COACHES -- work in Progress

Bricklayer

Don't Make Me Use The Bat
II -- COACHES
A -- Head Coaches
Phil Johnson -- DONE (Brick)
Jerry Reynolds
Bill Russel
Dick Motta -- DONE (Brick)
Rex Hughes -- DONE (Brick)
Gary St. Jean
Eddie Jordan -- DONE (Brick)
Rick Adelman
Eric Musselman
Kenny Natt -- DONE (Brick)
Reggie Theus
Paul Westphal
Keith Smart
Mike Malone
Tyrone Corbin
George Karl
B -- Notable Assistant Coaches
Pete Carril
John Wetzel
Byron Scott
Scott Brooks
Elston Turner
 
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Phil Johnson
Position: Head Coach
Years Coaching Kings: 1985-87 (2 years)
Record Coaching Kings: 51-77 .398
Playoff Appearances: 1 (0-3, .000)

The head coach of the Kings when the franchise first arrived in Sacramento (Johnson had already been coaching the team for a year, after an earlier 5 year stint in the 1970s), Johnson guided an offensive minded jumpshooting and guard heavy bunch to a #8 seed in their first year in Sacramento (albeit with a losing 37-45 record). In the playoffs they would go on to be quickly dismissed by the original Houston Hakeem Olajuwon/Ralph Sampson Twin Tower team.

The following season, with their defensive roleplayers aging and a failed trade for Derek Smith and his ruined knee which robbed the team of backcourt depth, the team's already shaky defense collapsed entirely. On February 4 of the season the Kings suffered a humiliating record setting defeat when the Los Angeles Lakers jumped out to a 29-0 lead against them, and outscored them 40-4 in the first quarter. Johnson was dismissed less than a week later, and Jerry Reynolds elevated to take his head coaching position.

Career Before Kings
The more appropriate title with Johnson would be "Career before Sacramento" because he had spent the bulk of his early career with the Kings/Royals franchise.

After playing his college ball at Weber State under another future Kings coach, Dick Motta, Johnson went on to become an assistant coach under Motta at his alma mater, and then followed Motta to the NBA with the Chicago Bulls from 1971-73 (where Jerry Sloan was a fellow assistant).

In 1973-74, at the young age of 27 Johnson was tapped to take over the struggling (6-19) Kansas City/Omaha Kings midseason, and led the team to a 27-30 record the rest of the way. In his second season he led them to 44 wins and a playoff berth, good enough to win NBA Coach of the Year honors. He would continue to coach the Kings into the 1977-78 season before being fired, and after spending the intervening years assisting now head coach Jerry Sloan in Chicago, he was rehired by the Kings franchise beginning in 1984-85, and followed them to Sacramento. In all he coached parts of 8 different seasons for the Kings franchise, putting up a 236-306 record (Sacramento numbers included) and making the playoffs twice.

Career After Kings
Johnson actually returned to the Kings near the end of the 1987-88 season when Jerry Reynolds was again tapped to be the interim coach after Bill Russel's failure. Reynolds immediately contacted his old mentor and asked him to turn the tables and play assistant. Early the next season (1988-89) Johnson was still on Reynolds' staff, but received an offer from Jerry Sloan and the Utah Jazz to become their lead assistant instead and was allowed to leave for the better opportunity. He would stay with the Jazz as the lead assistant to Sloan for the remainder of his career until his resignation (simultaneous with Sloan's) 23 years later in 2011. He was named the league's top assistant coach 4 times during his career, in 2002, 2004, 2007, and 2010.

Season by Season Record with Kings*
1985-86: 37-45 .451 Playoffs: 0-3 .000
1986-87: 14-32 .304
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TOTALS: 51-77 .398 Playoffs: 0-3 .000

*as explained above in Phil's case Sacramento era only


http://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/johnsph99c.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phil_Johnson_(basketball,_born_1941)
http://www.nba.com/coachfile/phil_johnson/
http://www.nytimes.com/1987/02/10/sports/sports-people-kings-dismiss-coach.html
 
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Kenny Natt
Position: Head Coach
Years Coaching Kings: 2008-09 (1 year)
Record Coaching Kings: 11-47 .190
Playoff Appearances: 0

A longtime assistant in the NBA, Natt was on head coach Reggie Theus's staff when Theus was fired early in the 2008-09 season, and was promoted to interim head coach with more than 2/3 of the season remaining. With the team in freefall, and general manager Geoff Petrie making rebuilding moves on the fly over the course of the season, Natt led the team to its worst record of the Sacramento era (17-65 .207) and was fired at the conclusion of the season.

Career Before Kings
Natt, who is the younger brother of HOF player Calvin Natt, briefly played in the NBA in the early 1980s (including a brief 4 game stint with the Kansas City Kings in 1984-85, the year before they moved to Sacramento), and had a lengthy playing career in the CBA and WBL as well, lasting until 1989.

