Toronto Star

Lue vows to be a voice for change

New Clippers boss is one of just six Black head coaches in the league

- TIM REYNOLDS

Tyronn Lue is ready to follow in Doc Rivers’ footsteps. That has nothing to do with coaching the Los Angeles Clippers.

He wants to be a voice for change.

Rivers has been one of Lue’s most trusted mentors for years, and his teaching point in these times has been clear. Rivers isn’t going to coach forever. Neither is Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs, another of the NBA’s strongest coaching voices. Someone is eventually going to have to fill their roles as two of the go-to speakers in the league, as champions for change, and Rivers wants Lue to step up to be that someone.

“He needs me to be that next voice for the Black coaches coming up through the NBA,” Lue said in an interview with The Associated Press. “Doc is great. Any time there’s a crisis or anything gets bad for our country, he’s always a spokespers­on for the NBA. Him and Pop … And Doc told me: ‘Ty, you have to be that next one. You have to be the one to step to the forefront, protect the Black coaches, and speak out for the Black coaches.’ ”

Lue’s primary mission as coach of Kawhi Leonard, Paul George and the Clippers — as Rivers’ replacemen­t — is clear. He’s tasked with being the one who finally gets the franchise to the Western Conference final and beyond, who finds a way to take a team that has spent most of its existence as a punchline and makes it a champion.

That should be daunting enough.

But in these times, as one of only six Black coaches in the NBA, a league in which most of the players are Black and most of the coaches are white, Lue knows more is required.

That’s why the NBA spent three months at Walt Disney World, to stand on a platform that would amplify voices urging an end to racial inequality and police brutality in the United States.

Rivers, as the Clippers’ coach during their time in the bubble, was moved to tears at times when he spoke of the problems that ail the nation. Lue, like most assistant coaches, didn’t have much of a media footprint in the bubble; assistants are seen and rarely heard.

In this role, he vows, that will change.

“That’s what I’m going to fight for being in this position,” Lue said. “Or just having more Black head coaches and more assistant coaches and guys will be able to get the chance and opportunit­y to show their greatness.

“And, with 80 per cent of the league being Black and AfricanAme­rican, Black coaches can relate to these guys. It helps these guys that come from single-parent homes and growing up in the situations that they grew up in. Being able to talk and relate to these guys is very important.”

Lue’s hiring by the Clippers — it got done last week, was finalized Tuesday and he was formally introduced Wednesday — is another step in the right direction for the NBA.

The league was down to four Black coaches at one point this off-season; Rivers’ hiring in Philadelph­ia and Lue’s hiring with the Clippers has the total back up to six. When this year’s playoffs started, it was eight.

A few years ago, Black coaches held a then-record 14 NBA jobs. Indiana replaced a Black coach in Nate McMillan with firsttime coach Nate Bjorkgren, who is white. New Orleans is replacing a Black coach in Alvin Gentry with veteran coach Stan Van Gundy, who is white.

There are two jobs currently unfilled: Houston and Oklahoma City.

“You know, we’ve looked at what might be an equivalent to a Rooney-type rule in the NBA, and I’m not sure it makes sense,” NBA commission­er Adam Silver said during the NBA Finals, referencin­g the NFL’s Rooney Rule, which requires teams to interview minority candidates when coaching, general manager and top frontoffic­e jobs become open.

“I’m open-minded if there are other ways to address it. There is a certain natural ebb and flow to the hiring and firing, frankly, of coaches, but the number is too low right now.”

For his part, Lue is no fan of a Rooney-type rule in the NBA either. He simply wants the best coaches to have the jobs.

“If the Black coach is not better, then he shouldn’t get the job and vice versa,” Lue said. “So that’s how I feel about it. I know there’s a lot of great coaches out there, Black coaches that have proven themselves and have been good, but just haven’t gotten a second chance or another opportunit­y to show (it).”

He’s no longer one of those who didn’t get a second chance. He won an NBA title when he took over in Cleveland in 2016, although part of the deal when a coach wins a title with LeBron James is that the coach never gets all the credit he deserves for that championsh­ip. James left Cleveland in 2018, Lue’s ensuing Cavs team started 0-6 and he was promptly fired.

And now he inherits a team that has championsh­ip aspiration­s, a two-time NBA Finals MVP in Leonard and an owner in Steve Ballmer who will spend whatever is necessary to win.

Lue said he’s ready for the challenge — for all parts of the challenge.

“Without Doc, I wouldn’t be in this position,” Lue said. “With that being said, Doc has laid a hell of a foundation here with the Clippers, and now it’s up to me to better that.”

 ?? MICHAEL REAVES GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Tyronn Lue, left, takes over as Clippers head coach from Doc Rivers, who has long been a spokespers­on on Black issues.
MICHAEL REAVES GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Tyronn Lue, left, takes over as Clippers head coach from Doc Rivers, who has long been a spokespers­on on Black issues.

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