The Cavaliers brought in Michigan coach John Beilein to install his motion offense, to develop young players, and to build a culture that could win big in Cleveland.
None of that happened. The Cavaliers are 14-40, they have the worst net rating in the league and are bottom seven in both offense and defense, their young talent — players such as Collin Sexton and Darius Garland — are not developing, the Cavs’ players have clashed with Beilein and each other, and the team abandoned Beilein’s motion offense less than a month into the season. It’s been rough.
Now he’s going to walk away, reports Shams Charania of The Athletic.
Sources: Cavaliers, John Beilein in advanced talks about parting ways by Wednesday — and Beilein walking away from remainder of his contract.
Story with @ByJasonLloyd on @TheAthleticNBA: https://t.co/P3jYz5RGrt
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) February 18, 2020
The Cavaliers return to practice Wednesday and J.B. Bickerstaff — a former NBA head coach in Houston and Memphis, and the lead assistant on Beilein’s staff — will take over as head coach. Reports suggest that Bickerstaff will not have an “interim” title — he is going to be the head coach going forward, and into next season.
Bickerstaff would be the fourth Cavaliers coach in less than two seasons since LeBron James left the organization.
Beilein struggled to adapt to the NBA coaching style — the lack of practices, the losing, the fact that good NBA players have more organizational power than the coach, and that he couldn’t treat NBA players the way he did his college players. He was unable to relate to players, and his relationship with them became an issue when he reportedly said they were “no longer playing like thugs” during a film session. Those NBA players were not giving a college coach the benefit of the doubt, he had to prove himself to them. He didn’t. At age 67, Beilein wasn’t able to adapt to the NBA.
He was in the first year of a five-year contract worth more than $4 million a season (the last year of that was a team option). Beilein is unhappy enough to leave an estimated $12 million guaranteed on the table to walk away. He could return to college coaching as soon as next season if he wanted, there would be a long line of universities interested.
Hiring Beilein is a big miss for GM Koby Altman (the first GM that owner Dan Gilbert gave a second contract to; Gilbert pushed good GMs like David Griffen out the door). The revolving door of coaches is not the sign of a strong and stable organization. The Cavaliers need to develop a culture and they need a new coach who can deliver that. A lot falls on Bickerstaff now.