Pistons Reportedly Set to Turn to Bickerstaff as New Coach

Pistons Reportedly Set to Turn to Bickerstaff as New Coach
Cleveland Cavaliers Coach J.B. Bickerstaff shouts at his team during Game 6 of an NBA playoff series against the Orlando Magic in Orlando, Fla., on May 3, 2024. (John Raoux/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
6/30/2024
Updated:
6/30/2024
0:00

DETROIT—The Detroit Pistons have agreed to a four-year contract with Coach J.B. Bickerstaff, with a team option for a fifth season, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement had not been announced.

The Cleveland Cavaliers fired Bickerstaff in May after they lost to Boston in the Eastern Conference semifinals despite the team having won 99 games over two seasons.

The Pistons fired Coach Monty Williams one season into a six-year, $78.5 million contract after they had the NBA’s worst record for a second straight year. They also fired General Manager Troy Weaver after they won just 23 percent of their games in his four seasons.

Trajan Langdon, Detroit’s president of basketball operations, has been busy trying to turn around a three-time NBA championship-winning franchise that has fallen on hard times.

The 45-year-old Bickerstaff, who twice finished among the top five in NBA Coach of the Year voting, was 170–159 in four-plus seasons in Cleveland. He had six victories in the playoffs. He took over when John Beilein, a former University of Michigan coach, walked away from the Cavs during the 2019–20 season.

Bickerstaff also was promoted to replace fired coaches in Houston and Memphis, going 37–34 with the Rockets in the 2015–16 season, and winning 48 games with the Grizzlies during most of the 2017–18 and all of the following season.

Bickerstaff’s father, Bernie, won 419 NBA games with Seattle, Denver, Washington, Charlotte, and the Los Angeles Clippers.

The Pistons went into free agency with $50 million in salary-cap space, desperately looking for an influx in talent to play with 2021 No. 1 overall pick Cade Cunningham.

Langdon has begun to reshape the roster by declining a $19 million option for Evan Fournier, extending a qualifying offer to Simone Fontecchio, and acquiring Tim Hardaway Jr. from Dallas in a trade. He drafted Ron Holland of the G League Ignite with the fifth overall pick on Wednesday.

The Pistons haven’t won a playoff game since 2008, when they appeared in the Eastern Conference finals for the sixth straight year.

By Larry Lage