.@RicBucher: Hiring JJ Redick would be a mistake by the Lakers.
“I’m praying that they do this because it would be the most comical thing that we’ve ever seen.” pic.twitter.com/7A5VM5rfg4
— Speak (@SpeakOnFS1) May 22, 2024
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Cavaliers parted ways with head coach JB Bickerstaff
The Cleveland Cavaliers parted ways with head coach JB Bickerstaff, sources tell @TheAthletic @Stadium. Warriors assistant Kenny Atkinson and Pelicans associate James Borrego are expected to be among candidates for the job. pic.twitter.com/PVU0ZUcRGb
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) May 23, 2024
6 Conference Finals players Lakers should pursue
6 Conference Finals players Lakers should pursue from least to most likely https://t.co/DjFWzA69BO
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 23, 2024
6. Kyle Anderson, Minnesota Timberwolves
5. Derrick Jones Jr., Dallas Mavericks
4. Obi Toppin, Indiana Pacers
3. Pascal Siakam, Indiana Pacers
2. Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Minnesota Timberwolves
1. Jalen Smith, Indiana Pacers
WOW! JB is available now!
For my money (and it’s not) I would strongly pursue J.B. Bickerstaff pronto. Dude is a grinder, comes from great coaching genes, and has shown he can mold a team. Cavs going to regret this one since there’s no guarantee it helps keep Spyda “happy”. Honestly didn’t see this one coming at all, I think he’s done an amazing job there considering the injuries to key players every season.
Clear first choice unless he chooses to take break.
LA Knows It ‘Screwed Up’ By Not Adding Champion Coach
Lakers News: LA Knows It 'Screwed Up' By Not Adding Champion Coach https://t.co/iXj073GX1j
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 23, 2024
The Los Angeles Lakers still see a former L.A. player as the one that got away, apparently.
Negotiations with All-Star forward LeBron James’ former Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Tyronn Lue, who led the Cavs to the 2016 championship, broke down in the summer of 2019. Los Angeles only wanted to pay him a three-year, $18 million deal, a major downgrade from his previous five-year, $35 million agreement with Cleveland at the time, and wanted control over his bench hires, specifically mandating that Jason Kidd be brought on, per ESPN’s Ohm Youngmisuk.
Prior to his coaching days, Lue was a journeyman backup point guard. He was selected with the No. 23 pick in the 1998 draft out of Nebraska, and saw his draft rights shipped out from the Denver Nuggets, along with Tony Battie, to the Lakers for All-Star point guard Nick Van Exel. Lue played in Los Angeles until 2001, claiming two titles during the club’s halcyon Shaquille O’Neal/Kobe Bryant era.
Lue hadn’t even been the Lakers’ first choice in the summer of 2019— that was Monty Williams, who ultimately signed on with the Phoenix Suns, brought that team to the NBA Finals, alienated himself from maximum-salaried center Deandre Ayton, saw the team’s chemistry crumble, signed a crazy deal with the Detroit Pistons, and earned $13.1 million this year while guiding the Pistons to a 14-68 record.
Once Williams passed on the gig and talks with Lue broke down (Lue pivoted to being Doc Rivers’ assistant on the rival L.A. Clippers, and eventually took over for Rivers in 2020), the Lakers pivoted to Frank Vogel, mandated the Kidd hire, and instantly won a championship. After underperforming in 2020-21 (following a pandemic-shortened offseason), the Lakers panicked, offloading major championship equity for an ill-fitting, past-his-prime Russell Westbrook and surrounding its new Westbrook/James/Anthony Davis core with decrepit veterans. The team tanked immediately, ultimately finishing with a 33-49 record. Vogel was fired, the sacrificial lamb of team president Rob Pelinka’s transactional hubris.
Per Anthony Irwin of Lakers Daily, Los Angeles even now regrets passing over Lue. Despite, you know, winning immediately with Vogel. The Lakers are now seeking their third head coach in the last four seasons.
“If Lue was available, it’d be done already,” a source close informed Irwin. “They know they screwed that up a few years ago and would like to remedy that mistake. Problem is, the Clippers know the Lakers want Lue. So, on top of him being a good coach, [Steve] Ballmer doesn’t want to help the Lakers get better.”