[新聞] Magic Dismiss Rob Hennigan as GM
http://www.nba.com/magic/news/magic-dismiss-rob-hennigan-general-manager
Magic Dismiss Rob Hennigan as General Manager
By John Denton
April 13, 2017
ORLANDO – When the Orlando Magic couldn’t change the fact that they are
mired in the worst five-year stretch in franchise history and couldn’t end
their longest playoff drought ever, major change within the organization was
inevitable.
Those changes came on Thursday when Magic CEO Alex Martins announced the
firings of General Manager Rob Hennigan and Assistant GM Scott Perry. Too
many misjudgments in the past five NBA Drafts, too many miscalculations on
trades and free-agent signings and too much coaching upheaval severely
damaged the Magic’s chances of making major strides in rebuilding. Those
shortcomings cost Hennigan and Perry jobs that they had held since 2012.
Assistant GM Matt Lloyd, a Magic employee for five years, will serve as the
franchise’s interim GM until a full-time successor is chosen. Lloyd, who
worked for the Chicago Bulls for 13 years prior to joining the Magic, is
expected to be a candidate for the long-term position.
``We appreciate Rob’s efforts to rebuild the team, but feel we have not made
any discernible improvement over the last few years specifically,’’ Martins
said. ``It’s time for different leadership in basketball operations. We
certainly wish Rob and his family well.
``Matt brings solid experience and his appointment as general manager on an
interim basis will allow us to seamlessly continue our preparations for the
upcoming draft,’’ Martins added.
The search for a new GM has already begun and Martins and the Magic
undoubtedly will be looking for a basketball operations leader with solid
communication and team-building skills. Whether that person will need prior
experience as a NBA GM or not is unknown, but there figures to be no shortage
of candidates. Undoubtedly, other elite GM candidates will look to land a
Magic job where a solid core of talent with Nikola Vucevic, Evan Fournier,
Aaron Gordon, Elfrid Payton, Bismack Biyombo, Terrence Ross and Mario Hezonja
is in place. Also, the Magic will have two first-round picks in the upcoming
June NBA Draft and approximately $25 million in salary-cap space with which
to use to re-stock the talent on the roster.
The dismissals of Hennigan and Perry come on the heels of a disappointing
29-53 season – one where the Magic fully expected to contend for a playoff
spot after a flurry of trades and free-agent signings last July. Instead, the
Magic’s bevy of new players never meshed under first-year head coach Frank
Vogel and the team finished last in the Southeast Division for a fifth
consecutive season.
The Magic were left with no choice but to make a move on Hennigan and Perry –
the two men charged with rebuilding the Magic into winners following the
crippling defection of franchise center Dwight Howard in 2012 – after seeing
their last five teams struggle mightily. Orlando has posted a 132-278 record
(a .322 winning percentage) since 2012. That’s the second-worst mark in the
NBA over the last five seasons with only the Philadelphia 76ers being worse
at 109-301 (.266 winning percentage).
Orlando’s last playoff berth came in 2012 – weeks before Hennigan was hired
as GM and Perry was brought aboard as Assistant GM. The five-year playoff
drought is a first in the 28-season history of the franchise.
``It was a very tough year and we didn’t deliver,’’ said center Nikola
Vucevic, one of the first players acquired by Hennigan in August of 2012 and
the longest-tenured player on the Magic. ``We didn’t meet the expectations
that we had and it shows.’’
It also didn’t help Hennigan’s case that other down-on-their-luck
franchises rebuilt their rosters and got back to the playoffs before the
Magic could.
Boston hired head coach Brad Stevens in 2013 and over the four past seasons
the Celtics have increased their win total from 25 to 40 to 48 to 53
victories, making the playoffs each of the past three years. Portland hired
coach Terry Stotts in 2012 and it has been in the playoffs each of the last
four seasons. Utah, which bottomed out with 25 wins in 2013-14, capitalized
on several big scores in the NBA Draft and is headed to the playoffs after
locking up the Northwest Division crown this season. Finally, Milwaukee,
winners of just 15 games in 2013-14, is bound for the postseason for a second
time in three seasons under head coach Jason Kidd.
Hennigan, who broke into the NBA as a scout and a rising executive with San
Antonio and later Oklahoma City, hoped to repeat the lottery luck that helped
the Magic land superstars Shaquille O’Neal, Penny Hardaway and Howard in
previous years. However, bad ping-pong ball luck certainly played a role in
the front office’s lack of success in culling superstar-level talent out of
the past five drafts. The Magic fell to fourth in 2014 (and missed out on
Andrew Wiggins, Jabari Parker and Joel Embiid) and remained stuck at fifth in
2015 (and missed out on Karl-Anthony Towns, D’Angelo Russell, Jahlil Okafor
and Kristaps Porzingis).
Players that Hennigan and his staff drafted or traded for – (19th pick)
Andrew Nicholson and (50th pick) Kyle O’Quinn in 2012; (second pick) Victor
Oladipo and (51st pick) Romero Osby in 2013; (fourth pick) Aaron Gordon,
(10th pick) Elfrid Payton and (56th pick) Devyn Marble in 2014; (fifth pick)
Mario Hezonja and (51st pick) Tyler Harvey in 2015; and (41st pick) Stephen
Zimmerman in 2016 – either didn’t pan out or have yet to fully blossom into
the kind of transformational players needed by struggling teams. Gordon,
Payton, Hezonja and Zimmerman are the only Magic-drafted players still on the
roster.
