Who should coach the Bulls? Coaches, executives and scouts weigh in

Arturas Karnisovas began reshaping the Chicago Bulls’ roster for next season by firing coach Jim Boylen. “In terms of what we’re looking for, we’re going to continue focusing on player development,” Karnisovas said. “Someone who puts relationships …

Arturas Karnisovas began reshaping the Chicago Bulls’ roster for next season by firing coach Jim Boylen.

“In terms of what we’re looking for, we’re going to continue focusing on player development,” Karnisovas said. “Someone who puts relationships with players first and is a good communicator.”

Several candidates have emerged, including former Nets coach Kenny Atkinson, Nuggets assistant Wes Unseld Jr., Raptors assistant Adrian Griffin, Bucks assistant Darvin Ham, 76ers assistant Ime Udoka, Timberwolves assistant David Vanterpool, and Mavericks assistant Stephen Silas, according to multiple reports.

While the list of candidates may grow, several coaches and executives around the league believe there is one candidate who stands out amongst the current group – Atkinson.

“I think the list will change, but out of the group mentioned, I think Kenny would be the favorite,” one general manager told HoopsHype. “Some of it depends on Arturas’ timeline, but Kenny can coach, and he can oversee player development. He will be able to compete on the court while also continuing to develop the young guys.”

Atkinson was Jeremy Lin’s primary development coach during Linsanity. Jeff Teague became an All-Star while Atkinson was his assistant coach in Atlanta. Most recently, D’Angelo Russell developed into an All-Star under Atkinson’s tutelage with the Nets. Also in Brooklyn, Spencer Dinwiddie and Joe Harris evolved into starting-caliber players.

“No brainer, Kenny Atkinson,” one NBA scout told HoopsHype. “It’s a young team. He will do for Chicago exactly what he did for Brooklyn. He’ll have them overachieve, outhustle and outwork teams on a nightly basis. They will be physical, smart, and tough to guard because they will share the ball. Plus, he’s a no-nonsense, direct, fair coach who relates very well to players. He’d be my pick.”

In Chicago, Atkinson would be reunited with assistant coach Chris Fleming, whom he worked with for three seasons in Brooklyn.

Zach LaVine vs. Devin Booker

While Zach LaVine has become a proven scorer on the wing, Atkinson’s ability to maximize the play of his guards could be a welcomed addition for Kris Dunn and Coby White. Dunn, the fifth overall pick of the 2016 draft, is eligible for a $7.1 million qualifying offer and restricted free agency this summer. White, the seventh pick of the 2019 draft, is a projected All-Rookie 2nd Team member, per our media voting poll.

In Lauri Markkanen, Atkinson would have the stretch-four he covets for his offensive schemes and maximum floor spacing.

“Kenny is the move,” one NBA assistant coach told HoopsHype. “He’s done this job before with less talent. This is a player development job. They have talent that needs to be developed and utilized. There is more there than people think.”

Should Karnisovas consider hiring an assistant coach, Unseld Jr. is a prime candidate given their history with the Denver Nuggets. With the help of Unseld Jr., Denver’s defensive rating improved from 25th to 16th since being hired in 2015.

“Kenny would be very good there,” another general manager told HoopsHype. “My gut is they go with an assistant coach that Arturas has worked with before. I think Unseld deserves a shot.”

Unseld Jr. interviewed for the Cleveland Cavaliers head coaching position last year before the team hired John Beilein.

Karnisovas is also familiar with another assistant, Griffin, whom he played with at Seton Hall under coach PJ Carlesimo.

Griffin, a former Bulls player for three seasons, recently coached the Raptors to a win over the Philadelphia 76ers as head coach Nick Nurse gave his top assistant an opportunity for some hands-on experience in the big chair.

The next morning, Griffin’s ex-wife tweeted that he abused her, including choking her, throwing her into a wall and dragging her while she was pregnant.

Griffin “vehemently” denied the allegations of his ex-wife and said the two are “involved in a longstanding legal dispute over alimony and child support arrangements” in a statement.

It’s unclear how those allegations will affect Griffin’s potential candidacy.

Vanterpool and Udoka received some praise from talent evaluators.

“I think Vanterpool will be good if he gets an opportunity,” one former NBA executive told HoopsHype. “He’s a high-level player relator, which has been a piece they’re missing there.”

