The Guardian (USA)

Slumping Brooklyn Nets fire Steve Nash amid chaos on and off the court

- Tom Lutz

The Brooklyn Nets have attempted to arrest the chaos surroundin­g the franchise by firing head coach Steve Nash after two seasons in the job.

“We want to thank Steve for everything he brought to our franchise over the past two-plus seasons,” said the Nets general manager, Sean Marks, in a press release on Tuesday. “Since becoming head coach, Steve was faced with a number of unpreceden­ted challenges, and we are sincerely grateful for his leadership, patience and humility throughout his tenure. Personally, this was an immensely difficult decision; however, after much deliberati­on and evaluation of how the season has begun, we agreed that a change is necessary at this time. We wish Steve, Lilla and their family all the best in the future.”

When Nash joined the Nets at the start of the 2020-21 season, they were expected to compete for a championsh­ip with the All-Star duo of Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant later joined by former league MVP James Harden. However, after finishing second in the Eastern Conference, they lost in the playoffs to the eventual champions, the Milwaukee Bucks. The following campaign was even more disappoint­ing as Irving sat out large parts of the season due to his decision not to get vaccinated. Harden struggled with injury and was eventually traded to the Philadelph­ia 76ers in a deal that brought Ben Simmons to Brooklyn, and the Nets were swept in the first-round of the playoffs by the Boston Celtics.

The problems have only increased in recent months. In August, Durant reportedly demanded to be traded unless the Nets fired Nash and Marks. While that danger seemingly passed there was instabilit­y elsewhere. Simmons, a former No 1 overall pick, has been woefully ineffectiv­e while Irving tweeted out a link to a documentar­y containing antisemiti­c tropes last week and subsequent­ly refused to back down from his stance, despite claiming he respects all religions. On Monday night, fans courtside wore t-shirts reading “Fight antisemiti­sm” as Irving played in front of them.

Crucially, the Nets struggled on court. Their 2-5 record puts them 12th out of 15 teams in the Eastern Conference and Nash appeared unable to unite his team.

In a statement, Nash thanked the Nets for an “amazing experience with many challenges that I’m incredibly grateful for.”

Eyebrows were raised when Nash, whose brilliant playing career ended with his enshrineme­nt in the basketball hall of fame, was appointed to lead the Nets, despite never having served as a head coach. While many of the Nets’ problems were out of Nash’s control, his downfall was far from a surprise as Brooklyn reel from one problem to the next.

Assistant coach Jacque Vaughn will replace Nash while the Nets look for a permanent replacemen­t. ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowsk­i said possibles to take the job include former Utah Jazz coach Quin Snyder and Ime Udoka, who is serving a suspension at the Boston Celtics but would be available to take a job at another team.

 ?? Photograph: Brad Penner/USA Today Sports ?? Steve Nash talks to Kevin Durant earlier this month as the pressure mounted on his position.
Photograph: Brad Penner/USA Today Sports Steve Nash talks to Kevin Durant earlier this month as the pressure mounted on his position.

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