Blazers sign coach Chauncey Billups to a multi-year extension
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Coach Chauncey Billups has signed a multi-year contract extension with the Portland Trail Blazers.
The Blazers did not release terms of the deal, announced before the regular-season finale against the Lakers on Sunday.
In his fourth year with the Blazers, Billups has guided the team to a 35-46 record this season. While Portland missed out on the postseason for the fourth straight year, the team performed better than expected with young stars like Scott Henderson, Shaedon Sharpe, Toumani Camara and Deni Avdija.
'I'm just so happy, with what we've done and where I think we can go,' Billups said. 'So much promise here. I'm pumped about it.'
Billups has helped the Blazers forge an identity, especially over the last 40 games when Portland had the league's third-best defensive rating. The second youngest team in the league went on a run in late January-early February when they won 10 of 11 games.
'The defensive improvement that we've seen, for us to be the third-best defense in the league in the second half of the season. That's meaningful and substantive,' said general manager Joe Cronin, who signed his own extension earlier this week. 'And that's what we've been trying to build. And that's a what we're going to point to moving forward, this is who we are.'
There were other teams reported to be interested in Billups, including the Phoenix Suns.
'The core of Chauncey's leadership is his ability to build a collaborative culture and growth mindset for our young team,' Blazers chair Jody Allen said in a statement. 'We're very happy to extend his contract as head coach, and excited to see his continued work developing our players and transforming this team into one capable of long-term success.'
Billups, 48, who had an NBA playing career that spanned 17 seasons, won a championship with Detroit in 2004 and was named the finals MVP. A five-time All-Star, he was inducted to the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame in October.
'I just feel very good about where we're at, and now I understand how long it takes to build a culture. I feel like we've done that,' Billups said. 'I think the tell tale of that, for any coaches, is if at some point when your team kind of takes on your personality and how you believe the game should be played, I think you've gotten there.'
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander reflects on emotional rise to Thunder cornerstone and NBA MVP
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's eyes darted around at the crowd, searching for where he'd begin his speech. There was no script folded into the many pockets embroidered onto his beige button down. Rows of white chairs faced his lectern like a ceremony meant for the White House lawn. Dozens more people were scattered around the Thunder's pair of practice courts, the backdrop for SGA's acceptance speech for being named NBA MVP. Advertisement To his right, Oklahoma City royalty. Clay Bennett, Sam Presti, Mark Daigneault. To his left, his family and team staffers. Within arm's reach were his teammates, dressed in shirts with SGA's face and latest feat printed upon them, their wrists blinging with the watches he'd gifted them Wednesday. Gilgeous-Alexander scanned over the faces that meant most to him. Then the words came to him. They revealed a side of him, even if briefly, never before seen to the public eye. You have to consider who this was for. This was for his teammates, he began, who directly impacted his candidacy. A player who averaged 30 points per game for three straight seasons, and yet this was the campaign he managed to help collect 68 wins. MVP TAKEAWAYS: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander gifts Rolex watches to OKC Thunder teammates after NBA MVP win Oklahoma City Thunder executive vice president and general manager Sam Presti smiles during a press conference in Oklahoma City announcing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander won the 2025 NBA MVP award on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. He picked up their dinner tabs, some perhaps as expensive as a Rolex. He stayed in the gym with them. The younger ones, like Dillon Jones, were fine lugging around Louis Vuitton bags for him. All he did was pour into Jones in return. Advertisement They gripped his shoulders when he emotionally plopped back into his seat, embracing him as he sat down for all of 10 seconds between the point he tapped out of his speech and when he realized he had questions to answer. 