draft picks they surrendered in a sign-and-trade with the Suns actually only exists on Twitter and sports talk radio.

“If you live online,” Nash said, “you’d think I’m a pariah in the community.”

The reality?

“Lakers fans have been unbelievable to me in person,” he said. “I’ve never had a Lakers fan or a person in Los Angeles say a negative thing to me in two-and-a-half years. The opposite. People have been so supportive, so respectful.”

Those people apparently know the truth: how Nash worked harder in his rehab efforts over an 18-month period, after suffering career-altering nerve damage in a collision with Portland’sDamian Lillard in his second game as a Laker, than he did at any point in his gym rat life.

You should also know, if you haven’t already read Nash’s explanation on the matter, that he has essentially been retired since it was announced in October that he would be forced to sit out the entire 2014-15 campaign. The reason his retirement wasn’t formally announced then? Lakers officials asked him to delay the news he broke Saturday so they could try to trade his expiring, $9.7 million contract for an asset with more staying power.

The silver lining there, of course, is Nash has had some time to get used to the idea of telling the world what only family, friends and confidantes have known all season.

“I actually feel like I’m doing great,” Nash said. “The saving grace for me is that the mornings I wake up and say, ‘I want to play today. Can I still do it?’ … it takes me about 30 seconds to realize, ‘You can’t do it.’ So the answer was made for me. I just cannot do it anymore.

“I had to just be honest and accept the fact that I can rehab this way for the next 10 years, and I’m not going to be in a position to help the team. So that saves me. That makes it bearable. That’s made me, in some ways, kind of move past it.

“There is going to be a transition here where I’m gonna have to become someone else, do something else, and that’s going to be tricky. I don’t want to underestimate that. But I feel pretty good about it.”

How could he not, really?

As we covered in this cyberspace in October, when we published our first farewell to Captain Canada — knowing then, as he did, the end had arrived — Nash essentially suffered a broken back in a pickup game in Dallas before his first real game as a Maverick. He overcame that injury and myriad complications it spawned, after the very long odds he overcame in the first place just to make it all the way to the NBA from a remote outpost in a hockey country, to earn eight All-Star invites, uncork four of the 10 recorded 50/40/90 seasons in league history, finish third all-time in assists behind John Stockton and Jason Kidd and, yes, win the back-to-back MVP awards in Phoenix to a) become the only player ever shorter than 6-foot-6 to do so and b) earn the slick nickname of Two-Time.

When his body finally gave in, Nash happened to be the only 40-year-old you could find on the NBA map.

As a bonus, in case he needs the pick-me-up, Nash can console himself with the knowledge that at least one pretty good basketball team still covets his services. League sources told ESPN.com earlier this month that LeBron JamesCleveland Cavaliers — who happen to have two of the biggest Nash admirers on Earth in their front office, in David Griffin and former teammate Raja Bell — let it be known to longtime Nash agent Bill Duffy that they would love to give the old man a whirl as a short-minute backup to Kyrie Irving if Nash wanted to seek a buyout after the trade deadline from whoever had him at that point.

No chance, though.

He only wanted to come back — and go out — as a Laker. He says he’s going to live where he is now “forever” and hoped he could give the locals something — anything — to repay the Lakers for bringing him to town and giving him the chance to stay near his three children, who all go to school mere steps from Nash’s house.

“In preseason, I did everything right,” he said. “I had a good camp. I came in maybe in the best shape on the deal. I played one preseason game and felt decent. I thought maybe I could get better from here. The next morning, I woke up, and I was a mess. … I just had to come to the realization that if I’m lucky, I’d play in 10 games this year.

“I think I can [still] have a great game. But I can’t do it more than once or twice a month.”

Instead, he’s forced to satisfy his competitive urges with the copious amounts of soccer he plays with former pros such as NBC Sports commentator Kyle Martino, his role as a rehabbing mentor to injury-tortured U.S. national teamer [and ESPN FC commentator] Stu Holden and the occasional morning invites to duck out and play beach volleyball.

He also watches copious amounts of soccer — “Every Spurs, Barcelona and [Vancouver] Whitecaps game” — and actually has a variety of jobs, thanks to his philanthropic work with theSteve Nash Foundation and the $5 million it has raised to get critical needs sources to children, his many filmmaking endeavors alongside cousin Ezra Holland, and his role as general manager of Canada’s national basketball team.

Which makes him Andrew Wiggins‘ boss of sorts.

“I don’t know that Andrew needs much of a push,” Nash said. “We’re just lucky he’s Canadian.”

Besides tracking Wiggins and the influx of highly drafted Canadians in recent years — naturally sparked in part by the NBA interest he generated back home — Nash lists Irving and Steph Curry as his favorite point guards to watch in the modern game.

On this particular afternoon, though, Nash only has eyes for his kids. When the interview ends and the crew finishes packing up its cameras, there are five of them under one roof: Nash’s 10-year-old twin daughters, Bella and Lola, 4-year-old son, Mateo, and two neighborhood friends.

The mood could not possibly stay heavy once Mateo strolled upstairs to inform Dad that this particular Friday at school was “Happiness Day.”

In all the years I’ve covered Nash, from closer range than I ever had a right to expect or deserve, I only know of him crying twice.

I saw it with my own eyes at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, which Nash to this day refers to as the pinnacle of his career, when he bolted off the floor in tears after a quarterfinal loss to France left the Cinderellas from Canada one win shy of the medal round.

The only other instance, which occurred out of public view, is said to have happened after a heated scolding from Don Nelson during Nash’s nightmarish debut season with the Mavericks, when he went to his then-coach seeking help and wound up getting berated to a degree that left Nash shattered. Of course, if you read Nash’s “I’m retiring” letter to his fans Saturday, you know how big an impact Nellie’s tough-love approach had on Nash’s subsequent success.

But that’s it. That’s my list. Beyond that, I can only repeat what I wrote six months ago: Nash is as glass-half-full as anyone I’ve ever met.

Inside or outside sports.

Somewhat fearful of the unknown in his next life? Of course.

Emotionally distraught by a run of health misfortune as a Laker, a run that has been thickly caked on top of the string of postseason daggers he ingested as a Sun?

Try philosophical.

“I don’t hide from that: I didn’t win a championship,” Nash said. “If that forms people’s opinions of my career or legacy or value, that’s their opinion. That’s not my responsibility.

“I don’t get caught up in legacy or where I fit in [when it comes to the point guard pantheon]. … If I leave anything behind, I hope it’s that I was a great teammate and a great competitor. If a championship is a huge component in your [definition of] success, that’s fine. But it doesn’t affect how much I enjoyed my career. I’ll always be disappointed I didn’t win a championship, for sure, but there’s a lot more to life as well.

“I lost the [last] battle, but I fought the battle. That’s what matters most.”