Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts

Monday, 11 January 2016

Brooklyn Nets Fire Lionel Hollins

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The Brooklyn Nets fired coach Lionel Hollins and reassigned general manager Billy King on Sunday in the midst of their worst season since moving from New Jersey.

The Nets said assistant Tony Brown will serve as the interim head coach, and the GM position will remain open until a replacement is hired.

The Nets have lost four in a row overall and nine straight at home, where attendance has dwindled at the $1bn Barclays Center. The Nets had made the playoffs every year since relocating for the 2012-13 season, but they are 10-27, better only than the league-worst Philadelphia 76ers.

King had been GM since 2010, orchestrating a number of high-profile moves that led to just one playoff series victory. Hollins was in his second season as coach.

“It’s clear from our current state of affairs that we need new leadership,” owner Mikhail Prokhorov said in a statement. “With the right basketball management and coach in place, we are going to create a winning culture and identity and give Brooklyn a team that it can be proud of and enjoy watching.”

King worked hard to fulfill Prokhorov’s goal of winning a championship within five years of buying the team in 2010, making blockbuster trades that brought in Deron Williams, Joe Johnson, Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett.

Only Johnson remains, as the Nets decided to cut costs after at one point owning the largest payroll in league history. But they are not competitive now and have little hope of a quick fix in the future, as their first-round pick next season goes to Boston as part of the payment from the deal that brought Pierce and Garnett in 2013.

“At every step of the way, he has been aggressive in his quest to build a winning team and has been a key factor toward the Nets making the playoffs for each of the last three seasons,” Prokhorov said of King, who was in the last year of his contract.

Prokhorov is scheduled to hold a news conference Monday.

King has been criticized for making deals with no regard for future ramifications, starting with the 2011 trade with Utah for Williams, whose contract was bought out last summer with two years remaining. Another swap with Portland for Gerald Wallace cost the Nets the pick that turned into Damian Lillard, and they don’t control their own first-round choice until 2019 thanks to the trade with Boston.

Hollins went 48-71 and, like predecessors Avery Johnson, PJ Carlesimo and Jason Kidd, didn’t last long in Brooklyn. The former Memphis Grizzlies coach got the Nets to the No8 seed in the Eastern Conference last season, but they dropped their first seven games in this one and haven’t won at home in a month.

Those home struggles and a roster loaded with lesser names have created a big drop in interest in Brooklyn, where there have been empty seats all over the arena this season. It will be hard for the new regime to change much quickly, unless the Nets can score a big name in free agency.

Prokhorov thanked the fans in his statement and said bright days are ahead. “We have learned a great deal during the past six years and our experiences will guide us for the future,” he said.



Sunday, 21 July 2013

Medinah a Big Loss - Mickelson

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Phil Mickelson has conceded he is still coming to terms with America's Ryder Cup defeat to Europe and admits it is amongst the most painful losses of his entire career.

The 42-year-old was part of the US side captained by Davis Love III that threw away a 10-6 lead heading into Sunday's singles to eventually succumb to a dramatic 14½-13½ defeat at Medinah.

The Americans could muster only three wins in the singles as Europe pulled off arguably their greatest triumph in the biennial event and Mickelson has acknowledged the result is still raw nearly three weeks on.

"I don't know what happened Sunday," he told ESPN in his homeland. "I'm still licking wounds from that. It still stings. It's one of the toughest, most difficult losses I've ever had in my career.

"Individually, that and the Winged Foot US Open loss (in 2006) have stung the most. This one still hurts. I really thought we were going to get that win.

"When we had to be accountable to our team-mates and to our country and the people that are pulling for us and supporting us in the United States of America, we just felt so, I mean, we still do, we feel so down and disappointed about it."

However, the left-hander maintained his stance that skipper Love was right to controversially bench him and partner Keegan Bradley for Saturday's fourballs session in Chicago.

"I thought it was a great idea because we were fresh and ready for the singles and we had a four-point lead," he added.

"Of my nine Ryder Cups, that's the only time that's ever happened [that] we had that kind of lead, so whatever Davis did the first two days was right on."


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