The Los Angeles Lakers plan to speak with former
Knicks and Suns head coach Mike D'Antoni and former Lakers, Blazers, Bucks and
Clippers head coach Mike Dunleavy about their head coaching job in the coming
days, according to a league source.
Those upcoming discussions will follow Saturday's
meeting between Lakers officials and Phil Jackson, in which the two sides
discussed the job but no official offer was made. "There is nothing to
report," said a source involved with the discussions Saturday. Jackson,
though, remains the overwhelming favorite to take over early next week. The
11-time champion, who won five of those rings in two stints with the Lakers,
has the enthusiastic support of all of the team's star players, including Kobe
Bryant, Dwight Howard, Steve Nash and Pau Gasol. Interim coach Bernie
Bickerstaff, who took over Friday after the Lakers fired former coach Mike
Brown, will coach Sunday's home game against Sacramento.
The Lakers next play at home Tuesday against San
Antonio, but then have two days off before their next game, next Friday, at
Staples Center against the Suns. Not making a hire until after the Spurs game
would give the next head coach two days of practice before debuting against
Phoenix, and give them a chance to interview other candidates. It is not
believed that the Lakers have contacted former assistant coach and player Brian
Shaw, who was Jackson's and Bryant's choice to succeed Jackson after Jackson's
final season with the team in 2011. Shaw is now the associate head coach of the
Pacers.
Former Jazz head coach Jerry Sloan told USA
Today Saturday that he had not been contacted by the Lakers.
D'Antoni's camp was resigned earlier Saturday to
the idea that Jackson would be the next head coach. The Lakers didn't contact
D'Antoni throughout the day while interviewing Jackson. The Los Angeles
Times reported that executive vice president Jim Buss and general manager
Mitch Kupchak met with Jackson.
Jackson's longtime agents, Todd and Brian
Musburger, said in June that Jackson was looking for a deal similar to the one
that Pat Riley has in Miami if he were to return to the game. At the time, they
said Jackson's inclination was not to return to coaching, but to seek a job
where he would pick a coach and work with that coach and his staff. In Los Angeles,
Jim Buss has the final say on basketball-related matters. But Buss did not have
a very good relationship with Jackson, and after he left the team got rid of
almost all of the people that had had any association with Jackson. Jim Buss
chose Mike Brown to replace Jackson instead of other candidates like Rick
Adelman, who subsequently took the head job with the Timberwolves.
Jackson, according to a source who knows him
well, is in good shape after having a knee replacement last March. The
likelihood is that if Jackson returns to coach, he'd want to bring back many of
his longtime assistants, including Jim Cleamons, Frank Hamblen and Kurt Rambis.
Most observers around the league think it would be easy for the team's current
personnel that weren't in Los Angeles when Jackson last coached the Lakers to
pick up the triangle offense Jackson has used since his days in Chicago in the 1990s.
The offense would be especially good for Howard, who could thrive in the low
post the same way Shaquille O'Neal did when the Lakers won three straight
titles from 2001 through 2003.
D'Antoni, who resigned as head coach of the
Knicks in March, is obviously familiar to Nash, who won back-to-back league MVP
honors playing in D'Antoni's system in Phoenix. D'Antoni is also quite familiar
with Bryant, whom he first met while he played--and Bryant lived--in Italy, and
then coached as an assistant on the U.S. Olympic teams that won the gold medal
in 2008 and 2012.
Dunleavy started his head coaching career with
the Lakers, making the Finals in 1991 before losing to the Bulls in six games,
before moving on to the Bucks, Blazers and Clippers. He last coached in 2010,
getting fired with a 21-28 record with the Clippers. He put together a group
that tried to buy the New Orleans Hornets and was thought to be the favorite
before the team was sold by the NBA to New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson.
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