Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his (2024)

CLEVELAND —Before the Cavs’ thrilling home win over the Indiana Pacers late in the regular season, I playfully asked J.B. Bickerstaff why he was so mean to the officials.

Bickerstaff usually spent game nights barking at the referees from the opening tip to the final buzzer. Some nights he yelled so much during the game that it stole his voice. After 4 1/2 years of watching it, I finally asked him about it. I thought about his answer often this week and especially after the Cavs fired him as their head coach.

“It’s a matter of being in the competition and showing your players support,” he said. “When your players feel as if they’ve been wronged, it’s our responsibility as coaches to protect them. … If our guys feel wronged, whether they’re right or wrong, I’m going with them.”

GO DEEPERCavaliers fire J.B. Bickerstaff after 4 full seasons

He consistently had his players’ backs. Even when they didn’t have his.

The Cavs parted ways with Bickerstaff on Thursday in a move that was long expected. I first heard rumblings about his job security as far back as last summer, well before the season even began.

I don’t believe Cavs president Koby Altman wanted to fire Bickerstaff. I believe Altman felt he had no choice. The players rule the league in the NBA, and the players in Cleveland collectively decided they’d had enough of their coach.

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It left Altman with two alternatives: Stick by his guy, tell the locker room to shut up and get back to work; or relent, fire the coach and start anew. Choosing the former risked a mutiny in today’s world of player empowerment, particularly with the high stakes of this offseason. Altman chose the latter.

For all the team issues revealed over the past week, let’s be clear: The Cleveland Cavaliers are a good team and had a good season with a good coach. Their trajectory continues to trend upward. You can dispute the way they manipulated Game 82 and faced Orlando in the first round, but the fact remains that the Cavs went from a Play-In team two years ago to a first-round team last season and now an Eastern Conference semifinalist this year. That’s tangible progress.

There’s a lot of skill here. Whether all of their best pieces fit together is debatable, but they’re a talented team and any roster players they choose to move on from this summer will command value in trade.

The curious part in all of this is the list of Bickerstaff’s sins is relatively mild. Yes, his offense can be unimaginative. Fine. I’ve thought for years they were too pick-and-roll reliant.

And yes, he did treat the Cavs as kids at times, particularly last season, and seemed to make excuses for early exits and poor performances rather than hold them to high standards of a team trying to make a deep playoff run. That especially seemed to haunt him with the early exit to the Knicks, which immediately started the questions about his job security.

I believe they owed it to Bickerstaff to bring him back this year and give him another opportunity with a complete roster. The Cavs simply didn’t have enough shooting last season to compete in the postseason. Altman tried addressing that in free agency, but the moves they made didn’t have the impact expected this postseason.

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I heard complaints that Bickerstaff was too hands on, that he wanted to be in control of everything at practices and shootarounds. Players grumbled about playing time, either too much or too little. Again, all fairly ordinary and pedantic. The most damning criticism, and one that sticks, is the second-half fade most of his teams here experienced. Injuries can be blamed for part of it, but he has to wear that one.

Evan Mobley hasn’t progressed offensively the way the Cavs expected. Some of that falls on coaching. Darius Garland seemed to regress this year. Bickerstaff has to wear that one, too, although Mobley showed in the Boston series what it can look like with him as the lone big on the floor. He never really had that opportunity this season because Jarrett Allen played in 77 straight games to close the season.

There are good guys and not-so-good guys in every profession. Bickerstaff is one of the good guys. He is deeply respected around the league as a good man. That’s what makes his exit difficult on the organization. He isn’t a coach with an enormous ego. He wasn’t locked into a power struggle internally, constantly seeking leverage. He’s an old-school coach who believes in old-school basketball with bigs and physicality on defense.

Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his (4)

Under coach J.B. Bickerstaff, the Cavs went from a Play-In team two years ago, to a first-round team last year, to a conference semifinalist this year. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea / USA Today)

This was Bickerstaff’s first time going through all of this, too. He had brief interim runs in Houston and Memphis and one full season as head coach of the Grizzlies, but he was nevertheless an inexperienced head coach when he took over the Cavaliers. Mistakes were certainly made, but progress was undeniable.

There was a time the Cavs had another inexperienced head coach who prioritized defense over offense. The Cavs fired him — twice. Now Mike Brown has revitalized the once-woeful Sacramento Kings.

Will that ever be Bickerstaff? Perhaps. Brown, too, irritated players early in his career. He acknowledges now he made plenty of mistakes in his first few years as a head coach, both in Cleveland and even Los Angeles. Brown grew and learned from it and is a better coach for it now. Maybe that will be Bickerstaff one day.

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For now, the Cavs are moving on. Yes, Donovan Mitchell was one of those aggravated by some of Bickerstaff’s tactics and strategies. He wasn’t alone, but a locker room follows its star. If Mitchell had Bickerstaff’s back, everyone else would fall in line. When he didn’t, the others fell into that line, too.

Could Mitchell have a voice in who is selected as the next Cavs coach? Nobody knows at this point if he even wants that responsibility, but it wouldn’t be the first time a superstar picked his own coach. If Mitchell agrees to an extension, that could certainly be part of the hiring package.

Full disclosure: I’ve covered plenty of coach firings, but this one hits a bit different. My first interaction with Bickerstaff when he arrived in town was personal, not professional.

I received an e-mail the summer he arrived from his wife, Nikki. They moved to the same town where I live and she was introducing herself as my son’s new soccer coach on his co-ed team. I laughed.

Bickerstaff was an assistant coach at the time. At the first game, there was J.B. sitting on the sideline in his camping chair. I plopped down next to him and said “Well, let’s get this over with because this is going to be awkward.”

