INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Pacers president of basketball
operations Kevin Pritchard intends to stand pat — for now.
He'd rather not break up the big-man tandem of Myles Turner, the
NBA's blocks champion, and two-time All-Star Domantas Sabonis. He
hopes free agents Doug McDermott and NBA steals champ T.J.
McConnell return.
And he's not pulling the plug on coach Nate Bjorkgren. At least
not yet.
After missing the playoffs for the first time in six years and
amid a tumultuous final month, Pritchard used a 45-minute,
season-ending video call to explain why he's still evaluating the
first-year coach's fate.
“You don’t win 34 games with a decimated roster without doing
some good things, too," Pritchard said. “But there are some things
that we need to do better, he needs to do better. Right now, no
decisions have been made. We’re not making a decision today. We
don’t make decisions in a vacuum, we take our time and to be honest
with you, I’m being evaluated. I’m being evaluated every day."
Pritchard's tepid reaction almost certainly will raise more
questions about Bjorkgren's future with Indiana.
Pritchard, like many players over the weekend, largely refuted
reports about trade demands, whether team officials did their
research before making the hire, and strained relationships between
Bjorkgren and his players.
T.J. Warren, Indiana's top scorer in 2019-20, was the most
definitive.
“Seeing those reports was really, really terrible," Warren said
Saturday, denying he'd ever asked to be dealt. “Nate’s been nothing
but a great guy. Everybody loves Nate and it wasn’t fair to him.
It's just unfortunate that false stuff, like that, was being passed
along through the internet. That wasn't cool."
Still, Pritchard said Bjrokgren acknowledged some shortcomings
during a recent meeting, something Bjorkgren also did earlier this
month publicly when he blamed himself for not forging stronger
locker room bonds.
Exit interviews with players addressed other concerns. Pritchard
said that while none expressed unhappiness with Bjorkgren, some
described his style as micromanaging.
Pritchard believes the mounting losses and a long list of
injuries were contributing factors to those sentiments. He said
that with so many players out, others were asked to change roles,
sometimes on a nightly basis.
Multiple players, including starting guard Malcolm Brogdon, said
over the weekend they knew this season would be challenging for a
new coach because of COVID-19 requirements and fewer practices.
The injuries didn't help.
Bjorkgren hasn't spoken with reporters since Thursday's
season-ending blowout loss at Washington in the play-in round.
“He said, ‘I know I’ve got to get better at this, I want to get
better at this,'" Pritchard said. “So I have a young coach who is
really talented in X’s and O’s and he has to get better at human
management. If you're willing to do that, again, you learn a ton
more by your losses than your wins, that's half the battle. He
wants to be a great coach and I think there’s something there."
Potential solutions, aside from hiring a third head coach in
three years, include Bjorkgren delegating more of his duties and
bringing in new assistant coaches.
Two areas will need to be addressed — defense and winning at
home. The Pacers finished 25th in scoring defense, allowing 115.3
points a game, after losing Warren to season-ending foot surgery in
December and Turner with his own season-ending foot injury in
mid-April.
The result: Indiana posted its first losing home record in 32
seasons, in a mostly empty arena.
“If you don’t have a really good wing defender in this league
you have no chance. We needed T.J. Warren out there," Pritchard
said. “I thought defensively we really suffered when Myles didn’t
play. We knew we were going to give up some on the defensive end
(this year) and where we've made our hay in this league is we
defended. That is something we’ve got to take a look at."
It could lead to roster changes.
First, though, Pritchard needs to make a decision about
Bjorkgren.
“To go from a first assistant from a championship team to
sitting in the head seat, you never exactly know how a guy's going
to react," Pritchard said. “But that 12 inches is huge. It's just
like going from GM to president. You can say you're going to be
prepared and everything, but it's a totally new stress, a totally
new responsibility and it's challenging.
"Every coach has to go through it. The thing I like about Nate
is, I think Nate is going to be very self-reflective and hopefully
he’ll be a better coach in the future."
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