Coach of the year on hot seat
TORONTO On a day Dwane Casey was honoured by his peers as this season’s finest coach in the NBA, his job security in Toronto remained a mystery.
Hours after Casey won the Michael H. Goldberg coach of the year award, which is handed out by the National Basketball Coaches Association, the 61-year-old was questioned about his future in Toronto after the Raptors were ushered out of the post-season by Cleveland for the third straight year.
Will he be back next season?
“Nobody’s told me any differently and until they do, I’m still here, still fighting, still scratching, still meeting with players, and that’s all I can do,” Casey said. “They haven’t changed my key lock. Door still opens. I had some meetings with Masai (Ujiri) talking about what we can do better, what we can do better next year to get over the hump. Until that changes, I’m still here.”
The NBCA award is separate from the NBA’s Red Auerbach Trophy as top coach, presented June 25 and voted on by media around the league. Casey is the frontrunner for that award as well.
Casey led the Raptors to a franchise-record 59 victories in the regular season, including 34 wins at home. That secured Toronto its fifth Atlantic Division title and the top seed in the Eastern Conference.
But LeBron James and his Cavaliers undid all the positivity of the regular season in four second-round games, prompting cries of “same old Raptors.”
Ujiri was noncommittal about Casey’s future on Wednesday, except to say he’ll evaluate everything about the organization in the coming days and weeks.
“Coach Casey has been unbelievable for our organization and I treat it the same exact way that we’ve done every year, including the years that we’ve done well — to go back and look at everything,” the Raptors president said at Biosteel Centre. “I’m having conversations with coach Casey, same exact way I had conversations with him last year, two years ago.”
The Raptors’ historic season came after Ujiri called for a “culture reset” last off-season.
He joked in Wednesday’s traditional season-ending press conference, saying off the top: “I can’t pull the culture reset off this year, can I?”
Under Ujiri’s reset, the Raptors revamped their offence around improved three-point shooting and better ball movement, and focused on developing the bench. The Raptors’ second unit became the envy of the league, and Toronto was the only team in the playoffs that had finished in the top five in both offence and defence in the regular season.
Ujiri said his belief in the team, which was the secondyoungest in the playoffs, hasn’t faltered.
“There was a point where we’re trying to make the playoffs, trying to make the playoffs, trying to make the playoffs, and now we’re in there and we’re trying to success in the playoffs,” he said.
“Maybe it’s the stage that we’re going to go through. Because you know what? People can make fun of anything they want on the internet, make fun of the team, make fun of getting beat and all that stuff. Hey, one team in the NBA is going to win the NBA championship and 29 teams are going to be disappointed and we’re one of them.”