AILMike D'Antoni apparently was just as surprised
to get the Los Angeles Lakers' coaching job as Phil Jackson was that he
didn't get it.
D'Antoni told the New York Daily News that
he assumed, like most everybody else, that Jackson was a lock to return to the
franchise as Mike Brown's replacement. Brown was fired after the Lakers
stumbled badly out of the gate while struggling to learn his
Princeton-inflected offense and playing mediocre defense.
"Sure I did," the former Suns and
Knicks coach told the newspaper. "For sure I did. Didn't everybody? When I
got the call that it was me, my first reaction was, 'Are you serious?'"
D'Antoni said he was excited to be reunited with
point guard Steve Nash, whom he coached in Phoenix for five seasons. Nash
won back-to-back NBA MVP awards (2004-05, 2005-06) running D'Antoni's signature
up-tempo offense, and they won at least 54 games in each of D'Antoni's last
four seasons.
"To get one more chance to have him run the
thing the way he did for me before (in Phoenix), well, that's the kind of thing
you never think is going to happen. But now it has," D'Antoni told the
Daily News.
D'Antoni coached the Knicks for the past four
seasons, resigning last March after a largely unsuccessful tenure featuring
just one playoff appearance and no postseason victories.
D'Antoni said he considered himself "lucky
or even blessed" to get the opportunity to coach the Lakers.
"I like this team," D'Antoni told the
newspaper. "We're good, and we're gonna get better."
Kobe Bryant, in a Facebook message he posted just
after midnight Tuesday, said he couldn't wait to play for D'Antoni.
"It's been a wild week to say the least,"
he wrote. I'm happy to have closure and can't wait to get to work with
Coach D'Antoni.. spacing, ball movement. And despite the chatter, I believe we
will be phenomenal defensively. I'm looking forward to getting started with him
and his staff this week. Mamba out."
Lakers forward Antawn Jamison, a veteran of
14 NBA seasons who joined the club this season as a free agent, also is looking
forward to playing for D'Antoni, though the described the last few days around
the team as "a zoo."
"One thing I like about this team is that we
have a lot of veteran guys who have been through turmoil before," Jamison
told The Los Angeles Times. "We should be able adjust to this as quickly
as possible and really concentrate on the most important thing, which is
winning basketball games.
"Once I signed here I got the go-ahead that
things are going to be a little bit crazier than I'm used to. I dealt with
LeBron (James) leaving Cleveland; guys bringing firearms into the locker room
(in Washington) ... I'm used to turmoil a little bit."
A league source told ESPN.com that D'Antoni
received a three-year deal worth $12 million with a club option for a fourth
year. D'Antoni's agent Warren LeGarie confirmed the deal late Sunday night,
several hours after the Lakers beat Sacramento 103-90 for their second straight
win under interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff.
The Lakers plan to hold a news conference
Thursday to introduce their new coach. In a statement released by the team,
Lakers spokesperson John Black said team owner Jerry Buss, executive vice
president Jim Buss and general manager Mitch Kupchak were "unanimous that
D'Antoni was the best coach for the team at this time."
Jackson said he told Kupchak and Buss that he had
"confidence that (he) could do the job" when he met with them
Saturday to talk about the position. Jackson then left the meeting with a handshake
and understanding "that (he) would have until Monday to come back to them
with (his) decision."
Jackson was prepared to return to the Lakers on
Monday morning if negotiations between his agent and the team went well, a
league source told ESPN late Sunday night. But before he could do so, Jackson
said Kupchak woke him around midnight on Sunday by phone to tell him the team
had instead signed D'Antoni.
"The decision is of course theirs to
make," Jackson said in a statement. "I am gratified by the groundswell
of support from the Laker Fans who endorsed my return and it is the principal
reason why I considered the possibility."
Information from ESPNLosAngeles.com's Ramona
Shelburne and Dave McMenamin and ESPN.com's Marc Stein was used in this report.

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