Misses on under-the-radar talents in 2012 (Draymond Green, Jae Crowder, Evan
Fournier and Khris Middleton), 2013 (Giannis Antetokounmpo, Rudy Gobert, C.J.
McCollum and Steven Adams), 2014 (Nikola Jokic, Dario Saric and Zach LaVine)
and 2015 (Myles Turner and Devin Booker) proved costly in the Magic’s
ability to stockpile talent throughout their roster. To be fair, several
other teams also misjudged those players, but those whiffs become more
punitive when there’s a dearth of difference-making talent, such as with the
Magic.
``You need some luck and you need some moves to hit,’’ Vogel said of the
difficulty of rebuilding in today’s NBA. ``Sometimes you make the right move
and it doesn’t work out for whatever reason. It’s difficult to create that
culture that you want, but your moves have got to hit. You’ve got to hit on
some lottery picks and some free-agent acquisitions and hit on some trades. It
’s difficult to make all of that happen, but it’s a challenge we’re
embracing (going forward).’’
Churning through four head coaches in the past five years certainly didn’t
help the Magic’s continuity, either. Hennigan’s first hire, Jacque Vaughn,
was 58-158 in 2½ seasons as head coach. Interim James Borrego was not
retained at the end of the 2015 season, while Scott Skiles lasted just one
season (2015-16) after clashes over personnel. Hennigan acted quickly last
May to hire Vogel, who was considered the best coach on the market following
his highly successful 5 ½-year run with the Indiana Pacers. This season,
however, has tested Vogel’s mettle because of Orlando’s many struggles.
``I liked the team coming in and I thought we had a good chance, but some
things didn’t work out that we’ll have to try and fix and do differently
going forward,’’ Vogel said on Wednesday prior to Orlando’s season-ending
defeat of the Detroit Pistons. ``Gradually we were failing, but we tried our
best all the way through. Mathematically we were still alive and we were
still trying to compete. We were still trying to build something in terms of
a winning culture. There are obviously a lot of reasons why it didn’t work
out this year, but I don’t want to get into them all right now. I’m going
to take some time away and evaluate the totality of it.’’
Hennigan will most be remembered as the GM who granted the trade request of
the disgruntled Howard, dealing him to the Lakers in a four-team, 12-player
transaction in August of 2012. However, it was other transactions that
ultimately did more long-term damage to the Magic.
Orlando surrendered shooting standouts and fan favorites Ryan Anderson and
J.J. Redick in 2012 and ’13 for little in return. The same thing occurred
with Tobias Harris and Channing Frye midway through the 2015-16 season, and
the Magic have little left to show for those transactions.
More recently, Hennigan made the controversial call on going big with the
personnel – even as the rest of the league was trending toward smaller,
faster talent. Hennigan traded Oladipo, Ersan Ilyasovsa and rookie Domantas
Sabonis for OKC’s Serge Ibaka on draft night even though the power forward
was set to become a free agent in July and his statistical effectiveness had
been slipping for the previous three seasons.
Free agent Bismack Biyombo to a lucrative, four-year deal even though the
center has had just one highly productive season in the NBA.
The additions of Ibaka and Biyombo not only created a logjam with Vucevic,
but that overemphasis on size made Orlando’s offense slow and its defense
ill-prepared to stop foes that rely heavily on 3-point shooting.
Ibaka was traded to Toronto on Feb. 14 for reserve shooting guard Ross, whose
shooting has allowed the Magic to shift to a more modern style of
perimeter-based play. The Magic won seven games after getting Ross into the
lineup, but that was far too little to help the Magic salvage the season and
get back in playoff contention.
The departures of Hennigan and Perry show that the Magic could be about to
undergo another major roster overhaul in hopes of getting back in the playoff
mix by next season. Whoever the new GM is, several changes in the way that
the Magic roster is constructed could occur. That’s something that wasn’t
lost on Fournier as the final days of another disappointing regular season
wound down.
``I’m fully aware that (Wednesday’s finale) might be my last game with the
Magic because you never know what can happen,’’ said Fournier, whose career
has blossomed in his three seasons in Orlando. ``When you lose, that’s
really when things shake up and teams make a lot of changes. So, yeah,
everyone is fully aware (that changes could come).
``I’m not the type of guy who is concerned by that sort of thing,’’
Fournier added. ``At the end of the day, my job is to get better and play
basketball and I can’t control those (roster changes). To be honest, I don’
t even want to think about it because it’s just a waste of time and a waste
of energy. Again, you can’t control it, so why focus on it?’’
Note: The contents of this page have not been reviewed or endorsed by the
Orlando Magic. All opinions expressed by John Denton are solely his own and
do not reflect the opinions of the Orlando Magic or their Basketball
Operations staff, partners or sponsors.
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還是貼個原文新聞來好了
掰掰 Rob Hennigan
--
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