ESPN REPORT: The Phoenix Suns Head Coach is Been Fired Due to….
Monty Williams was sacked as head coach of the Phoenix Suns on Saturday, the franchise said.
In a press statement, James Jones, President of Basketball Operations and General Manager, stated, “Monty has been foundational to our success over the past four seasons.”
“We are incredibly appreciative of all that Monty has done for the Suns and the Valley community. Even though I had a hard time deciding, I’m excited to keep working to create a championship team.
As to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, the Suns are still changing ownership at every level of the business. This decision was made by new owner Mat Ishbia.
“Ishbia has assumed complete control over the team’s basketball operations, including arranging the deal for Kevin Durant in February andand now Williams’s dismissal. Williams received the news over the phone on Saturday night from Suns general manager James Jones, according to Wojnarowski.
The team’s six-game 2023 playoff defeat against the Denver Nuggets preceded the firing by barely two days.
Phoenix will now face competition in the coaching free-agent market this offseason from the Milwaukee Bucks, Toronto Raptors, and Detroit Pistons.
The Suns will attempt to entice Tyronn Lue, the head coach of the Los Angeles Clippers, to leave the organization, according to NBA reporter Marc Stein.
Williams played in four seasons, going 194-115 (.628). The Suns went to the NBA Finals in 2021 after missing the playoffs by a close margin in the COVID-19-shortened 2019–20 season. The previous two years, they lost in the conference semifinals.
But in the end, Williamsaccepts responsibility for how their playoff runs transpired.
LINKED STORIES
How will the Suns address their shortcomings and pivot during the crucial offseason?
Deandre Ayton downplays “noise,” and Monty Williams and Chris Paul discuss the future.
As the Suns’ summer gets underway, talk of a Deandre Ayton deal has already begun.
In the 2021 Finals, the Suns wasted a 2-0 lead against the Milwaukee Bucks and then another 2-0 lead against the Dallas Mavericks in the 2022 conference semifinals, losing both games. That resulted in a rout at home in Game 7.
This season, after the Suns acquired star Kevin Durant in a blockbuster trade, Phoenix overcame a 2-0 deficit against the top-seeded Denver Nuggets to lose a non-competitive Game 6 elimination, which included two home games.a 30-point disadvantage at the half.
When the team was owned by former owner Robert Sarver in July 2022, Williams consented to a multi-year agreement. For the 2023–24 season, he has one year left on his initial five-year contract before the extension begins.
Before 2022–2023—when Williams took over as head coach of the Suns before the 2019–20 NBA season, Phoenix showed growth in each of his seasons.
Williams won the NBA Coach of the Year award after leading the Suns to an NBA-best 64-18 record in the previous year. Additionally, he has won the award from the National Basketball Coaches Association for several seasons running.
For the first time since 1993, Williams guided the Suns to the NBA Finals in the 2020–21 season.
In hisThe Suns improved to 34 wins in their debut season after finishing with 19 the year before. During the 2020 NBA Bubble, Williams was a member of the Suns, where he went 8-0 in a run that would define the next two seasons.
With a 45-37 record, the Suns placed fourth in the Western Conference this past season. Despite the absence of starters Devin Booker (29 games), Chris Paul (23 games), and Deandre Ayton (15 games) due to injury, they managed to finish ninth in the NBA in net rating.
Starter Jae Crowder, a mainstay in the starting lineup the previous two years, was not available for Phoenix. And prior to the trade of those 2022–2023 starters, Mikal Bridges and Cam Johnson only played 56 and 17 games, respectively.for Kevin Durant, who played for the Suns in just eight games during the regular season.
For better or worse, the head coach gained a reputation for being a little adamant about his opinions and some players.
Over the course of the previous year and a half, he and center Deandre Ayton have worked through what seemed to be a strained relationship, which was exemplified by Williams benching Ayton in a Game 7 loss against the Dallas Mavericks in 2022 to end Phoenix’s season. Williams, a free agent at the time, allegedly never contacted Ayton again or the Indiana Pacers after signing an offer sheet that Phoenix matched.