The Boston Globe

Assistant coach Lee hired away by Hornets

- By Adam Himmelsbac­h and Khari Thompson Adam Himmelsbac­h can be reached at adam.himmelsbac­h@globe.com. Follow him @adamhimmel­sbach. Khari Thompson can be reached at khari.thompson@globe.com.

celtics assistant coach charles lee was named head coach of the charlotte Hornets Thursday morning. He is expected to remain with the celtics for the rest of their playoff run before beginning his new role.

“The opportunit­y to be the head coach of the charlotte Hornets is a dream come true,” Lee said in a statement. “The Hornets have a talented young core of players and I’m excited about our future and what we can build here. There are few places as passionate about basketball as the carolinas, and I look forward to coming to charlotte and getting to work.”

Lee, 39, was a finalist for head coaching jobs with the Pistons and Lakers last summer before being hired as coach Joe Mazzulla’s top assistant in boston.

He previously had stints as an assistant with the Hawks and bucks, and helped milwaukee to the NbA title in 2021.

In boston, Lee helped build the celtics’ second-ranked defense. Point guard Jrue Holiday played for Lee with the bucks and worked closely with him after being acquired in a trade last fall.

“charles has always been the type to be very teacher-esque,” Holiday said earlier this year. “If I have any questions or anything like that, I could always go to him.

“but he’s always quizzing me on plays, he’s quizzing me on schemes, what we want to do defensivel­y. Literally just walks up to me and asks me a question about something, and I have to answer. so always just keeping my mind going, my mind engaged.”

mazzulla said Lee being hired as a head coach was “long overdue.”

mazzulla, considerin­g he just took over as celtics coach at the beginning of last season, was asked if he had any advice for Lee. mazzulla shook his head and said, “Everybody hates you, get used to it. You’re no longer the shiny new toy.”

Lee’s experience, relationsh­ip with Holiday, and positive attitude made him a welcome addition to the celtics’ staff this season, mazzulla said.

It was announced in April that Hornets coach steve clifford would step down at season’s end and take a role in the team’s front office.

celtics assistant general manager Austin Ainge was a finalist for charlotte’s general manager opening in february, but the team ultimately hired Nets assistant general manager Jeff Peterson.

mazzulla said the goal when an assistant leaves is typically to hire from within.

“That’s why you have the structure that you have and have the staff that you have,” mazzulla said. “All of our guys have done a great job and that’s kind of the first goal, is retention. And then we’ll kind of go from there.”

Hot, then not

Derrick White had been on a tear, entering Thursday night’s Game 2 against the cavaliers shooting 57.5 percent from the field and 50 percent from 3-point range during the playoffs.

He was the celtics’ No. 2 scorer through six postseason games, trailing Jaylen brown.

Like his teammates, however, White went cold in Thursday’s loss, going just 3 for 11 from the field, 1 for 8 on 3-pointers, and finishing with 10 points.

cavaliers coach J.b. bickerstaf­f said he’s seeing a newfound confidence in White that has led to a hot streak.

“That’s the thing when you watch NbA players,” bickerstaf­f said before the game. “A lot of them are similarly talented, but the belief in themselves and the security in themselves, as that grows that changes people.

“You look through the league, and sometimes it goes up, sometimes it goes down, but you see him playing with supreme confidence right now. some of the shots that he’s taking and making, you wouldn’t recommend that people take. He’s taking them with belief and confidence and knocking them down.”

White’s impact on the game had gone beyond his shooting. He was also second on the team in assist-to-turnover ratio (3.5) and fourth in blocks per game (0.8).

“Just watching this team as a whole,” bickerstaf­f said. “Winning is such a priority that he’s just doing whatever he can to help this team win and he knows being this much of a threat frees up everybody around him.”

Double trouble

cleveland’s evan Mobley had a double-double of 21 points and 10 rebounds. The cavaliers outscored the celtics, 60-44, in the paint, with 16 of those points coming from mobley.

“I feel like last game in the second half I caught a flow and started seeing how they were guarding me and where I could score from,” mobley said. “I watched the film a little bit and came out here and tried to do the same thing, attack those spots, get to my spots and elevate.”

 ?? BArrY cHIN/GLObE sTAff ?? Donovan Mitchell (29 points) was posing — to the concern of the players on the Celtics’ bench — after his 3-pointer gave the Cavaliers a 70-63 lead in the third quarter of Game 2.
BArrY cHIN/GLObE sTAff Donovan Mitchell (29 points) was posing — to the concern of the players on the Celtics’ bench — after his 3-pointer gave the Cavaliers a 70-63 lead in the third quarter of Game 2.
 ?? BArrY cHIN/GLObE sTAff ?? Charles Lee called the chance to coach the Hornets a dream come true.
BArrY cHIN/GLObE sTAff Charles Lee called the chance to coach the Hornets a dream come true.

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