Los Angeles Times

Shaw is selected to coach G League’s academy team

Former Lakers guard, assistant will lead elite young players seeking different path to NBA.

- By Broderick Turner

Perhaps it was all those years of helping to settle the difference­s between Lakers teammates Shaquille O’Neal and Kobe Bryant, playing and coaching under Phil Jackson, and playing in the NBA that made Brian Shaw uniquely qualified for his new position.

Shaw has been chosen to coach the new NBA G League academy team, launched for elite players coming out of high school who view it as an alternativ­e path to the NBA instead of attending college or playing overseas.

Shaw will be more than a coach for these players, who will earn at least $125,000 for a five-month contract.

He will be a mentor who offers advice. He will be a teacher who offers basketball instructio­n. He will listen, instruct, critique and encourage a group of young men with aspiration­s of playing in the NBA in the near future.

“I’m thrilled to just have an opportunit­y to serve as a mentor and a coach and developer of some young, fresh, talented guys that still have another level to go to,” Shaw said. “So that makes it unique, and it makes it new for me to help develop these guys to try to realize their NBA goals, and to do everything in my power to try to get them there.”

Shaw had been working for NBA TV as an analyst the last few months, his NBA coaching career on hold after the Lakers let him go as lead assistant after the 201819 season when the team parted ways with Luke Walton as coach.

The opportunit­y to be a part of young men’s lives and have a positive influence lured him back.

“Once it was kind of put in front of me and presented, it kind of made me go, ‘Huh, this is kind of interestin­g!’ And I think the place I am in life right now and everything that I’ve already done and kind of been through, the idea and the thought of this re-energized me, for a lack of better words, and it really piqued my interest,” Shaw said. “And as I delved into it a little bit deeper, it made sense for me right now.”

Shaw, 54, was an assistant coach with the Lakers under Jackson from 2003 to 2011; an assistant with the Indiana Pacers under Frank Vogel, now the Lakers’ coach, from 2011 to 2013; head coach of the Denver Nuggets from 2013 to 2015; and an assistant with the Lakers under Walton from 2016 to 2019.

Shaw played guard for 14 seasons with seven teams in the NBA and helped the Lakers win three straight NBA titles from 2000 to 2002.

He had all the qualities that Shareef Abdur-Rahim, president of the G League, was looking for.

“We’re thrilled to have Brian as head coach of the NBA G League team,” he said. “Brian’s extensive experience and success as an NBA player and coach make him a natural choice to lead the developmen­t of these terrific young players and help them grow as profession­als.”

The group of players that Shaw will coach features Jalen Green, a 6-foot-5 guard who was considered the No. 1 recruit in the class of 2020. Other top players signed for next season include Isaiah Todd, a 6-10 forward who had committed to Michigan, Daishen Nix, a 6-4 guard who had committed to UCLA, and Kai Sotto, a 7-2 prospect from the Philippine­s.

The G League program for elite young players includes college tuition to attend Arizona State. Players have until five years after their careers end to take advantage of that partnershi­p.

“In my short stint as a head coach in the NBA, it taught me patience,” Shaw said. “At one point, I used to always draw a line in the sand and be like, ‘This is the way it is.’ But we live in a different world now where you have to be a little bit more sensitive. I’m constantly learning and applying what I’ve learned, so patience is another adjective that I would use to describe how I would have to be as well.”

A decision on where the G League team will be based has yet to be made, but the

Los Angeles area is being considered.

The team will play 20 to 25 games, some against existing G League teams and, with hope, some against junior national teams from other countries.

There will be some veterans on the team, former NBA players who will help with mentoring the young players.

But Shaw will be the man in charge.

Whether this opportunit­y leads him back into the NBA coaching ranks, Shaw is grateful to have a chance to mold the next generation of players.

“Once it’s successful and it’s starting to grow, I could see myself loving this and wanting to do this until I ride off into the sunset,” he said. “But obviously if other opportunit­ies came up, I’d have to weigh them. But I’m very happy with the decision I made to take this route, and I’m happy that they reached out to me and put me in a position to be the coach of this team.”

 ?? Kathy Willens Associated Press ?? BRIAN SHAW is calling this opportunit­y unique.
Kathy Willens Associated Press BRIAN SHAW is calling this opportunit­y unique.

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