'You guys are really like my brothers, and I really mean that,' Gilgeous-Alexander told them, 'and without you guys, none of this would be possible, and I want you guys to know this award is your award, too.' This was for the organization that thought he was worth trading for. The night he first flew to OKC to complete his physicals, he got shots up. He looked around at Wilson basketballs perfectly fixed on the racks so that the logos faced him. The Gatorade, the towels, all lined like a Ritz-Carlton. He was fascinated. SGA considers himself obsessive about the details. When he learned that level of organization wasn't from a janitor with OCD but instead a franchise with it, he knew he belonged. Advertisement 'I understand the particularness in just making sure everything is right so all you have to do is worry about putting the ball in the hoop or boxing out or rebounding or getting a stop,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'That's what's allowed guys to come here and grow.' MUSSATTO: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander joins Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook in rare club This was for 'Shai Camp,' his crew of childhood best friends and trainers back in Hamilton who helped him work out in the summer. Peculiar — for the superstar to depend on these training methods, and for his friends to dedicate their early mornings to him — but fitting. His physical trainer, Nem Illic, grinned from the front row. His hoop trainer, Nate Mitchell, wasn't in attendance, but surely let his preaching about post-ups rest for one proud night. This was for his brother, a shade darker than Gilgeous-Alexander but who mirrors him just the same. His father, for starting this journey. His mother, who he called crazy, though he understands her ways all these years later. Advertisement 'I love the person that she turned me and my brother into,' he said. And then the tears flowed. Uncontrollably. He choked up at the mention of his wife, Hailey Summers, who held their son, Ares. He's branded composure. Packaging his swag in a way the league hasn't quite seen since Allen Iverson, torching teams as a scorer, flashing his thoughts through one-liners. But in this moment, he wasn't too cool. The nervous laughter had no power over his tears. His wide smile was a faulty mechanism. He felt joy and gratitude so strong that for the first time, his fans saw him cry. Gilgeous-Alexander wiped his face so firmly he took pores with it, leaving no tear behind. Advertisement This was for the family that reshaped his perspective, that matured him in ways basketball couldn't. 'Sorry, I'm so dramatic,' SGA said as he tried to fit words in. 'Hailey Summers, thank you for everything you are for me, for our son Ares. You were the first person to show me what love really meant, what sacrifice really meant. 'I wouldn't be the man I am, I wouldn't be the player I am, I wouldn't be the father I am without you, so thank you for that.' More: Jalen Williams touts OKC Thunder teammate Lu Dort for NBA All-Defensive team Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander hugs his wife, Hailey Summers, after a press conference in Oklahoma City announcing that won the 2025 NBA MVP award on Wednesday, May 21, 2025. He'd been asked on TNT's broadcast by Shaquille O'Neal if last year's MVP ballot stung him, a landslide of a loss to Nikola Jokic, who Gilgeous-Alexander bested with 71 first-place votes this time around. SGA cited the obvious, that it meant more people thought he was undeserving than not. Advertisement He wasn't asked again Wednesday. And while it wasn't his sole source of fuel this past season Gilgeous-Alexander quietly stored last year's results in his mind. Why not him, he wondered. When he heard Wednesday's news, SGA thought of each time he was turned away. Each time he was deemed undeserving. 'All the moments I got cut, traded, slighted, overlooked,' he said. 'I had nights where I thought I wasn't good at basketball, had nights where I thought I was the best player in the world before I was.' This was for him, too. The 26-year-old franchise player, eligible for the richest deal in NBA history. Who laughs at the title of 'free throw merchant,' who smiled wide at a Denver crowd that taunted him while down in the West semifinals. Advertisement Now, seven wins away from an NBA title, Gilgeous-Alexander is being asked what's left. 'The way I see it,' Gilgeous-Alexander said, 'everything is left. When I picked up a basketball when I was nine years old, playing AAU, I never sat there like, I want to be an All-Star, I want to be an MVP. I sat there like I want to win this tournament.' Gilgeous-Alexander can tap his nine-year-old self on the shoulder. He can pinch the version of him that was cut from junior varsity teams. Splash cold water on the version of him that arrived at Kentucky without a promise to start. The version of him that was told he was letting his NBA youth wither in Oklahoma City. Everything is on the table for the kid from Hamilton. Advertisement More: Converse, OKC pay tribute to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's NBA MVP award Joel Lorenzi covers the Thunder and NBA for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Joel? He can be reached at jlorenzi@ or on X/Twitter at @joelxlorenzi. Sign up for the Thunder Sports Minute newsletter to access more NBA coverage. Support Joel's work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: How Shai Gilgeous-Alexander rose to Thunder cornerstone, 2025 NBA MVP