Vanterpool was an assistant coach with the Blazers for six seasons while Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum emerged as one of the league’s premier backcourts.

“Keep an eye on Ime Udoka,” an NBA scout told HoopsHype. “He’s a bright, young up and coming head coach candidate. It’s only a matter of time before he’s hired.”

Udoka spent seven seasons under Spurs coach Gregg Popovich in San Antonio before joining the 76ers this season.

Similar to Udoka, Ham – a former eight-year NBA veteran – is considered a rising coach in the league after following two-time Coach of the Year, Mike Budenholzer, from Atlanta to Milwaukee.

Silas is in the midst of his 19th season overall and his second season as an assistant coach under Rick Carlisle with the Mavericks.

Finally, amid the curiosity of who’s next to coach the Bulls, one current NBA coach sympathized with Boylen and believes he will be back coaching again soon.

Atlanta Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce was recording a podcast appearance with HoopsHype as news of Boylen’s firing broke. As a fellow coach tasked with developing a young team in a rebuild, the news hit home for Pierce.

“For me, it’s disturbing,” Pierce told HoopsHype. “It’s upsetting. Jim’s a great man. I know the challenges that he was facing as a coach with a team that’s similarly young to ours. You’re trying to get that thing going. It’s not always the easiest task at hand when you’re dealing with the media, social media, young players, and the expectations of everyone. Everyone wants to win, and everyone wants to win right now. I know the position. I’m in the position, but we all know as coaches that this is the job we’re in. We understand the expectations that come with the job. We understand the seriousness of those expectations, and we take on the task knowing that. I think Jim will be fine. He’ll land on his feet soon.”

Celebrate The Last Dance with Chicago Bulls Bobbleheads featuring Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman

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Comparing NBA prospect Cole Anthony to former UNC star Coby White

University of North Carolina Tar Heels freshman point guard Cole Anthony is one of the most polarizing prospects in the 2020 NBA Draft.

University of North Carolina Tar Heels freshman point guard Cole Anthony is one of the most polarizing prospects in the 2020 NBA draft.

Anthony, 20, is the son of former NBA guard Greg Anthony and was the No. 3 overall prospect coming out of high school. He still projects as a Top 10 pick in the draft, though his draft stock may not be as high as where former UNC star Coby White went just one year prior.

The two prospects, of course, come from the same program and play the same position. White went No. 7 overall in the 2019 draft, which is considered a more talented class.

Both prospects were among the three leading scorers while competing at the NBPA Top 100 Camp in 2017.

The two players were also teammates at the U18 Americas Championships in June 2018. Both received All-Tournament honors en route to a gold medal for Team USA. White averaged 28.0 points per 40 minutes while Anthony averaged 26.8 points per 40; the prospects finished as the top two leading scorers in the tournament.

Even though they were not on campus at the same time, White reportedly played a critical role in recruiting Anthony to play at North Carolina.

(via nbadraftcomp.herokuapp.com)

White measured at 6’3.5″ without shoes and 6’4.75″ with shoes at the 2019 NBA Combine, nearly the same as Anthony. Overall, though, these are two prospects with a very similar build and frame.

The main difference is that Anthony, who has recorded a 40-plus-inch vertical, has more jump than White. However, the leaping ability hardly made a difference in their game as Anthony actually dunked less often (0.14 attempts per game) than White (0.17 attempts per game) did at UNC.

“Cole’s vertical never shows itself on the court,” said one NBA scout, who spoke to HoopsHype on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. “When all you have to do is hit a stick and jump straight up, it’s a lot easier.

Even without as much pop, White took attempts at the rim (22.5%) just about as often than Anthony (20%) did. However, that may be attributed to the fact that Anthony tore his meniscus while in college, which can take upwards of six months to re-gain explosiveness.

Shot chart for Cole Anthony in 2019-20 (via Synergy Sports)

Anthony, however, makes up for that in the fact that he was able to create more offense for himself near the basket. Very few of his finishes near the rim (8.1%) were assisted, showing he is more than able to make opportunities for himself near the hoop.

That figure was still impressive for White (17.9%) but still only occurred half as often.

White, meanwhile, was significantly more accurate (67%) than Anthony was (53.6%) within five feet of the basket. Anthony’s inefficiency near the rim is arguably his biggest concern heading into the pros while also being the most notable difference between the two players.

