Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Donovan, team may find an identity

New coach has chance to put his stamp on youthful group

- By Jamal Collier

Billy Donovan has been an NBA head coach for five seasons. His .608 winning percentage during that span is among the best in league history, ranking 16th among those who have coached at least 100 games and sitting behind only three active coaches: Nick Nurse (.721), Steve Kerr (.709) and Gregg Popovich (.675).

Yet there still are lingering questions about the Bulls new coach after a stintwith the Oklahoma City Thunder during which he appeared in the playoffs every season. The uncertaint­y centers around his coaching identity. It’s why during his introducto­ry news conference last week Donovan was asked , “Ideally, how would a Billy Donovan team play?”

Although Donovan did not directly answer the question — deferring instead to the second part of the question focused on analytics and 3-pointers — he did offer insight about what could be his best trait as a coach: his ability to adapt.

“The first thing I’ll do is watch a lot of film,” he said. “But ... one of the things I’ve always felt like is important when you’re building out different things offensivel­y, is you’ve got to spend time with players to let me hear from them how do they want to be used. How do they feel like they’re most effective? What are things they feel most comfortabl­e doing? How can you take advantage of their skill set and their offense?

“You go through that with the players ... then you build out from there of how you want to play.”

Taking over a young team that Donovan can more easily mold could give him an opportunit­y to shape his philosophy more clearly.

His teams in Oklahoma City went through drasticall­y different phases. Donovan’s first year with the Thunder in 2015-16 was also Kevin Durant’s last with the team, with expectatio­ns to go to the finals.

After Durant left, Russell Westbrook was the lone star and went on to average a triple-double and win the league’s MVP award. The Thunder then got Westbrook some help, pairing him with Paul George — and Carmelo Anthony briefly — for two seasons before George forced a trade to the Los Angeles Clippers. And the Thunder shifted gears again this season, which many consider Donovan’s most impressive coaching job after they traded Westbrook to the Rocketsfor Chris Paul and surrounded him with young players.

This Bulls roster cannot match the star power the Thunder had in any of Donovan’s seasons in Oklahoma City. Even the most optimistic view of the Bulls would characteri­ze them as a team capable of competing for a playoff berth because of the lack of depth at the bottom of the Eastern Conference.

But the Bulls core of Zach LaVine, Coby White, Lauri Markkanen and Wendell Carter Jr. have all shown flashes of talent. Donovan seems better equipped to unlock their strengths than Jim Boylen, who attempted to mold players to fit his system rather than take advantage of their best traits. Pair that young talent with a couple of solid veterans in Otto Porter Jr. and Thaddeus Young and some better injury luck, and it’s easy to see why the Bulls have expressed growing optimism lately.

“You will see a quick turnaround in terms of the output that these players give,” general manager Marc Eversley said, “by going out and getting a Billy Donovan, who brings a different voice to the gym. He brings winning. He brings leadership. He brings player developmen­t.

“And if you put that voice at the top of this thing, I think our players will grow . ... This team is better than a 22-win team, the talent is. If we tweak it ... we’ll see some results that are positive.”

While Donovan’s coaching style might be in question, his ability to make adjustment­s based on his roster is not.

The Thunder never won fewer than 47 games during the regular season under Donovan but lost in the first round of the playoffs the last four years. And aside from finishing second in offensive rating with Durant, perhaps the best offensive player of his era, those teams had mostly middling offenses. The Thunder offense ranked 16th in 2020, 17th in 2019, seventh in 2018 and 16th in 2017.

But this season Donovan also took a Thunder roster few thought could fight for a playoff spot and created a three-guard lineup in Paul, Devin Schroder and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander that finished with the best net rating of any three-man combinatio­n in the NBA.

The Bulls should benefit from Donovan’s addition next season — and from the lessons he learned in Oklahoma City.

“The end result is how good of shots can you create on a nightly basis,” Donovan said. “Every player is not going to have the chance to do everything that they want to do. But how do you mesh all of those guys together to get the whole to be better than the sum of the parts as a team? That would be my philosophy going forward.”

 ?? ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH/AP ?? Billy Donovan, now the coach of the Bulls, guided Florida to back-to-back national championsh­ips more than a decade ago and spent five seasons with the Thunder.
ERIC CHRISTIAN SMITH/AP Billy Donovan, now the coach of the Bulls, guided Florida to back-to-back national championsh­ips more than a decade ago and spent five seasons with the Thunder.

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