Appearing at a press conference on Thursday, Wizards executives Michael Winger and Will Dawkins explained that the decision to move Wes Unseld Jr. out of his head coaching position was more about how the team was losing than about the losses themselves, according to Ava Wallace of The Washington Post and Josh Robbins of The Athletic.
“We can tolerate losing a game in which we were competitive for 48 minutes. We can tolerate losing a basketball game where we see the team improving as a collective,” Winger said. “In the absence of 48 minutes of competitiveness, in the absence of collective team basketball progress over the course of time, irrespective of the individual improvement, we have an issue to address. And that’s sort of how that conversation unfolded.”
As Robbins observes, the defense performed especially poorly under Unseld. The Wizards’ 120.5 defensive rating at the time of his removal was just narrowly better than Charlotte’s league-worst mark of 120.6. Additionally, Robbins says, the effort level from several players was inconsistent and players repeated the same mistakes from game to game, en route to a 7-36 start.
“We know our energy wasn’t always there,” Dawkins said. “We know our competitiveness was not always there. And defensively, there were nights that were unacceptable, and those are things that we want to continue to work on. And we think that a fresh voice right here, right now, is what we need, and also (is needed) for the betterment of the future.”
Unseld wasn’t technically fired — he’ll remain in the organization in an advisory role in the front office. Winger stated on Thursday that the Wizards are “a better organization because of Wes,” adding that multiple players showed real growth under the first-time head coach.
However, as Robbins points out, the comments made by some Wizards players on Thursday suggested they felt they weren’t held accountable enough under Unseld. Corey Kispert and Kyle Kuzma were among those to cite accountability when they were asked about assistant Brian Keefe taking over Unseld’s role.
“B.K. keeps it real 100 percent of the time, and he’ll say it like it is and he won’t hold back for better or for worse,” Kispert said. “And we need a good dose of that in this locker room. If we want to grow and be the team that we think we can be for the remainder of the season, we’ve got to be held accountable for what we do and we don’t do.”
“I think as a whole right now, we’re looking at an organizational mindset shift,” Kuzma said. “And that’s defense and accountability, and I think those are the first two building blocks that’s going to be an emphasis and something that we kind of lacked over the past 40-something games.”
While the Wizards went just 77-130 under Unseld, it’s worth noting that the rosters during his tenure weren’t exactly loaded with talent. Nuggets head coach Michael Malone, who had Unseld on his staff for several years in Denver before the Wizards hired him, lamented the fact that his former assistant never got to coach the team he interviewed for, since Bradley Beal missed so much time with injuries and Russell Westbrook was traded shortly after Unseld was hired (Twitter link via Tim Bontemps of ESPN).
The Wizards will see if Keefe can get more out of the current roster during the second half and then plan to conduct a full-fledged coaching search in the offseason. Presumably, if Keefe does well the rest of the way, he’ll receive consideration for the permanent position. Washington’s new head coach said on Thursday that his focus will be on improving the team’s play on defense.
“Defense has to be our calling card,” Keefe said, per Wallace. “We have to see improvement on that. That’s going to be my first step. And I’ve always thought that. Basic tenets of the NBA — I like unselfish basketball; I like spacing; I like making the simple play. But our focus right now, for us, is we got to see growth defensively.”
Keefe, who served as an assistant for the Thunder from 2007-15, earned praise on Thursday from one notable member of that team for his work in Oklahoma City.
“He wouldn’t take any credit for it, but he taught me everything I know as far as how I approached shootarounds, practices, games, workout sessions, just everything,” Suns star Kevin Durant said (Twitter video link via Will Clayton). “He just changed my mindset. I met him when I was 18, so from 18 probably to 25, he was grooming me into the player that I am today, so I owe a lot to him. … He’s easily one of the most influential guys that I know in this business, in this game, and in life, so I got nothing but love and respect for B.K.”