San Francisco Chronicle
34 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
US Open champion JJ Spaun turned a freefall into a title at rain-soaked Oakmont
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Nobody backs their way into a U.S. Open title. J.J. Spaun wasn't about to be the first to say he did. On a day built for umbrellas, panchos and industrial-sized squeegees, Spaun reversed his own freefall, took advantage of several others' and hit two shots that turned him into a major champion while finally, mercifully, creating a moment to remember at the rain-soaked brute called Oakmont. 'I just tried to dig deep,' said the 34-year-old Californian who can now call himself a major champion. 'I've been doing it my whole life.' The shots that will go down in history are the drive he hit on the reachable par-4 17th and the 65-foot putt he sank with the sun going down and the rain falling on 18. The first set up a birdie that put him in the lead by himself for good. The second was for emphasis — he only needed a two-putt, after all — that ensured this U.S. Open would finish with one — and only one — player under par. The 65 footer, the longest of any putt made all tournament, closed out a back nine 32 and left Spaun at 1-under 279 for the tournament. His 72 was the highest closing-round score for a U.S. Open winner in 15 years. But that wasn't Sunday's takeaway. Rather, it was the 401.5 feet worth of putts the champion made over four days. And the fact that Spaun joined none other than Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Jon Rahm as the fifth U.S. Open winner to finish birdie-birdie. 'I just felt like you keep putting yourself in these positions, like eventually you're going to tick one off,' said Spaun, whose loss in a playoff to Rory McIlroy three months ago at The Players Championship was his third top-three finish of 2025. But at the U.S. Open? In that kind of weather? None of it seemed possible when the rain started coming down during the tail end of a front-nine 40 that took Spaun from one shot back at the start of the day to four behind and fading fast. Coaches told him, 'Dude, just chill,' and Spaun did A 1-hour, 37-minute rain delay ensued. It was a break that changed everything. 'They were just like, 'Dude, just chill,'' Spaun said of the pep talk he got from his coaches. They suggested that, if earlier in the week, he'd been told he could be four shots back with nine holes to play, he would have jumped at the chance. 'They just said, 'Just let it come to you, be calm. Stop trying so hard,'' Spaun said. Staying calm resulted in making a downhill 40 footer on the par-5 12th for birdie, then a 22-foot birdie on 14 to take the lead by himself for the first time, at even par. Everywhere else, meltdowns in the rain. Third-round leader Sam Burns thinned a shot out of a divot and over the 11th green en route to the first of two back-nine double bogeys. He shot 40 on the back and finished tied for seventh. Adam Scott, the only major champion in the top 10 after Saturday's play, shot 41 in the rain on the back nine and dropped to 12th. 'I didn't adapt to those conditions well enough,' Scott said. Tyrell Hatton, who shot 72, briefly threatened and was part of a brief five-way deadlock for the lead before making bogey on the last two holes to finish tied for fourth. Robert MacIntyre turned out to be Spaun's most persistent challenger. The left-hander from Scotland faded his drive just short of the green on the way to birdie on 17 to get to 1 over and set the target for Spaun, who was playing three groups behind. MacIntyre was waiting in the locker room when Spaun hit his approach on 18 to 65 feet. Everyone knew it was no sure two-putt. Hardly anyone expected Spaun to get down in one. 'To watch him hole the putt on 12 down the hill there was unreal,' said Viktor Hovland, who played in the twosome with Spaun. 'And then he makes another one on 14 that was straight down the hill. And then the one on 18, it's just absolutely filthy there.' A sick kid and 'chaos' ends with a trophy When they close the book on Spaun's victory at this rainy U.S. Open, maybe the most telling story will be about the way his Father's Day began. As much as the front-nine 40, it had to do with the 3 a.m. trip to the drug store for his daughter, Violet, who Spaun said was 'vomiting all over.' 'It was kind of a rough start to the morning,' he said. 'I'm not blaming that on my start, but it kind of fit the mold of what was going on, the chaos.' Then, through all the rain, and through all those bad lies and bad breaks, Spaun brought some order to it all with a drive and a putt that landed him with the silver trophy and gold medal that go to U.S. Open winners. 'We all sacrifice so much to be here, and to see it come to fruition, that's why we do it,' said Spaun's coach, Adam Schriber. 'It's for these moments.'