After working as a scout and assistant coach at the CBA and collegiate levels, Natt became an assistant under Jerry Sloan with the Utah Jazz and remained in that post for 9 seasons, including two trips to the NBA Finals. He moved to Mike Brown's staff in Cleveland for 3 seasons from 2004-07, and then joined Theus's staff to begin the 2007-08 campaign.

Career After Kings
Natt reemerged in 2011-12 as the head coach of the India National Team, and since 2012 has served as the Director of Basketball at the IMG Academy in Florida (sports related boarding school). He has yet to return to the NBA in any capacity.

Season by Season Record with Kings
2008-09: 11-47 .190
-----------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS: 11-47 .190


http://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/nattke01c.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenny_Natt
http://www.nba.com/coachfile/kenny_natt/index.html/
http://www.imgacademy.com/sports/boys-basketball/coaches/coach/kenny-natt
 
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Um Brickie? Is this a test? :p

There should be.

With his long relationships with Motta, Sloan, the Kings and Jerry Reynolds, Johnson had the most interesting and intricate Kings related background of any coach but Adelman.
 
There should be.

With his long relationships with Motta, Sloan, the Kings and Jerry Reynolds, Johnson had the most interesting and intricate Kings related background of any coach but Adelman.

I was referring to the part (now gone) of the write-up that had him as the head of the Duke cheerleading squad. :p
 
Eddie Jordan
Position: Head Coach
Years Coaching Kings: 1996-98 (2 years)
Record Coaching Kings: 33-64 .340
Playoff Appearances: 0

Jordan took over the Kings as interim head coach late in the 1996-97 season after long time coach Gary St. Jean was finally let go. The Kings finished that season 6-9 under Jordan, and he was retained for what turned out to be a disastrous 1997-98 campaign. With the bulwarks of the Kings borderline playoff teams from the mid 90s showing their age, and the longterm failure to replace Spud Webb resulting in rookie second round pick Anthony Johnson inheriting the starting PG position, Jordan struggled to hold together a team full of fading vets and indifferent youngsters, eventually leading longtime franchise player Mitch Richmond to give up on the team and sit out much of the late season as the team spiraled toward the lottery. Ironically the disaster would serve the team well, as it led to the next season's complete overhaul of both personnel and coaches, initiating the Adelman golden era of '99-'06.

Career Before Kings
Jordan was a former NBA player who had a 7 year journeyman career in the league in the late 70s and early 80s, which included winning a ring with the 1981-82 Los Angeles Lakers championship team.

After retiring as a player in 1984, Jordan pursued a college coaching career, initially starting out as a voluntary assistant at his alma mater Rutgers, and working his way up. In 1992 Gary St. Jean tagged him to join his new coaching staff when he took over for the Kings, and for the next 5 seasons Jordan was a Kings assistant until St. Jean was fired in March of 1997.

Career After Kings
After leaving the Kings Jordan signed with the New Jersey Nets to be their lead assistant for the next 4 seasons, including their back to back Finals appearances in 2002 and 2003.

Being the lead assistant on two Finals teams led to Jordan being chosen by the Washington Wizards to be their new head coach to begin the 2003-04 season. Running a muted version of the same Princeton offense the Kings had instituted after he left Sacramento, and with the mercurial Gilbert Arenas as his franchise player, Jordan would go on to coach the Wizards for the next 5 1/2 seasons, including 4 straight playoff appearances. The team would never win more than 45 games however and consistent defensive issues prevented it ever emerging as a major contender, and with Arenas deteriorating a slow start to the 2008-09 season led to Jordan's quick dismissal. Jordan attempted a comeback the next season with the Philadelphia 76ers, but only lasted for a single failed campaign (27-55 again) before being fired once again.

Jordan reportedly passed on an offer to coach his old alma mater (Rutgers) in order to continue pursuing NBA coaching opportunities, and in 2012 he briefly was brought in to assist Mike Brown in instituting the Princeton offense with the Lakers. Brown was fired only a few weeks into the season however, and the experiment shelved. In 2013 Jordan finally gave up on the NBA and accepted the head coaching position at Rutgers Unviersity.


Season by Season Record with Kings
1985-86: 6-9 .400
1986-87: 27-55 .329
-----------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS: 33-64 .340


http://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/jordaed01c.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Jordan_(basketball)
 
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Rex Hughes
Position: Head Coach
Years Coaching Kings: 1991-92 (1 year)
Record Coaching Kings: 22-35 .386
Playoff Appearances: 0

A relatively inexperienced and hot tempered assistant coach who was thrown into the role of interim head coach when Dick Motta abruptly resigned in the winter of 1991. The Kings would finish the 1991-92 season 22-35 under Hughes, and he was let go after the season in favor of Gary St. Jean.

Career Before Kings
After finishing his college playing career at Pepperdine, Hughes spent decades working his way up through the high school and college ranks, capped by a disastrous 4 year 27-63 run as the head coach at Kent State in the mid 1970s.

