Jason Kidd appears to be on his way out of Brooklyn, after a stunning failed power play to gain more control within the organization.
Kidd apparently came hard at management for a more executive role, one that would include player personnel decision-making responsibilities. He had already lined up a similar opportunity with the Bucks, it seems, thanks to a past personal and financial relationship with one of the team’s new owners.
But Nets ownership wasn’t feeling it, and were so taken aback by this turn of events that they reportedly have already decided that Kidd won’t be coming back.
From Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports:
Kidd made a failed coup to Brooklyn’s Russian ownership to usurp the power of Nets general manager Billy King – and failed spectacularly. The Nets and Bucks are discussing compensation for Milwaukee hiring Kidd away, which will likely include second-round draft picks, sources told Yahoo Sports.
“The Russians are done with Kidd,” one high-ranking league source told Yahoo Sports on Saturday night. …
Kidd isn’t angling to immediately take over as president and coach, sources said, but is intrigued with the higher-paying, lower-workload life of an executive, sources said.
There’s plenty more in that report, including details on Kidd’s many missteps in his personal and professional life. Most recently, Kidd was suspended for his first two games as Nets head coach for a DWI guilty plea, and begged the front office to make Lawrence Frank an extremely well-paid assistant coach with a six-year, $7 million deal, only to have Kidd banish him less than six weeks into the regular season.
Kidd was also reportedly annoyed that Steve Kerr and Derek Fisher received higher-dollar deals this summer to similarly coach without any prior experience, which (if true) would be completely ego-driven, considering he has over $187 million in career earnings as a player, without including any money received from endorsements.
The executive life may be what Kidd is ultimately seeking, but he’ll find out quickly that it won’t be easy in Milwaukee. Free agents historically haven’t come willingly to that market, and no matter how enthusiastic the new ownership group may be, you’ll never see the Bucks match the $190 million payroll and luxury tax bill that the Nets billionaire owner signed off on last season.