Shot chart for Coby White in 2018-19 (via Synergy Sports)

Generally speaking, per Synergy, most of White’s field goal attempts (66.8%) were jumpers. This, once again, is a similar profile and output that Anthony (60.6%) had as a freshman at UNC.

White (36.4%) and Anthony (35.9%) were nearly identical from the field on their jumpers. Both have fairly effective jump shots but Anthony can score off the catch or from the dribble whereas White had a bit more help from his teammates.

More than half of the jumpers that White hit (60.2%) were assisted while that sit above one-third (37.3%) for Anthony. So when coupled with how often Anthony scored at the rim without an assist, this suggests that he is far more capable of creating his own offense than his predecessor.

Anthony averaged 1.10 points per possession on all isolation plays, according to Synergy. Among the 81 players in D-I basketball who recorded as many opportunities (minimum: 60 possessions) in isolation last season, none were as efficient as Anthony. This, overall, is the biggest advantage for Anthony in favor of White.

“On the perimeter, Cole breaks a dude down and it usually ends up in a stepback jumper,” continued the scout. “But I don’t see Cole blowing by guys on the perimeter even for a midrange.”

(via nbadraftcomp.herokuapp.com)

Overall, White was a touch more prolific scorer (22.5 points per 40 minutes) and distributor (5.7 assists per 40) than Anthony (21.2 points and 4.6 assists per 40) was for the Tar Heels. But the productivity was fairly similar across the board.

Anthony relied more on the pick-and-roll than White did while at UNC. The point guard finished 38.4% of his possessions as the ballhandler in these sets while White’s rate was 27.5% in 2018-19. Both prospects mostly played on-ball during their time in college playing for coach Williams.

“Cole is incredible off the pick-and-roll. He gets it,” Jake Lawrence, who covers UNC Men’s Basketball for SB Nation’s Tar Heels Blog, recently told HoopsHype. “You can put him tight, up near the three-point line or below.”

(via nbadraftcomp.herokuapp.com)

Anthony’s usage rate (29%) was slightly higher overall than White’s (26.1%) likely due to UNC’s offense having a few more weapons in 2018-19 than the team did during in 2019-20. White, however, still ranked Top 10 among all high-major freshmen in terms of usage rate.

As playmakers, per Bart Torvik, both prospects had an assist percentage that ranked Top 10 among all high-major freshmen. White’s assist-to-turnover ratio (1.5) was better than what Anthony recorded (1.1) as freshmen, though both struggled to hold onto the ball.

“I think Cole probably sees the court a little bit better than what Coby did,” noted Lawrence. “I thought what was impressive is Coby grew as a facilitator as time went on … Coby grew into that role but he really evolved into the point guard position … He had a lot of talent around him that allowed him to grow.”

White recorded a better assist percentage in transition (20.4%) than Anthony (12.5%) did. UNC had the sixth-fastest tempo among D-I teams under White, which suggests White is more capable of pushing the break than Anthony is. If you want your team to run fast, White is a better pick than Anthony.

“Coby knew when to push it and when not to,” added Lawrence. “He could really push the pace. He’s got the handles. He would drop people.”

Anthony’s rebound percentage, meanwhile, was a touch better than White’s was while at UNC. Especially after nearly averaging a triple-double while in high school, it was encouraging to see this continue into the NCAA.

(via nbadraftcomp.herokuapp.com)

Neither guard, meanwhile, is considered a particularly helpful defender.

White recorded an adjusted defensive box plus-minus (2.2) a bit better than what Anthony offered (1.4) at UNC, but like with rebounding, their numbers still place them in a similar category of player.

“Cole has the ability to score but he is going to get smothered on the perimeter during switches,” explained the scout, who currently views Anthony as a backup point guard at the next level.

Lawrence said he would take Anthony if the team was looking for a pure point guard but White if the team preferred a secondary ball-handler and scorer in a two-guard offense. While he personally prefers Anthony, he’d expect that he is selected somewhere behind No. 7 where White was picked in 2019.

That seems to be fair analysis as NBA draft expert Chad Ford recently predicted a similar range for Anthony on a big board episode of his podcast. Ford reported that teams have the guard going between No. 10 and No. 20 on draft night.

[lawrence-related id=1348019]

Adrian Griffin makes sense to replace Jim Boylen as coach of the Bulls

Arturas Karnisovas will be the Chicago Bulls’ head of basketball and decide who coaches the team. Adrian Griffin makes a lot of sense.

