Miami Herald

Cavs hire ex-Laker Walton as assistant

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The Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday hired former Los Angeles Lakers coach

Luke Walton as an assistant under J.B. Bickerstaf­f.

The 42-year-old Walton finished his 11-year NBA playing career with the Cavs in 2012 before getting into coaching. He spent nine years playing for the Lakers, winning NBA titles in 2009 and 2010.

Walton coached the Lakers from 2017-19 before going to Sacramento. He spent two-plus seasons with the Kings, but was fired following a 6-11 start last season. He also served as an assistant with Golden State, winning a title in 2015.

“It’s rare when you can strengthen your staff with someone of similar experience­s and a passion for the game of basketball,” Bickerstaf­f said. “Luke is someone who identifies with our five core values as a coach, but also traits he was recognized for as a player, both in college and the NBA.

“I’m excited for our players to have another valuable resource to work with on the court, as we continue doing things the right way for sustainabl­e success.”

Walton’s championsh­ip experience should benefit the improved Cavs, who were one of the league’s biggest surprises last season. Cleveland went 44-38 and made the play-in game a year after going just 22-50.

With All-Star guard

Darius Garland, forward

Evan Mobley and center

Jarrett Allen, the Cavs have a solid young nucleus to build around. They’ve also made a long-term commitment to Bickerstaf­f, who signed an extension in December through the 2026-27 season.

“We are very excited to add someone of Luke’s caliber and championsh­ip DNA to our coaching staff,” said Koby Altman, the Cavs’ president of basketball operations.

“His on-court experience­s as a head coach, assistant coach and player in this league fit seamlessly into J.B.’s existing coaching staff.

“Luke is someone who truly embraces player developmen­t, a team-first mentality, and a history of creating winning basketball habits.”

ELSEWHERE

Timberwolv­es: Riding the momentum of a return to the NBA playoffs, Minnesota’s leaders are determined to further elevate a franchise long mired among the dregs of the league.

New president of basketball operations Tim Connelly is the first big catch. They’re counting on more players to follow.

Connelly agreed last week to a reported fiveyear, $40 million contract; Timberwolv­es owner Glen Taylor confirmed it includes bonuses for team performanc­e.

With Karl-Anthony Towns and Anthony Edwards emerging as elite players and Chris Finch drawing rave reviews for his guidance in his first full season as coach, the Timberwolv­es pushed No. 2 seed Memphis hard over six games in the first round.

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