Montreal Gazette

Could Raptors assistant be on move to Chicago?

Coach Griffin has strong ties to Bulls’ new vice-president Karnisovas

- RYAN WOLSTAT rwolstat@postmedia.com

A big hiring by the Chicago Bulls aimed at starting the process of restoring that franchise to glory could have reverberat­ions north of the border, too.

The Bulls have agreed to a deal with Arturas Karnisovas to be the team’s executive vice-president of basketball operations, according to numerous reports. Karnisovas spent seven years with the Denver Nuggets, first as assistant general manager, before being elevated to GM under president Tim Connelly. Karnisovas helped build Denver into a top team in the Western Conference and previously worked for the Houston Rockets and the NBA’S basketball operations department.

The connection to the Toronto Raptors comes from his playing days. Karnisovas, a former European Player of the Year, played for Lithuania (winners of Olympic bronze medals in both 1992 and 1996, with help from Karnisovas) against the Dream Team at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and was a star for Seton Hall, including for two years alongside Nick Nurse’s lead assistant with the Raptors, Adrian Griffin, who replaced Karnisovas as the Pirates’ top player after he graduated. Both are members of Seton Hall’s hall of fame.

The Raptors denied the Bulls permission to speak with general manager Bobby Webster for the job that eventually went to Karnisovas, but it isn’t expected they’d stand in the way of a promotion and homecoming for Griffin, who played for the Bulls and was an assistant coach there from 201015. The team, whether it’s Nurse, other coaches, or the front office, has long touted Griffin’s future as a head coach.

“I mean, he is awesome,” fellow Raptors assistant coach Nate Bjorkgren told a couple beat writers back in February, before the entire staff went to Chicago, ironically, for the NBA all-star weekend.

“He has a great demeanour, he’s going to be a great head coach in the NBA,” Bjorkgren said. “He’s got a nice calming presence about him when he’s showing film to the team, when he’s talking to the team. So just his overall feel and approach and knowing how to talk to the players is probably his No. 1 strength.”

Griffin coached the World Team at the Rising Stars game at the United Center and talked about his Windy City ties after the game.

“A lot of memories here obviously — five years coaching, three years playing, (Derrick) Rose MVP year. All that stuff comes back when I walk in this building,” Griffin said.

“It always feels like home. I raised my children here. So it’s just a special place, and it’s just a great city, the fans and the community. That’s what I miss the most.”

Maybe he won’t be missing Chicago for too much longer?

It appears FIBA and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee are going to have a talk.

One day this week, the IOC announced qualifying for the reschedule­d Tokyo Olympics needs to be completed by June 29, 2021. On another day, FIBA, the Internatio­nal Basketball Federation, made their own announceme­nt about qualifying for the basketball portion of the Olympics. The last-chance tournament­s will go between June 22 and July 4, which obviously extends beyond that June 29 date set by the IOC.

FIBA did add the exact dates need to be approved by the IOC, so we’ll see where that goes.

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