Fox Sports
an hour ago
- Fox Sports
US Open champion JJ Spaun turned a freefall into a title at rain-soaked Oakmont
Associated Press OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Nobody backs their way into a U.S. Open title. J.J. Spaun wasn't about to be the first to say he did. On a day built for umbrellas, panchos and industrial-sized squeegees, Spaun reversed his own freefall, took advantage of several others' and hit two shots that turned him into a major champion while finally, mercifully, creating a moment to remember at the rain-soaked brute called Oakmont. 'I just tried to dig deep,' said the 34-year-old Californian who can now call himself a major champion. 'I've been doing it my whole life.' The shots that will go down in history are the drive he hit on the reachable par-4 17th and the 65-foot putt he sank with the sun going down and the rain falling on 18. The first set up a birdie that put him in the lead by himself for good. The second was for emphasis — he only needed a two-putt, after all — that ensured this U.S. Open would finish with one — and only one — player under par. The 65 footer, the longest of any putt made all tournament, closed out a back nine 32 and left Spaun at 1-under 279 for the tournament. His 72 was the highest closing-round score for a U.S. Open winner in 15 years. But that wasn't Sunday's takeaway. Rather, it was the 401.5 feet worth of putts the champion made over four days. And the fact that Spaun joined none other than Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Jon Rahm as the fifth U.S. Open winner to finish birdie-birdie. 'I just felt like you keep putting yourself in these positions, like eventually you're going to tick one off,' said Spaun, whose loss in a playoff to Rory McIlroy three months ago at The Players Championship was his third top-three finish of 2025. But at the U.S. Open? In that kind of weather? None of it seemed possible when the rain started coming down during the tail end of a front-nine 40 that took Spaun from one shot back at the start of the day to four behind and fading fast. Coaches told him, 'Dude, just chill,' and Spaun did A 1-hour, 37-minute rain delay ensued. It was a break that changed everything. 'They were just like, 'Dude, just chill,'' Spaun said of the pep talk he got from his coaches. They suggested that, if earlier in the week, he'd been told he could be four shots back with nine holes to play, he would have jumped at the chance. 'They just said, 'Just let it come to you, be calm. Stop trying so hard,'' Spaun said. Staying calm resulted in making a downhill 40 footer on the par-5 12th for birdie, then a 22-foot birdie on 14 to take the lead by himself for the first time, at even par. Everywhere else, meltdowns in the rain. Third-round leader Sam Burns thinned a shot out of a divot and over the 11th green en route to the first of two back-nine double bogeys. He shot 40 on the back and finished tied for seventh. Adam Scott, the only major champion in the top 10 after Saturday's play, shot 41 in the rain on the back nine and dropped to 12th. 'I didn't adapt to those conditions well enough,' Scott said. Tyrell Hatton, who shot 72, briefly threatened and was part of a brief five-way deadlock for the lead before making bogey on the last two holes to finish tied for fourth. Robert MacIntyre turned out to be Spaun's most persistent challenger. The left-hander from Scotland faded his drive just short of the green on the way to birdie on 17 to get to 1 over and set the target for Spaun, who was playing three groups behind. MacIntyre was waiting in the locker room when Spaun hit his approach on 18 to 65 feet. Everyone knew it was no sure two-putt. Hardly anyone expected Spaun to get down in one. 'To watch him hole the putt on 12 down the hill there was unreal,' said Viktor Hovland, who played in the twosome with Spaun. 'And then he makes another one on 14 that was straight down the hill. And then the one on 18, it's just absolutely filthy there.' A sick kid and 'chaos' ends with a trophy When they close the book on Spaun's victory at this rainy U.S. Open, maybe the most telling story will be about the way his Father's Day began. As much as the front-nine 40, it had to do with the 3 a.m. trip to the drug store for his daughter, Violet, who Spaun said was 'vomiting all over.' 'It was kind of a rough start to the morning,' he said. 'I'm not blaming that on my start, but it kind of fit the mold of what was going on, the chaos.' Then, through all the rain, and through all those bad lies and bad breaks, Spaun brought some order to it all with a drive and a putt that landed him with the silver trophy and gold medal that go to U.S. Open winners. 'We all sacrifice so much to be here, and to see it come to fruition, that's why we do it,' said Spaun's coach, Adam Schriber. 'It's for these moments.' ___ AP golf: recommended