An NBA First: Every Coach Who Started Last Season Is Back

By TIM REYNOLDS, AP Basketball Writer

MIAMI (AP) — Dozens of NBA players found new homes this offseason. A few front offices dealt with hirings and firings. There's a new arena in Detroit and an ownership change looms in Houston. The league's logo was even tweaked.

Change was everywhere.

That is, except the coaches' offices.

Here's a first for the NBA: Every coach is back. From the start of last season to the start of this season — barring something happening in training camps, anyway — not a single NBA team has changed coaches. That's an unprecedented run of retention and an obvious source of pride for coaches across the league as the first practices of the season get set to occur this weekend.

"I think what people are seeing is what this league needs, what these players need more than anything, is stability and a consistent message," said Miami coach Erik Spoelstra, who's going into his 10th season. "Otherwise we're just losing ground if you have to start all over every year. That's a tough way to win in this business. That's a tough way to build any sort of culture or consistency."

No one is starting over in the next few days, at least in the sense that a new staff is taking over a team.

Last season was the first since 1963-64 — and only the fourth in league history — where there were no in-season changes. The league was much smaller back then as well, with only nine coaches having to keep their bosses happy.

It's a 30-team league now, and a year ago at this time 10 of those clubs had a new coach.

"From top to bottom, we have a very high quality level of coaching," said Dallas coach Rick Carlisle, the president of the National Basketball Coaches Association.

"This is as stable as our profession has been in decades. Contracts are strong, the league is constructed in a way now where coaching is extremely important and ownership understands the importance of the coaching process."

There hasn't been a coaching hire since Jeff Hornacek was formally announced by the New York Knicks on June 2, 2016 — which might not sound that long ago, but in a field without any real job security that's an eternity. So when coaches gathered last week for their annual preseason meeting, they celebrated the fact that there were no new faces in the room.

"We've talked about the importance of supporting one another — and at the same time, the need to try to beat each others' brains in," Carlisle said. "It's a conflicting sort of concept from afar, but internally we are the only ones that know all the challenges that head coaches in the NBA face. And because of that, there's a real healthy respect for one another."

Summer vacations are ending now. Coaches will all be grabbing their whistles in the next few days, starting with Golden State's Steve Kerr and Minnesota's Tom Thibodeau on Saturday when the Warriors and Timberwolves open training camp — those teams can start early because they're going to China in the preseason.

The other 28 teams start practice on Tuesday.

"In team-building and pro sports, a lot of times the methodical long game is what's necessary," said Spoelstra, the second-longest-tenured coach in the league behind San Antonio's Gregg Popovich. "But you're seeing less and less of that. That's why last year was such a pleasant surprise. I think it really was a celebration of stability and an acknowledgment of how complex this position can be."
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