Bucks ‘FIRE first-year head coach Adrian Griffin’: Second-place Milwaukee hits the panic button and appoints Joe Prunty on interim basis… but the job ‘could go to Doc Rivers’
- Milwaukee is in second place at 30-13 in the East behind the 34-10 Celtics
- Joe Prunty is the interim coach, but the job could ultimately go to Doc Rivers
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According to ESPN, the Milwaukee Bucks have parted ways with first-year head coach Adrian Griffin.
Notably, Milwaukee is in second place at 30-13 in the East, behind the 34-10 Boston Celtics.
Griffin was hired to replace Mike Budenholzer, who led Milwaukee to a title at the end of the 2020-21 season.
Bucks assistant coach Joe Prunty will take over on an interim basis. Prunty was head coach of the Great Britain national basketball team from June 2013 to September 2017. He also won three NBA titles as an assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs under Gregg Popovich.
However, Prunty’s time as interim coach could be short-lived. According to Bleacher Report’s Chris Haynes, Milwaukee is already considering ESPN announcer Doc Rivers, a longtime NBA star and head coach who played his college ball in town at Marquette.
The Bucks have replaced Adrian Griffin (left) with Joe Prunty (right) on an interim basis.
The Milwaukee Bucks could hire Doc Rivers (left), who played collegiately at Marquette
At just 43 games, Griffin’s tenure is the third-shortest in NBA history for a head coach.
The Bucks are clearly facing championship expectations in Milwaukee following the offseason trade that netted perennial All-Star Damian Lillard.
Milwaukee has been strong in a number of offensive areas this season, ranking third in field goal percentage, for example.
However, the defense was disappointing, allowing opponents to make 44.8 percent of their field goals – worse than all but three NBA teams.
A longtime point guard for the Atlanta Hawks, Los Angeles Clippers, New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs, Rivers is now best known as a coach after winning an NBA title with the Boston Celtics in 2007-08.
After stints with the Orlando Magic, Celtics, Los Angeles Clippers and Philadelphia 76ers, Rivers is 1,860-1,097 with a postseason mark of 215-111.
He was fired in 2023 after the 76ers fell to the Eastern Conference semifinals for the third straight season.