His introduction to the NBA and the Kings organization came as a part time scout in the late 80s. He would move to the Atlanta Hawks and become their chief scout before returning to the Kings as an assistant coach in 1990.

Career After Kings
After being released by the Kings, Hughes would go to San Antonio to join new head coach Jerry Tarkanian, with whom Hughes had briefly been an assistant at UNLV in 1979-80. Tark was fired only 20 games into his first season however, and while Hughes remained on staff as an assistant for the remainder of the season, he left the Spurs at the end of the year. He would briefly return to the NBA as an assistant for Vancouver one season, and in a front office role for the Orlando Magic for another, but seems to have been retired since 2000.

Season by Season Record with Kings
1991-92: 22-35 .386
-----------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS: 22-35 .386


http://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/hughere99c.html
http://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/coaches/rex-hughes-1.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_Hughes
http://www.easyreadernews.com/75396/redondo-union-athletic-hall-of-fame/
http://books.google.com/books?id=JR...=kent state basketball coaches hughes&f=false
http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we...rpage=25&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no
http://news.google.com/newspapers?n...IEzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ejIHAAAAIBAJ&pg=1597,4198495
http://www.fanbase.com/Rex-Hughes
 
Dick Motta
Position: Head Coach
Years Coaching Kings: 1989-92 (3 years)
Record Coaching Kings: 48-113 .298
Playoff Appearances: 0

An old ball coach who had had long term success in the NBA before coming to the Kings, but looked over the hill and out of his depth trying to manage a chaotic rebuilding roster. Motta arrived mid season during the 1989-90 season, taking over for Jerry Reynolds and finishing the season 16-38. Following the complete teardown of that roster to produce a record 4 first round picks in the 1990 draft, Motta's 2nd year was spent coaching a team full of inexperienced kids and patchwork roleplaying vets to a 25-57 record. After reportedly spending the summer tinkering with a 4 forward offense to accomodate Wayman Tisdale, Antoine Carr and rookies Lionel Simmons and Anthony Bonner, plans went awry when both Tisdale and Bonner missed more than half the season with injuries. Motta proved unpopular amongst his players, with the normally easy going Tisdale even reportedly asking Kings management not to rehire him after his contract expired in 1992, and after getting off to another poor start in the 1991-92 season (7-18) despite the offseason acquisition of Mitch Richmond, Motta was fired 25 games into the season and replaced by interim coach Rex Hughes for the remainder of the campaign. In total, Motta went 48-113 for the Kings, only a .298 winning percentage, and by the time he was let go was the losingest coach in NBA history.

Career Before Kings
After beginning his coaching career with a successful 7 year run at Weber State (where his assistant was future Kings head coach Phil Johnson), Motta transferred to the NBA with the Chicago Bulls in 1968. He would go on to coach the famously tenacious Jerry Sloan/Norm Van Lier Bulls backcourt of the early 70s, win the 1970-71 Coach of the Year Award, and win 50 or more games 4 straight seasons while coaching future NBA coaches Sloan, Rick Adelman, Bob Weiss and Matt Guokas. After the winning run was finally snapped, he would move on to coach the Washington Bullets for 4 years, a span capped by the 44 win Bullets' surprising run to the 1977-78 NBA Championship. During that title run Motta was credited with popularizing the saying "the opera ain't over until the fat lady sings" although in truth it had been first attributed several years earlier to Texas Tech's sports information director. In 1980 he became the first coach in Dallas Mavericks history, as he took over the expansion franchise and guided it upward for 7 straight years, culminating in a 55win season in 1986-87, his last before taking over the Kings.

Career After Kings
At the time of his firing by the Kings, Motta announced that he was retiring and that 1991-92 would be his final season coaching. Two years later however he was lured out of retirement for an unsuccessful return to Dallas (52-102) as they too began rebuilding, and he capped his career with an even worse final season in Denver (17-52) in 1996-97, leaving his career coaching record at 935-1017, 12th on the all time coaching victories list, and 4th on the all time coaching losses list.

Season by Season Record with Kings
1989-90: 16-38 .296
1990-91: 25-57 .305
1991-92: 7-18 .280
-----------------------------------------------------------
TOTALS: 48-113 .298

http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1991-12-24/sports/1991358079_1_motta-barkley-nba
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Motta
http://www.basketball-reference.com/coaches/mottadi99c.html
 
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Just letting you know that I'm ready to pick up the mantle again. All the moving parts are working again and that's a good sign...

Been thinking the same thing. Busy with a bunch of freelance work, but feel like I could start popping some of these things off during breaks.
 
Rex Hughes taught me how to shoot a basketball when I was about 12 years old.

Assistant coaches aren't listed in the media guide below, but I know he was an assistant for Cal State Bakersfield for at least 2 season under Jim Parks. He was there in 85-86 and 86-87. He maybe was there the previous 2 years as well, but I seem to remember him just being there for Parks' final 2 years.

http://www.gorunners.com/fls/13300/mediaguides/201516MBBGuideColor.pdf?&DB_OEM_ID=13300