The Commercial Appeal

Pacers fire Mcmillan after 1st-round sweep

- Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS – Nate Mcmillan won dozens of regular-season games despite the Indiana Pacers’ continual injuries.

The playoff losses cost him his job. On Wednesday, two days after enduring a second straight first-round sweep, president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard fired Mcmillan.

“This was a very hard decision for us to make; but we feel it’s in the best interest of the organizati­on to move in a different direction,” Pritchard said, whose relationsh­ip with Mcmillan dates to their earlier days in Portland. “Nate and I have been through the good times and the bad times; and it was an honor to work with him for those 11 years.”

The decision was a surprise, given Pritchard’s Aug. 12 announceme­nt that Mcmillan had been given a one-year contract extension through the 2021-22 season. At the time, Pritchard cited Mcmillan’s ability to overcome major injuries – like the one that kept Victor Oladipo out for 12 months – and personnel changes, such as the trade of All-star forward Paul George.

Another dismal playoff performanc­e apparently changed the equation.

While Mcmillan’s 183 victories with Indiana rank third in franchise history and the Pacers made the playoffs in each of his four seasons as head coach, Mcmillan’s teams went just 3-16 in the postseason and were swept three times – the first three times the Pacers haven’t won at least one game in a best-of-seven NBA series.

They haven’t reached the second round since appearing in the Eastern Conference finals in 2013 and 2014, and after Monday’s loss to Miami, Indiana has lost a franchise-record nine consecutiv­e playoff games.

Injuries have played a key role in the failures. After getting swept by Lebron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2017, the Pacers played without Oladipo, a two-time All-star last season who suffered a serious knee injury, last season and without All-star forward Domantas Sabonis because of a foot injury against the Heat.

Mcmillan finished his career in Indiana with a 183-136 record.

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Nate Mcmillan, seen Saturday, was fired Wednesday as coach of the Pacers after the team’s second consecutiv­e first-round sweep.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Nate Mcmillan, seen Saturday, was fired Wednesday as coach of the Pacers after the team’s second consecutiv­e first-round sweep.

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