Jim McDonnell

Nets Promote BJ Johnson To Assistant GM

The Nets have formally announced a series of additions and promotions within their basketball operations department. Among those moves, the most notable is the promotion of BJ Johnson to an assistant general manager role.

Johnson, who initially joined the franchise in 2016, had served as Brooklyn’s senior director of college scouting and player evaluation for the past two seasons. General manager Sean Marks suggested in April that Johnson could be in line for a promotion following the departures of assistant GM Jeff Peterson and executive director of basketball and business operations Ryan Gisriel for new jobs in Charlotte.

In his new role, Johnson will lead and oversee all of the Nets’ amateur scouting efforts. Brian Lewis of The New York Post, who first reported the promotion, notes that Johnson has been credited for pushing the Nets to draft players like Nic Claxton (2019) and Jalen Wilson (2023) in the second round of their respective drafts.

Johnson will work directly under Marks and alongside fellow assistant GM Andy Birdsong, Lewis writes.

Here are some of the other additions and promotions announced today by the Nets:

  • Makar Gevorkian has been promoted to vice president of basketball operations alignment and strategic planning.
  • Glenn DuPaul has been promoted to VP of basketball analytics.
  • Former MLS executive Justin Bokmeyer has been hired as the director of basketball operations.
  • Former Kings assistant coach and director of player development Dutch Gaitley has been hired as an assistant coach.
  • Jim McDonnell has been promoted to head video coordinator.
  • Geoff Staton has been hired as head athletic trainer.

The full list of basketball operations moves can be found within the Nets’ press release.

Nets Notes: Future Trades, Schröder, Staff Changes

After the Mikal Bridges trade, it was widely speculated that the Nets would begin offloading a lot of their movable veteran contracts sooner rather than later. Now, as NetsDaily’s Net Income notes, the consensus among NBA observers is that players like Cameron Johnson and Dorian Finney-Smith will open the season in Brooklyn.

The Nets accrued a massive haul for Bridges, whose only individual accolade during his NBA career is one All-Defensive Team honor. Brooklyn has five new first-round picks plus a swap from New York, in addition to a second-round selection and a massive trade exception.

As Net Income points out, the deals Brooklyn made this summer sending out Bridges and regaining control of the team’s 2025 and 2026 first-round picks arguably turned out better than those rumored at the trade deadline, so the front office figures to take a similar patient approach in its discussions involving players like Johnson and Finney-Smith.

The article dives into a variety of intriguing offseason plot lines:

  • Point guard Dennis Schröder, who is on an expiring $13MM contract, is another intriguing Nets trade candidate. The 31-year-old was the offensive fulcrum of a deep German national team this summer, although that program came up short of a medal. As Net Income observes, there has yet to be much chatter about a Schröder trade, but given how well he plays alongside Team Germany comrades Franz Wagner and Moritz Wagner, and the Magic‘s need for a point guard upgrade, Orlando feels like a potential trade partner.
  • Head video coordinator Travis Bader has taken an assistant coaching gig with the Nets, while former assistant video coordinator Jim McDonnell has taken Bader’s old job, per NetsDaily. Capologist Makar Gevorkian has been promoted to vice president of basketball operations for alignment and strategic planning. Brooklyn still needs a new assistant general manager and a new co-head of the performance team.
  • In a separate two-part story at NetsDaily, Net Income takes an in-depth look at how the franchise has grown a significant global fan base under current team owner Joe Tsai.