I’d covered the NBA for a decade but our paths never really crossed. I introduced myself and told him we’d be seeing a lot of each other over the next few years.

I’m not around the team every day, so we navigated through the personal, family stuff that fall and it became the same professional coach/media member relationship I’ve had with plenty of other coaches across plenty of other sports. But the origins on this one were unique and gave me a peek into Bickerstaff as a dad and husband before I saw him as a coach.

The Cavs are losing a good man today. He always had his players’ backs. Even when they didn’t have his.

(Top photo of J.B. Bickerstaff talking with Donovan Mitchell: Michael Reaves / Getty Images)

Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his (5)Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his (6)

Jason Lloyd is a senior columnist for The Athletic, focusing on the Browns, Cavs and Guardians. Follow Jason on Twitter @ByJasonLloyd

Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his (2024)

FAQs

Lloyd: Cavs oust J.B. Bickerstaff, who had his players' backs even if they didn't have his? ›

Bickerstaff, a good man who had players' backs even if they didn't have his. CLEVELAND — Before the Cavs' thrilling home win over the Indiana Pacers late in the regular season, I playfully asked J.B. Bickerstaff why he was so mean to the officials.

Who was the Cavs old coach? ›

The Cleveland Cavaliers are currently in search of a new head coach after parting ways with J.B. Bickerstaff back on May 23. The 45-year-old finished top-five in the NBA Coach of the Year Award voting twice during his time with the Wine and Gold.

How long has JB Bickerstaff been with the Cavs? ›

Bickerstaff after 4 seasons. The coach went 170-159 in 4 seasons in Cleveland and led the team to 50 wins each of the past 2 seasons. J.B.

Did the Cavs fire their coach? ›

The Cleveland Cavaliers on Thursday fired head coach J.B. Bickerstaff following a 48-34 season and second-round loss to the Boston Celtics. Bickerstaff coached the Cavs for four-plus seasons, going from 22 victories in 2020-21 to 51 last season and 48 this season, good for the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference.

Who is JB Bickerstaff married to? ›

Who was LeBron's first NBA coach? ›

CLEVELAND CAVALIERS

Paul Silas (2003-05): He was James' first coach in the 2003-04 season and helped the first-year player win the NBA Rookie of the Year award.

Who was the coach when the Cavaliers won the championship? ›

Ty Lue led the Cleveland Cavaliers to three straight NBA Finals and one NBA Championship. No other coach has done that since him, and those years created a reputation for Lue that gained him the respect of NBA players across the country.

What coach got fired in the NBA? ›

The Detroit Pistons fired coach Monty Williams on Wednesday after just one season that ended with an NBA-worst 14-68 record. “Decisions like these are difficult to make, and I want to thank Monty for his hard work and dedication,” Pistons owner Tom Gores said in a statement.

Is coach JB getting fired? ›

Bickerstaff after five seasons. Despite the franchise's first berth in the Eastern Conference semifinals in six seasons, the Cleveland Cavaliers dismissed coach J.B. Bickerstaff on Thursday morning.

Who was the Pistons coach after Larry Brown? ›

Doug Collins was the head coach for the Pistons from 1995 to 1998. Larry Brown was the Detroit Pistons head coach from 2003 to 2005 and led the team to the NBA championship in 2004. Flip Saunders was the coach for the Pistons from 2005 to 2008. Lawrence Frank was the coach for the Pistons from 2011 to 2013.

How much does JB Bickerstaff make? ›

Bickerstaff, 45, who is under contract through 2026 and makes roughly $5 million per year, steered the Cavs out from under the collective boot of the NBA when he took over for John Beilein in 2020.

Who is the head coach of the Cavs now? ›

Bickerstaff originally joined the Cavs as the associate head coach head of the 2019-20 season, taking over as head coach after John Beilein and the team parted ways. After helping turn the culture around and instill new energy in the young team, the Cavs signed Bickerstaff to a multi-year extension in 2021.

Is TJ Bickerstaff related to JB Bickerstaff? ›

Only child of Detra and Tim Bickerstaff...his father played football at N.C. Central…his cousin Shelton Robinson played seven seasons in the NFL…his uncle J.B. is the head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers and his grandfather, Bernie, was a head coach and an executive in the NBA…

Who replaced Bear Bryant as coach? ›

From 1979 to 1982, Perkins was the head coach of the New York Giants. However, it would not be until 1983 when Perkins would take on his greatest professional challenge up to that point: succeeding Paul “Bear” Bryant as the new head coach at Alabama, just a couple of months after Bryant's death.

Where else did Todd Bowles coach? ›

Bowles was the defensive coordinator and secondary coach at Morehouse College in 1997, and the defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach at Grambling State from 1998 until 1999. He was the defensive backs coach for the New York Jets in 2000, Cleveland Browns in 2004, and Dallas Cowboys from 2005 to 2007.

How long did Mike Brown coach the Cavs? ›

After his tenure in Indiana, Coach Mike Brown became the Head Coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers (2005-2010). As the Head Coach of the Cavaliers, Coach Brown had an NBA Finals appearance (2007), two Eastern Conference Finals appearances (2007 & 2009) and won the NBA Coach of the Year (2009).

Who all did Phil Jackson coach? ›

Regarded as one of the greatest coaches of all time, Jackson was the head coach of the Chicago Bulls from 1989 to 1998, leading them to six NBA championships. He then coached the Los Angeles Lakers from 1999 to 2004 and again from 2005 to 2011; the team won five league titles under his leadership.

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