Report: Adelman hired as new coach of T’wolves

Former Houston coach Rick Adelman has been hired as the new coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported Monday that two league sources have reported that , who was fired after last  season.

Adelman, 65, directed the Rockets to winning records each of his four seasons. His last two teams failed to make the playoffs, leading to his contract not be renewed after the 2010-11 season.

During a 20-season coaching history for four NBA teams, Adelman directed his teams to a 945-616 record. He earlier coached Portland, Golden State and Sacramento, leading the Trail Blazers to the NBA Finals in 1990 and 1992.

Adelman is a veteran coaching with a deep history around the league. He inherits a growing young team led by forwards Kevin Love and Michael Beasley. But working with rookie point guard Ricky Rubio could test his patience.

Timberwolves down to final two in coaching search

Minnesota general manager David Kahn is nearing the completion of his head coaching search.  

After considering replacements for Kurt Rambis for several weeks, the Timberwolves are down to the final two interviews with Sam Mitchell and Larry Brown.

Mitchell, who played two stints with the Timberwolves and was a Coach of the Year for Toronto in 2007, , the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reports.

Brown is set to meet with the Minnesota braintrust early next week.

Kahn and Taylor already have interviewed Terry Porter, Mike Woodson, Bernie Bickerstaff and Don Nelson. And former Houston coach Rick Adelman discussed the position with them, but didn’t formally interview and said earlier this week he plans to sit out from coaching this season.

With no end of the lockout in sight, there’s no real immediacy for the Timberwolves to make an immediate pick.

But it would still behoove them to pick their new coach as soon as possible, considering the magnitude of the rebuilding job at hand.

Just the thought of trying to teach Ricky Rubio NBA-level defensive principles should be enough to make whoever is hired want to jump into the job as quickly as possible.

Rockets tab McHale as coach

By Jonathan Feigen
jonathan.feigen@chron.com

HOUSTON — There were better matches, at least in terms of style and strengths. There were far greater coaching résumés and more tested coaches. Kevin McHale, however, became the Rockets choice to succeed Rick Adelman as coach because of a quality they could not resist.

“I’d put Kevin’s intelligence level about basketball up there with anybody’s,” said Danny Ainge, the Celtics executive vice president and McHale’s friend since the two helped the Celtics defeat the Rockets in the NBA Finals 25 years ago.

“I think that Kevin, though he lacks front-line coaching experience, has watched as many games and as much tape as anyone, and has learned about basketball from some of the great minds.”

The Rockets and McHale quickly agreed on Friday to a four-year contract, the final season the team’s option. McHale, who went 39-55 during two coaching stints with Minnesota while working as the Timberwolves’ vice president from 1995-2009, expressed reluctance at one time in becoming a career coach. But after a second stint in which he earned good reviews from his players, he reversed that position.

A key to the choice of McHale will be the selection of a strong lead assistant to run the defense and handle many of the finer points of preparation and practice, with McHale being more big-picture and player-development oriented.

Minnesota assistant Kelvin Sampson, Memphis’ Dave Joerger and New Orleans’ Michael Malone, who were early head coaching candidates in the Rockets’ wide-open search, are among the team’s top choices for the position, according to a person familiar with the process. Sampson and Malone could still be head coaching candidates, and Malone might join Mike Brown’s staff with the Lakers. Though Joerger is not officially a lead assistant, the Grizzlies likely will try to keep him.

Chris Finch, the coach of the club’s Development League Rio Grande Valley Vipers, will be promoted in part because he spent the past two seasons running the offense that worked well for the Rockets under Adelman.

Rockets owner Leslie Alexander and general manager Daryl Morey chose McHale over finalists Dwane Casey and Lawrence Frank on Thursday after several conversations with McHale, mostly about the structure of the coaching staff. McHale had been interviewed twice by Morey before he became the third candidate to meet with Alexander.

Twice the NBA Sixth Man of the Year winner, McHale averaged 17.9 points and 7.3 rebounds and became part of one of the greatest frontcourt in league history with Larry Bird and Robert Parish.

“I view him on the level of my favorite great coach, Adelman,” Rockets guard Kevin Martin said. “We just found a big piece to our puzzle. Now I can go back to my summer workouts and rest peacefully at night knowing we have a great coach that will elevate everyone’s game.”