The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Clippers promote Redden to general manager position

- Staff, news services

Trent Redden has been promoted to general manager of the Clippers, the team announced Monday, elevating him from the position he has held since 2017 when Lawrence Frank, president of basketball operations, hired him.

He replaces Michael Winger, who left to take the job as the Washington Wizards’ president of Monumental Basketball.

The Clippers also moved Mark Hughes to the role of senior vice president/assistant general manager.

“For the past six years, Trent and Mark have been trusted evaluators, dependable leaders, and for me, close confidante­s. Today, we’re thrilled to reward them,” Frank said.

“A lot of executives have background­s in strategy or evaluation. Trent brings expertise and agility in both.”

Redden previously worked with the Cleveland Cavaliers for 11 seasons winning a title as assistant general manager in 2106 when Tyronn Lue was coach.

With the Clippers, Redden has developed a reputation for his talent as an evaluator and as a leader, while Hughes has handled much of the scouting responsibi­lities.

— Janis Carr BUCKS MAKE HIRING OF GRIFFIN OFFICIAL >> Adrian Griffin is getting his first head coaching job at the same place where he started out as an assistant.

The Milwaukee Bucks officially announced Monday they have hired Griffin to replace Mike Budenholze­r, who was fired last month after a first-round playoff loss to the Miami Heat. Reports surfaced on April 29 that the Bucks were finalizing an agreement to make Griffin their next coach.

An introducto­ry news conference is scheduled for today.

Griffin has spent the last five seasons as a Toronto Raptors assistant on a staff headed by Nick Nurse, who was fired after the season and has since been hired as the Philadelph­ia 76ers’ head coach. Griffin’s coaching career began during a stint as a Bucks assistant on Scott Skiles’ staff from 2008-10.

“The Bucks are a championsh­ip organizati­on and I’m thrilled to work with an establishe­d roster of highcharac­ter and talented players,” Griffin said in a statement released by the team. “I’m excited to be back in Milwaukee and I can’t wait to get started.”

The 48-year-old Griffin began his first Milwaukee coaching stint after ending a nine-year NBA playing career that included stops with the Boston Celtics, Dallas Mavericks, Houston Rockets. Chicago Bulls and Seattle Supersonic­s.

He also was an assistant with the Chicago Bulls (201015), Orlando Magic (2015-16) and Oklahoma City Thunder (2016-18) before joining Toronto’s staff.

“Adrian is a widely-respected coach and former player, who brings great leadership and experience to our team,” Bucks general manager Jon Horst said in a statement. “His championsh­ip-level coaching pedigree, character, basketball acumen and ability to connect with and develop players make him the ideal choice to lead our team. He has earned this opportunit­y.”

Griffin faces the challenge of replacing a coach who led the Bucks to their first title in half a century.

Budenholze­r coached the Bucks to a league-best 271-120 regular-season record in his five seasons and coached the 2020-21 Bucks to an NBA championsh­ip, their first since 1971.

The Bucks made the coaching change because their postseason fortunes hadn’t matched their regular-season success for most of Budenholze­r’s tenure.

Milwaukee had the NBA’S best regular-season record three of Budenholze­r’s five seasons but didn’t make it beyond the Eastern Conference finals in any of those three years.

The Bucks blew a 2-0 lead and lost 4-2 in the 2019 Eastern Conference finals to the eventual NBA champion Raptors during Griffin’s first season in Toronto. The Bucks fell 4-1 to Miami in the second round of the 2020 playoffs in the Walt Disney World postseason bubble.

This year, the Bucks lost 4-1 to Miami in the first round after going 58-24 in the regular season.

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