[TimesPicayune] MOVING AHEAD
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MOVING AHEAD
Shinn on a mission to see Hornets ascend to the next level
Saturday, May 08, 2004
John DeShazier
Forget the impression you may have formed of Hornets majority
owner George Shinn a year ago, when he fired Paul Silas and
disappeared for a month rather than answer questions and
address the fallout head-on.
That man no longer exists.
Friday wasn't an occasion to celebrate Tim Floyd's demise after
one season as head coach of the Hornets. The hope was that the
Hornets would be successful on his watch. But it was an
opportunity to see the best of Shinn, who, via the dismissal of
Floyd following a 41-41 regular season and first-round playoff
exit, admitted the franchise made an error, corrected it and
vowed that a lesson has been learned.
"We hired a coach that we thought could help us make a run to the
next level and we weren't successful," Shinn said, reading from a
prepared statement, refusing to point a critical finger at Floyd.
"We've just got to get better," he said later. "I don't feel like
we did."
And, later, more: "Most of you guys have followed our games, you
know things went wrong."
Not as wrong as they could've gone, but wrong enough, for sure.
"Tim Floyd is a good person," Shinn said. "He is a wonderful human
being. This is tough to have to do something like this. It's
something we didn't want to do."
But it's something that had to be done if the Hornets want to be
taken seriously by a fan base that shrunk last season and a league
that ridiculed the hiring.
And now the Hornets move onward and, hopefully, upward, behind a new
coach and general manager (they need one of those, too, after Bob
Bass retired Wednesday) who have an idea what it takes to be
successful on the NBA level and won't be dismissed by players as
novelty acts.
"We're looking for someone that's capable, that's succeeded in the
NBA (before), that's going to carry us to the next level," Shinn said
of his desires in a coach.
Byron Scott, who led the Nets to the past two Eastern Conference
championships before being fired during this season, comes to mind.
So does Lakers assistant Jim Cleamons, who has sat on the bench next
to Phil Jackson for four titles in Chicago and three in Los Angeles.
Mike Fratello, who led the Hawks to the Eastern Conference semifinals
in 1986 and '87, is available if the Hornets want to do the
coach-turned-television-analyst-returns-to-coaching thing, a la Hubie
Brown and the Grizzlies.
Portland gave Coach Maurice Cheeks permission to talk to the 76ers.
Maybe the Trail Blazers won't mind if Cheeks -- a former point guard
who won an NBA title with the Sixers in 1983 -- talks to the Hornets,
too. And Rudy Tomjanovich, who led the Rockets to back-to-back titles
in 1994 and '95, might be rested and ready to return to the league
after a year away.
Shinn said he already has a preliminary list, but Bass will be
instrumental in making the coaching decision. But the search shouldn't
stretch too long or qualified candidates will be hired by other teams.
And certainly, it shouldn't parallel last year's search, when Houston
snagged Jeff Van Gundy and his NBA Finals experience, Indiana pounced
on Rick Carlisle and his consecutive 50-win seasons and the Hornets
plucked Floyd, who then had the worst winning percentage in NBA history.
"We all learn through experiences, and we've learned," Shinn said.
Friday, you got the genuine impression that he had. And that's a very,
very good thing.
. . . . . . .
John DeShazier can be reached at jdeshazier@timespicayune.com or
(504) 826-3410.
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