Advertisement

Floyd and Stotts Lose Their Jobs

From Associated Press

The dean of Eastern Conference coaches, Terry Stotts, was fired as expected Friday after 1 1/2 seasons with the Atlanta Hawks. That must seem like an eternity to Tim Floyd, dismissed by the New Orleans Hornets after one disappointing season.

In the rapid-fire, what-have-you-done-lately profession of NBA coaching, both got more time to prove themselves than John Carroll, Randy Ayers and Chris Ford, each let go after less than a year on the job.

The firing of Stotts and Floyd means all 15 teams in the Eastern Conference have changed coaches at least once since the end of last season. Five have lost their jobs since the regular season ended. Boston (Doc Rivers) and Philadelphia (Jim O’Brien) have hired replacements; Toronto is still looking.

Advertisement

Rivers and O’Brien are no strangers to the coaching carousel. Rivers was fired by Orlando on Nov. 18. O’Brien resigned as Boston’s coach Jan. 27.

“The whole atmosphere right now I don’t think is healthy for coaching,” said former Milwaukee coach George Karl, now an analyst for ESPN.

Since the start of the 2002-03 season, there have been 24 coaching changes in the NBA.

The reasons vary, from too many losses to personality conflicts with players and management to a team simply wanting a coach with a marquee name.

Advertisement

Floyd was let go after a combination of injuries and chemistry problems he struggled to control contributed to a 41-41 regular season and an opening-round playoff loss.

“We thank Tim for his hard work, but we are in a bottom-line business,” owner George Shinn said.

Of the four Eastern Conference coaches remaining in the playoffs, Detroit’s Larry Brown has technically been on the job the longest. He was hired by the Pistons on July 2, two days after they fired Rick Carlisle -- who had led them to two straight 50-win seasons.

Advertisement

Carlisle was subsequently hired by the Indiana Pacers, who had the league’s best record this season and are up, 1-0, in their second-round playoff series against Miami, led by first-year Coach Stan Van Gundy.

Earlier this season, New Jersey fired Byron Scott -- who had led the team to two straight NBA Finals appearances -- after reports of a personality conflict with star guard Jason Kidd. Assistant Lawrence Frank took over and has the Nets in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

“I don’t understand it when good coaches get fired, when coaches who are winning are let go,” Karl said. “It’s kind of confusing. It doesn’t make a lot of sense right now.”

*

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)

Revolving Door

Since the end of the 2002-03 NBA season, all 15 teams from the Eastern Conference have made coaching changes.

*--* ATLANTA

*--*

OUT...Terry Stotts

IN...?

*--* BOSTON

*--*

OUT...Jim O’Brien, John Carroll

IN...Doc Rivers

*--* CHICAGO

*--*

OUT...Bill Cartwright

IN...Scott Skiles

*--* CLEVELAND

*--*

OUT...Keith Smart

IN...Paul Silas

*--* DETROIT

*--*

OUT...Rick Carlisle

IN...Larry Brown

*--* INDIANA

*--*

OUT...Isiah Thomas

IN...Rick Carlisle

*--* MIAMI

*--*

OUT...Pat Riley

IN...Stan Van Gundy

*--* MILWAUKEE

*--*

OUT...George Karl

IN...Terry Porter

*--* NEW JERSEY

*--*

OUT...Byron Scott

IN...Lawrence Frank

*--* NEW YORK

*--*

OUT...Don Chaney

IN...Lenny Wilkens

*--* NEW ORLEANS

*--*

OUT...Paul Silas, Tim Floyd

IN...?

*--* ORLANDO

*--*

OUT...Doc Rivers

IN...Johnny Davis

*--* PHILADELPHIA

*--*

OUT...Brown, Randy Ayers, Chris Ford

IN...Jim O’Brien

*--* TORONTO

*--*

OUT...Wilkens, Kevin O’Neill

IN...?

*--* WASHINGTON

*--*

OUT...Doug Collins

IN...Eddie Jordan

Advertisement