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Heirs to the throne?
Kings consider their options for a new head coach
By Scott Howard-Cooper - Bee Staff Writer
http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/158962.html
Last Updated 1:01 am PDT Saturday, April 21, 2007
Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1
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Kings basketball president Geoff Petrie must hire a new coach for the second time in as many years after firing Eric Musselman on Friday. Sacramento Bee/José Luis Villegas
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At least the firings have been predictable.
Rick Adelman was left to twist all of 2005-06, after it was learned the Kings tried to replace him with Phil Jackson before the season and then refused to consider a midseason contract extension.
Friday's dismissal of Eric Musselman and his chafing personality could be seen from months away.
It's the hiring process that gets tricky.
If last summer was challenging enough -- only three candidates were interviewed, and Musselman was the only one with NBA head-coaching experience -- this offseason brings the additional burden that little has changed in the 49 weeks since the Kings last went through this with few apparent options.
There are no new ideal candidates and no new candidates of any kind without obvious drawbacks. There will be many young candidates who might have the desired motivating energy but lack experience while responsible for steering a roster in a difficult transition.
The options the Kings do have will come from several fronts.
The college crowd
• Tim Floyd, USC. His 90-231 record in the NBA is an obvious red flag, but that was with the Bulls -- immediately after the departure of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen -- and the Hornets. Floyd has always been highly regarded as a teacher and strategist, and his stock has risen after returning to college coaching and helping build an encouraging future at a former basketball stepchild.
• Lon Kruger, UNLV. Speculation continues that the former Hawks coach is looking for a new opportunity -- whether in college or the NBA -- and it doesn't hurt that the Runnin' Rebels just had a very good showing.
• Reggie Theus, New Mexico State. The ex-King might be the popular fan choice, especially after taking the Aggies from 16-14 in his first season to the NCAA Tournament last season.
The assistants
• Scott Brooks, Kings. Held in high regard personally and professionally by many in the league, he has four seasons on NBA benches.
• Marc Iavaroni, Suns. It's a race to get him. This summer's Hot Coaching Prospect also might be the top choice in Memphis and, if the Raptors and incumbent Sam Mitchell don't reach a new agreement, in Toronto.
• Kurt Rambis, Lakers. A good mix of experience and youthful enthusiasm that connects well with players. A Northern California native who briefly played for the Kings, he would be popular with a fan base eager to embrace a coach.
The old guard
• Del Harris. The 69-year-old Mavericks assistant has a track record as a successful teacher and head coach.
• Rudy Tomjanovich. The dark horse. After he quit as the Lakers' coach because of physical problems during the 2004-05 season, the 58-year-old's desire to return to the rigors is more the question than anything.
Meanwhile
• Billy Donovan? The Florida coach wasn't interested in the job when approached a year ago. He's bigger now, and the Kings are worse. If Donovan and his star power are moving to the NBA, it's for a more direct path to success (the Grizzlies if they get Greg Oden to go with Pau Gasól, Mike Miller and Rudy Gay) and for a contract that would surpass most proven peers.
• Larry Brown? Intriguing because Brown is great at pushing a team up a hill, and he loves the teaching that would go with a Kings youth movement. But he is high maintenance to historical proportions, and that won't play in this front office, especially after just living with Musselman and his insistence on magnifying little matters into issues. Besides, hiring Brown would mean another coaching search in a couple of seasons and, again, big money.
• Rick Adelman? Not a real, real strong likelihood.
The risks are compounded in that the Kings can't afford to miss again. Although many teams make hiring mistakes, back-to-back mistakes can cause long-term instability.
Additionally, the 2006-07 club likely would have slid backward anyway amid injuries and the dysfunction beyond the coach. Still, some forward arc into playoff contention will be expected within two or three years.
kings coaches
Kings consider their options for a new head coach
By Scott Howard-Cooper - Bee Staff Writer
http://www.sacbee.com/100/story/158962.html
Last Updated 1:01 am PDT Saturday, April 21, 2007
Story appeared in SPORTS section, Page C1
Print | E-Mail | Comments (0)
Kings basketball president Geoff Petrie must hire a new coach for the second time in as many years after firing Eric Musselman on Friday. Sacramento Bee/José Luis Villegas
See additional images
At least the firings have been predictable.
Rick Adelman was left to twist all of 2005-06, after it was learned the Kings tried to replace him with Phil Jackson before the season and then refused to consider a midseason contract extension.
Friday's dismissal of Eric Musselman and his chafing personality could be seen from months away.
It's the hiring process that gets tricky.
If last summer was challenging enough -- only three candidates were interviewed, and Musselman was the only one with NBA head-coaching experience -- this offseason brings the additional burden that little has changed in the 49 weeks since the Kings last went through this with few apparent options.
There are no new ideal candidates and no new candidates of any kind without obvious drawbacks. There will be many young candidates who might have the desired motivating energy but lack experience while responsible for steering a roster in a difficult transition.
The options the Kings do have will come from several fronts.
The college crowd
• Tim Floyd, USC. His 90-231 record in the NBA is an obvious red flag, but that was with the Bulls -- immediately after the departure of Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen -- and the Hornets. Floyd has always been highly regarded as a teacher and strategist, and his stock has risen after returning to college coaching and helping build an encouraging future at a former basketball stepchild.
• Lon Kruger, UNLV. Speculation continues that the former Hawks coach is looking for a new opportunity -- whether in college or the NBA -- and it doesn't hurt that the Runnin' Rebels just had a very good showing.
• Reggie Theus, New Mexico State. The ex-King might be the popular fan choice, especially after taking the Aggies from 16-14 in his first season to the NCAA Tournament last season.
The assistants
• Scott Brooks, Kings. Held in high regard personally and professionally by many in the league, he has four seasons on NBA benches.
• Marc Iavaroni, Suns. It's a race to get him. This summer's Hot Coaching Prospect also might be the top choice in Memphis and, if the Raptors and incumbent Sam Mitchell don't reach a new agreement, in Toronto.
• Kurt Rambis, Lakers. A good mix of experience and youthful enthusiasm that connects well with players. A Northern California native who briefly played for the Kings, he would be popular with a fan base eager to embrace a coach.
The old guard
• Del Harris. The 69-year-old Mavericks assistant has a track record as a successful teacher and head coach.
• Rudy Tomjanovich. The dark horse. After he quit as the Lakers' coach because of physical problems during the 2004-05 season, the 58-year-old's desire to return to the rigors is more the question than anything.
Meanwhile
• Billy Donovan? The Florida coach wasn't interested in the job when approached a year ago. He's bigger now, and the Kings are worse. If Donovan and his star power are moving to the NBA, it's for a more direct path to success (the Grizzlies if they get Greg Oden to go with Pau Gasól, Mike Miller and Rudy Gay) and for a contract that would surpass most proven peers.
• Larry Brown? Intriguing because Brown is great at pushing a team up a hill, and he loves the teaching that would go with a Kings youth movement. But he is high maintenance to historical proportions, and that won't play in this front office, especially after just living with Musselman and his insistence on magnifying little matters into issues. Besides, hiring Brown would mean another coaching search in a couple of seasons and, again, big money.
• Rick Adelman? Not a real, real strong likelihood.
The risks are compounded in that the Kings can't afford to miss again. Although many teams make hiring mistakes, back-to-back mistakes can cause long-term instability.
Additionally, the 2006-07 club likely would have slid backward anyway amid injuries and the dysfunction beyond the coach. Still, some forward arc into playoff contention will be expected within two or three years.
kings coaches
