Revisiting the Nuggets interim head coach Hall of Fame

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I know it's tacky to recycle a previously written column idea (maybe less so if you admit it at the outset), but it's time to revisit Adrian Dantley's place in Nuggets interim head coach history.

On February 25th two years ago, Nuggets assistant coach Adrian Dantley filled in for head coach George Karl who was out with the flu in a home game against the (then very good) Detroit Pistons. The Nuggets lost 98-93, which prompted me to write a column on other notable Nuggets interim head coaches...all of whom have been abject failures.

While no one would mistake Dantley for a coach doing a great job right now, he's the only interim head coach in Nuggets history to have won more games than lost, making him the best interim head coach in franchise history. Of course, if you read on below that's like saying you're the tallest midget.

Denver Nuggets Interim Head Coach Hall of Fame...


Adrian Dantley (record: 10-7 in 2010, previously 2-1)


Compared to his interim head coach predecessors, Dantley has done an admirable job keeping the Nuggets afloat in the absence of George Karl who's receiving brutal chemotherapy treatment for throat and neck cancer and might return for the playoffs second round.


Going behind the record, Dantley's tenure on balance has been a disappointment. With the exception of a big win at Oklahoma City last week, the Nuggets haven't won a single game under Dantley that they weren't supposed to win in the first place (like at Phoenix, at Boston, at Orlando or at Dallas) while losing several winnable games along the way (like home against Milwaukee and San Antonio, and at New York). And beyond wins and losses, Dantley's rotations and game plans have been suspect and he hasn't inspired passionate play among his players.


Scott Brooks (record: 1-2 in 2005)


Now in the running for NBA Coach of the Year for doing a tremendous job in Oklahoma City this season, Brooks once coached the Nuggets to a 1-2 opening record in the 2005-06. That prior offseason, Karl was suspended for the first three games after violating NBA Draft rules and Brooks took over. Brooks also served as an interim head coach in Oklahoma City last season, coaching the Thunder to a 22-47 record after P.J. Carlesimo got fired. My point? Maybe Brooks is better at being a head coach than an interim head coach.


Michael Cooper (record: 4-10 in 2004-05)



Mike Evans (record: 18-38 in 2001-02)


Evans was handed one of the more unenviable coaching opportunities in NBA history when he took over for Dan Issel who resigned after calling a fan a "Mexican piece of shit"...oh, and running the Nuggets franchise into the ground. After flaming out as a head coach in Denver, Evans was replaced by Bzdelik and resurfaced in Toronto as an assistant coach recently. Unfortunately for the always affable Evans, he was fired last off-season.

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