Plaschke: Lakers and JJ Redick are a match made in Looney Tunes
Former Magic guard JJ Redick, right, and official Gediminas Petraitis greet each other on the court during a game in Orlando. (Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press)
JJ Redick?
Seriously?
The Los Angeles LeBrons appear to be closing in on the landmark hire of a bench boss who possesses but one legitimate qualification.
JJ Redick could be the next Lakers head coach because he has a podcast with LeBron James.
Period. End of resume.
Redick has never been a coach at any level above elementary school. Heās never been a head coach or assistant coach or college coach or even a high school coach.
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Heās never overseen a practice. Heās never worked the sidelines. Heās never had that responsibility. Heās never dealt with that pressure.
Iāve coached or assisted in as many NBA games as JJ Redick, and heās going to run the Lakers?
Seriously?
This would not only be one of the oddest Lakers coaching hires in a long list of them ā remember that glorious moment when Pat Riley and Jerry West both coached the team? ā but it might also be the first talk-show driven head coaching hire in NBA history.
Redick would be hired simply because he is Jamesā wingman. He would be named head honcho simply because he is a great co-host.
The Lakers would be morphing from basketball team to buddy movie.
Their expected choice of Redick ā virtually every expert considers him the heavy favorite ā makes less sense with every syllable.
Granted, the recently debuted podcast, āMind the Game,ā is great, bordering on brilliant. Itās a master class in basketball strategy, filled with inside hoops chatter that reveals a deep respect between its two talking heads.
Former NBA guard JJ Redick, center, and his wife, Chelsea Kilgore, watch from courtside seats during a game in Orlando. (Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press)
James likes chopping up strategy with Redick. James clearly thinks like Redick. They are so connected, itās not difficult to imagine James believing he could essentially be a co-coach with Redick.
The Lakers certainly seem to be imagining it.
Which apparently could make it a reality.
Itās an awe-inspiring thing, really, watching the NBAās greatest franchise continually roll over to placate its best player, even though James is probably in the final two years of his career, even though heās aging and prone to injury, even to the point of hiring a coach who has no business sitting at the front of the bench.
That space was once occupied by two coaches who led the Lakers to five titles each. It was more recently inhabited by a coach who led the Lakers to their latest title.
And here comes Redick, who has never played for an NBA or college champion. In 13 professional seasons, his teams made the Finals once, the conference finals twice and he was part of that Clippers bunch that blew a three-games-to-one lead against Houston in that historic series in 2015.
Iāve won as many titles as JJ Redick, yet heās going to lead the franchise with one of the greatest winning traditions in sports?
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Of course, if recent Lakers history is any indication, heāll be little more than a co-leader. Heās going to follow Jamesā directions for two years until the King hangs up his crown, at which point Redick could be gone too.
Just ask Byron Scott.
So , in reality, the Redick hire might not mean much because the Lakers canāt do much until James leaves. Theyāre not going to win in the next two years, anyway, so what does it matter who serves as the sacrificial coach?
Well, this coach would still be the face and voice of one of the most popular brands in sports, so it does matter. It matters more than just picking out a Facebook friend. It matters for history and legacy and all the tradition the Lakers hope will shadow their annual struggles to make the play-in tournament.
To be fair, Redick doesnāt come completely unarmed. Heās smart. Really smart. Eight years ago, he became the first NBA player to host a podcast during the regular season, and heās currently sharp and insightful as an ESPN analyst
In fact, strictly judging from his current pod, Redick sounds as if heād be the perfect coach, and the exact opposite of poor Darvin Ham, a nice figure who was dogged by his inability to make adjustments.
Yet on the pod, Redick is talking to only one man, and there are bottles of wine between them. What happens when he has to share this knowledge with a dozen men, and nothing between them but a white board and three minutes?
Then, what happens when this great basketball brain clashes with the suspicions of players who wonder whoās actually doing the talking?
JJ Redick takes a shot over Lakers guard Talen Horton-Tucker during a game when he played with the Mavericks in 2021. (Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)
Udonis Haslem, a league stalwart who spent 20 seasons with the Miami Heat and is currently in their front office, asked that same question on ESPN.
āIām gonna go ahead and say it ā if itās JJ, itās gonna be a cynical locker room,ā Haslem said. āYouāre going to see guys that are gonna say, āIs coach going to do a podcast after the game with LeBron?ā Youāre gonna have a cynical locker room of guys that are gonna side-eye everything JJ says. Cause theyāre gonna wonder, āIs it JJās message? Or is it LeBronās message?’ā
The guess here is that Jamesā current message to the Lakers is clear.
Hire JJ or risk losing him this summer when he opts out of his contract. Hire JJ and heāll retire as a Laker. Hire JJ, period.
It would look different if James were any good at evaluating coaches. Heās not. This will be his third coaching change in seven Lakers seasons, LeBron turning on them as quickly as he endorses them.
A coach who won an NBA title was canned. A coach who led the team to the conference finals was booted.
Remember back when James tried to get Erik Spoelstra fired from Miami before Spoelstra became one of the best coaches in the NBA?
At that time, Pat Riley proved to be the first executive in the NBA to stand up to James. He is still the only one.
Yet itās not too late for Rob Pelinka, who needs to realize that if James retires without winning another championship, then the blame will shift to Pelinka.
This is the perfect time for him to stand up to James and say no.
No, to a coach who has never coached. No, to a coach who will serve as a caddie.
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In saying no, Pelinka finally will be calling Jamesā bluff.
Would he really leave his Los Angeles home to spend two more seasons starting over elsewhere? No way.
Would he really walk away from his business interests because they didnāt hire his buddy? Forget it.
It will be the upset of the year if James doesnāt finish his career as a Laker, and Pelinka needs to worry more about what comes next.
Find a coach not for the end of the LeBron James era, but for the meat of the Anthony Davis era.
Find an experienced assistant with rings and respect. Find somebody strong enough to wrest control of the organization from a superstar who has become a stop sign.
That somebody is out there, his name is Tyronn Lue, but Steve Ballmer is no dummy. So find the next Lue. And find him without checking with James.
It’s easier said than done, and probably not going to happen.
Thereās a better chance of them drafting Bronny James in the first round and assigning him to coach the team.
Wait. Thatās a joke. Right?
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.