Arturas Karnisovas will take over as head of basketball for the Chicago Bulls, and it will reportedly be his decision who coaches the team.

While that means Jim Boylen could keep the head coaching job, it seems more likely that he’ll bring someone new into the mix. The first name being linked to the gig is Toronto Raptors lead assistant Adrian Griffin.

Karnisovas, who is from Lithuania, played college basketball for the Seton Hall Pirates from 1990 until 1994. Starting in 1992, he and Griffin were actually teammates on that squad.

Griffin, who was a coach in the Rising Stars Challenge at the United Center earlier this year, spoke about his affection for Chicago (via NBC Sports):

“It was awesome. A lot of memories here obviously — five years coaching, three years playing, D-Rose MVP year. All that stuff comes back when I walk in this building. It always feels like home. I raised my children here. So it’s just a special place and it’s just a great city — the fans and the community. That’s what I miss the most.”

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, Chicago’s VP of basketball operations John Paxson is then “expected to move into an advisory role” within the organization.

(Photo by Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images)

Sam Smith, who wrote for the Chicago Tribune from 1979 until 2018, explained what Paxson liked about Griffin (via The Ringer):

“What the 2004-05 team represented was Paxson’s view of what an NBA team should be. Paxson was intent on changing the character of the team and adopting the character of what Chicago likes to see in itself—hard-working, tough, blue collar. He wanted hard-hat, lunch-bucket guys. The veterans he brought in were the same profile of tough overachievers: Adrian Griffin, Othella Harrington and Antonio Davis.”

According to one executive, per Joe Cowley, Griffin is “overqualified” for the position. He has long been one of the people most likely to become a head coach and is well-liked and respected by players around the league, including former Bulls star Jimmy Butler.

Teams coached by Griffin have ranked Top 5 among all teams in defensive rating six different seasons. He won his first NBA championship last year as an assistant on the Toronto Raptors.

Back in December, we mentioned Griffin as an under-the-radar candidate to become the next head coach of the New York Knicks. Griffin was considered for Chicago’s head coaching job back in 2015 (via Marc Stein):

“It should be noted that an alternative scenario making the rounds holds that the Bulls, if they can’t get [Fred] Hoiberg, will strongly consider promoting longtime Thibs aide Adrian Griffin, who is often touted as future head-coaching material and who, given the chance, just might be able to preserve the best of Thibs’ principles with a good bit less friction between the coach and the folks upstairs.”

He was an assistant for the Milwaukee Bucks from 2008 until 2010. Griffin reportedly “barely filed his retirement papers” before he was offered a job as an assistant coach for Milwaukee.

Griffin has interviewed to be the head coach of the Portland Trail Blazers (2012), Detroit Pistons (2013), Philadelphia 76ers (2013), Utah Jazz (2014), Cleveland Cavaliers (2014), Houston Rockets (2016) and Orlando Magic (2016). He reportedly had a “real shot” to coach the Magic and was a finalist for the position.

Jordan Greer wrote about why Griffin is such an attractive option (via Sporting News):

“Following nearly a decade as a player, Griffin has served as an assistant coach in Milwaukee, Chicago, Orlando and currently Oklahoma City. He has a habit of building relationships with those around him. He’s a guy who has made an impact at every stop but doesn’t need to take credit for individual or team success. Griffin is also a defensive-minded coach, having spent time under Tom Thibodeau with the Bulls.”

Considering he is known as a relationship-builder, it is worth looking at his history with people potentially in the front office for the Bulls. Some of the candidates to become Chicago’s next general manager include Michael FinleyCalvin BoothMatt LloydNazr Mohammed and Troy Weaver.

Griffin was teammates with Finley on the Dallas Mavericks (2001-2003 and 2005-2006) and was also teammates with Booth (2001) in Dallas. He played for Chicago when Lloyd was their senior manager of basketball operations (2006-2007) and he was an assistant coach for Orlando in 2015-2016 when Lloyd was their assistant GM.

Also, Griffin coached Mohammed (who reportedly “really wants the gig“) on the Bulls from 2012 until 2015. And when Griffin was an assistant coach for the Oklahoma City Thunder from 2016 until 2018, Weaver was their assistant GM.

He has all the relationships necessary for a position like this and has ties to Chicago. Hiring him would make all the sense in the world for the Bulls.

[lawrence-related id=1331096]