Los Angeles Times

Rivers has same job, expectatio­ns in Philadelph­ia

- By Andrew Greif

Within hours of learning last week that he would not return for an eighth season with the Clippers, Doc Rivers heard from his agent that three teams wanted to speak with him, that day, about their coaching openings.

“I said, ‘ I’m good right now, I need a day,’ ” Rivers said. “… I love coaching. But I was not going to just coach anybody, I can tell you that. I was ready to take a break, and it just depended on the team that was available and if I thought that that team in my opinion was ready to win.”

Within days, Rivers found a suitor that fit his criteria.

The 58- year- old coach who ranks 11th on the NBA’s victories list agreed to lead the Philadelph­ia 76ers, a franchise whose arc this season — star duo, title expectatio­ns but a disappoint­ing, early postseason exit that led to a coach’s ouster — mirrored the Clippers’ own.

The Clippers lost in the second round despite leading the series 3- 1 and each of the final three games by double digits. Following the Game 7 loss to the Denver Nuggets, which capped the second time a Rivers- led Clippers team blew a 3- 1 playoff series lead, Rivers said to blame him for the outcome. Throughout the postseason, Rivers was heavily criticized and questioned for being too reactive in making lineup and strategy changes. Two weeks later, the franchise’s record- holder for victories, winning percentage and playoff victories was out of a job.

He acknowledg­ed ref lecting on why the Clippers didn’t match their championsh­ip potential.

“Let’s just start with COVID,” Rivers said Monday, a 76ers lapel pin on his suit during a virtual news conference from Philadelph­ia’s practice facility. “This has been a tough year for everybody. The bubble is not a normal experience, but I’m glad it’s an experience that the NBA created. Without it, we wouldn’t be crowning a champion this year. As far as what went wrong, we had a 3- 1 lead and didn’t [ win].

“I love that we got up 3- 1. It tells us that we were doing something great. What I didn’t like is we didn’t close. And that’s something I do evaluate and look at and is something that will bother me for a long time until we win here.”

The Clippers termed the ouster a mutual decision by Rivers and Steve Ballmer. The owner was displeased that the team’s performanc­e was not keeping pace with upgrades in other department­s and wanted a coach innovative enough to get the most out of the roster, from its stars to its young players, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Tyronn Lue, an assistant under Rivers who coached LeBron James and Cleveland to the 2016 NBA title, is a leading contender to land the job, but the team is not expected to rush its hire.

“Steve and I had a lot of talks about the direction of the team, and f inally we decided that me staying there, that it was just time to take a step away,” Rivers said.

Instead of taking a break, Rivers will be on a sideline coaching for a 22nd consecutiv­e season in 2021, following a stop in Orlando, a championsh­ip tenure in Boston, and his time in L. A., where he guided the Clippers through the Donald Sterling scandal in 2014 and helped recruit Kawhi Leonard last summer but never advanced to a conference f inals. This spring and summer, he became a leading voice as the NBA grappled with how to help fight racism.

“Doc will use his voice to have tough conversati­ons to what he can do to change and make a positive impact on society,” Philadelph­ia general manager Elton Brand said.

Rivers was on a plane to meet with 76ers officials within a day of departing the Clippers because of two names, he said: Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons.

“This team is loaded with talent,” he said. “We just got to f igure out how to make it work the best.”

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