Rick Pitino doesn't want to replace Tom Thibodeau as the next Knicks head coach: 'Absolutely not'
Rick Pitino won't be returning to the New York Knicks.
'Absolutely not,' he said Wednesday night during the New York Yankees' matchup with the Cleveland Guardians, where he threw out the first pitch.
While there are a number of reasons why he might be a great fit, Pitino is now officially out of the running.
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The Knicks fired coach Tom Thibodeau on Tuesday after five seasons with the franchise. Thibodeau was fresh off a trip to the Eastern Conference finals, too, which is a place the Knicks hadn't been since 2000. By all accounts, Thibodeau's time with the Knicks was a success. He just couldn't get them over the final hump and into the Finals.
'I feel bad for Thibs because I think he captured all of New York and built something very, very special,' Pitino said, via SNY. 'A lot of us don't comprehend what happened, but Thibs is going to be well taken care of and he'll move on to other pastures.'
Naturally, the move has led to plenty of speculation as to whom the Knicks will hire to replace him. The team is now the only franchise without a head coach, after the Phoenix Suns moved to hire Cleveland Cavaliers assistant Jordan Ott on Wednesday. There are plenty of solid names available, like former Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone or ex-Sacramento Kings coach Mike Brown, for example. But others, like Pitino, have also been floated.
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Pitino already worked for the Knicks early on in his career. He was an assistant there for two seasons before jumping into the head job in 1987. He returned to the league nearly a decade later for a short stint with the Boston Celtics. Pitino is now with St. John's, where he's fresh off an NCAA tournament trip and in the midst of a career revival following his tumultuous exit from Louisville.
Pitino wouldn't necessarily be a long-term play for the Knicks, considering his age and where he's at in his career, but he's more than proved he's capable of the job throughout his decades in the sport. And, with him right across the river in Queens and the Red Storm already playing their home games in Madison Square Garden, he'd be an easy call to make.
But, it sounds like Pitino, 72, is more than happy where he is.
'As long as you're mentally and physically sharp, you do it as long as you can, because coaching is a blessing,' Pitino said, via SNY. 'It's the second best thing to playing. I've been blessed with over 50 years of coaching, and I hope it continues as long as I can do it.'
The Knicks will have to look elsewhere.
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Wall Street Journal
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New York Times
42 minutes ago
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New York Times
42 minutes ago
- New York Times
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When coach Paul Maurice read off the Florida injuries in his postgame news conference when his team was eliminated in Las Vegas two years ago, the list was endless — especially Ekblad's. He broke his foot in the Boston first-round series, yet didn't miss a game. He tore his oblique in the Carolina third-round series yet didn't miss a game then or in the Stanley Cup Final. Advertisement What's more, 'My shoulder kept coming out three or four times in the playoffs. I feel as good as I've ever felt now. Two years ago was awful. Could barely get out of bed.' After the final round, Ekblad recalled that Brandon Montour 'got surgery on a Friday and I was on a Monday.' 'Both shoulders,' Ekblad said. But, as Ekblad quickly noted, everybody goes through stuff like this when you're a professional hockey player and it's the price of being part of an organization turning into a perennial contender. Ekblad has been a mainstay in the Panthers' lineup since 2014. 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'I truly believe that after you win one, you want it that much more,' he said. 'And that's the kind of attitude that I think that all the returning players have. The amount of fun and the excitement that you get from it is incredible, and it makes you want it again that much more. So that's where I pull my energy from.' And then he'll worry about the future. His eight-year, $60 million contract is expiring. The Panthers, with only $19 million in cap space, have a number of free agents to sort through, including Sam Bennett and Brad Marchand. At 29, he'd be coveted by several teams, including Utah and Dallas, in need of solid right-shot defensemen. Advertisement 'I've given everything I can and will continue to give everything that I can to this team,' Ekblad said. 'All the way from the very, very top, they've done such a great job of taking care of us, making Florida such a destination franchise, a place where guys want to come. And it starts with a guy like Sasha Barkov. It's easy to want to play with Aleksander Barkov. It's easy to want to come play with (Sergei Bobrovsky and Matthew Tkachuk). 'And there's been some tough decisions made by management along the way, and all for the betterment of the team.' He just hopes he's not the next tough decision because, as the Panthers lifer said, he hopes to stay 'forever.'