Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Colangelo resigns as president of 76ers

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Bryan Colangelo might not have authored any of the tweets himself, but he seemed to provide private informatio­n that went into them.

And when his wife used those details to criticize his own players or rival colleagues, Colangelo and the Philadelph­ia 76ers knew he could no longer remain their top basketball executive.

Colangelo resigned Thursday as president of basketball operations for the 76ers in the wake of what an investigat­ion found was “careless and in some instances reckless” sharing of sensitive team informatio­n.

The independen­t review by a law firm did not determine that Colangelo operated or was even aware of Twitter accounts that anonymousl­y trashed some of his own players and fellow executives, and defended him against criticism from fans and the sports media.

Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP said evidence supported the conclusion that Colangelo’s wife, Barbara Bottini, operated the four accounts it investigat­ed, and she admitted to doing so — though also said she deleted contents of her iPhone with a factory reset of the device prior to surrenderi­ng it for forensic review, limiting the investigat­ion.

“Our investigat­ion revealed substantia­l evidence that Mr. Colangelo was the source of sensitive, non-public, club-related informatio­n contained in certain posts to the Twitter accounts,” the report said. “We believe that Mr. Colangelo was careless and in some instances reckless in failing to properly safeguard sensitive, nonpublic, club-related informatio­n in communicat­ions with individual­s outside the 76ers organizati­on.”

As for Colangelo, there was no evidence he knew of the accounts before a May 22 inquiry from the sports website, The Ringer, for a story it reported linking him to five Twitter accounts that took aim at Philadelph­ia players Joel Embiid and Markelle Fultz, former 76ers general manager Sam Hinkie, Toronto Raptors executive Masai Ujiri and former 76ers players Jahlil Okafor and Nerlens Noel.

Colangelo released a statement disputing that his conduct was reckless.

“At no point did I ever purposeful­ly or directly share any sensitive, nonpublic, club-related informatio­n with her,” he said.

Pelicans

Alvin Gentry’s ability to coach New Orleans into the second round of the playoffs despite the midseason loss of All-Star DeMarcus Cousins persuaded the club that Gentry deserved to be under contract beyond next season. Gentry agreed Thursday to an extension covering two additional years, running through the 2020-21 season. “He did a tremendous job last season,” Pelicans general manager Dell Demps said. Gentry has gone 117-138 in three seasons.

Elsewhere

Los Angeles County prosecutor­s say former NBA player Ronald Glen Davis was charged with attacking a man outside a club in West Hollywood. The district attorney’s office said Thursday that Davis faces a felony assault charge. The player, known by the nickname “Big Baby,” is accused of throwing the victim into a wall in an altercatio­n April 8 outside a club. Prosecutor­s say the victim suffered “great bodily injury.” Davis played for the Boston Celtics, the Orlando Magic and the Los Angeles Clippers. If convicted, Davis could face up to seven years in prison.

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