Rockets expect to announce new coach soon

Houston officials have concluded interviews with potential coaching candidates and expect to have a replacement for Rick Adelman by the end of the week.

The Houston Chronicle reported that Rockets owner Leslie Alexander on Wednesday.

Other finalists include Dallas Mavericks assistant Dwane Casey and Boston assistant Lawrence Frank.

The Chronicle reports that the Rockets have told each candidate that they do not have a frontrunner for the position, according to an individual familiar with the process.

Adelman directed the Rockets to winning records in each of his four seasons with the team, although they missed the playoffs for the second straight season in 2010-11. They were the only team in the league with a winning record that failed to make the playoffs this season.

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McHale agrees in principle to coach Rockets

Hall of Famer Kevin McHale has agreed to take over the vacant head coach job with the Houston Rockets.

The Houston Chronicle reports that . A remaining point to be settled will be for McHale and the team to agree on a top assistant coach to join his staff.

McHale was picked  by Houston owner Leslie Alexander over Boston assistant Lawrence Frank and Dallas assistant Dwane Casey.  

It’s an interesting choice considering McHale’s lack of previous success as an NBA head coach.  He has a career record of 39-55 in two previous stints with the Minnesota Timberwolves after earlier serving as the team’s vice president of basketball operations. After he was dismissed in 2009, he has been a popular NBA analyst for TNT and NBA-TV.

The Houston job will provide some unique challenges. The Rockets have a good influx of young talent, but their future is tenuous as long as oft-injured center Yao Ming is a focal point in their plans. The Rockets were the only team in the league with an above-.500  record that failed to make the playoffs this season.

And they will face a tough challenge in the Southwest Division, where all of the teams finished above .500. The balance in the Southwest is best shown by the fact that the Spurs led the division with 61 victories and two other teams from the conference — Dallas and Oklahoma City — played in the Western Conference Finals.

And it’s also a little unusual for a team to dictate assistant coaches that a new coach will hire.

Yahoo.com reports the Rockets will have much and may even dictate his style of play. Houston D-League coach Chris Finch of Rio Grande Valley will be promoted to McHale’s staff. And Memphis Grizzlies assistant coach Dave Joerger is expected to be a candidate to become McHale’s top assistant, sources told Yahoo.com.

It will also bear watching as the Rockets transition from a team directed by a coaching veteran to a relative coaching neophyte. The Rockets formerly were coached by Rick Adelman, who ranked eighth in NBA history in coaching victories. McHale’s basketball reputation is based more on his playing career after he was a member of three championship teams with Boston and was selected as an all-time top 50 player in 1996. 

Alexander will receive more buzz by hiring McHale than either of the other two finalists. But it’s uncertain if that excitement will carry over once he starts coaching the team.

Brown’s second chance likely to come on the NBA’s biggest stage

It’s not a shock that former Cleveland coach and former Spurs assistant Mike Brown is returning to the NBA after a season away.

But it’s a little surprising that he apparently is , according to the Los Angeles Times.

The Lakers are the biggest of the big-boy jobs in the league.

Brown led Cleveland to a league-best 61 victories last season before the Cavaliers were eliminating in the Eastern Conference semifinals by Boston. That collapse led to Brown’s eventual dismissal and LeBron James leaving that franchise for Miami.  

During the season before, Brown earned the NBA’s Coach of the Year honors after leading them to a league-best 66-16 record. He earlier took the Cavaliers to the 2007 Finals where they lost to the Spurs. His .663 career winning percentage ranks sixth in NBA history among coaches with at least 100 career victories.  

But in hiring him, it appears that Lakers management will be go against the wishes of key players like Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher, who both endorsed Lakers assistant Brian Shaw. Other finalists included former Houston coach Rick Adelman, Lakers assistant coach Chuck Person and former Lakers coach Mike Dunleavy.

A source close to the Lakers told SI.com’s Sam Amick  that , and that he was not a part of the decision-making process.

The choice of Brown appears to be falling in line with the type of coach that Bryant had described during the team’s exit interviews.

“If you’re building a championship team, your DNA always has to start with the defensive end of the floor,” Bryant said earlier this month. ”Always. I’m a firm believer in that. I don’t believe in building a championship team on offense. It has to be built on defense and rebounding. Period.” 

Brown has been the most successful of Gregg Popovich’s proteges.  And he should bring a defensive bent to a Lakers’ franchise that didn’t play with much fervor during the playoffs.

During his time away from basketball, Brown was an assistant coach on his 13-year-old son’s middle-school football team as he bonded with his family and collected on his settlement with the Cavaliers.

It’s given him perspective as he tackles his new job.

Lakers executive vice president of player personnel Jim Buss likes his defensive-minded style. His hiring would also likely mean that Andrew Bynum, another Buss favorite, likely will remain on the roster.

Hiring Brown would enable the Lakers to pinch a few pennies. Team management wants to bring their coaching costs down after playing Phil Jackson the league’s highest coaching salary last season. Brown would likely command about half of Jackson’s rumored $9 million per year salary.

Will Brown be what the Lakers need to return to the form that enabled them to claim the last two NBA titles and has boosted them to the NBA Finals in each of the last three seasons?

It likely will mean the end of Jackson’s preferred “Triangle” offense for a more defensive bent.

It will be interesting to see.