ORLANDO, Fla. -- Stan Van Gundy was hired Thursday as coach of the Orlando Magic, who acted quickly after their days-old agreement with Billy Donovan collapsed.
The hiring ends a chaotic two weeks in which Orlando fired Brian Hill, hired Donovan and then had to find another replacement because he got cold feet and returned to the Florida Gators.
On Thursday, Donovan apologized to the Magic, his family and Florida.
"I feel terrible about it. [The Magic are] a great organization. They have great ownership, and they're great people. I feel sorry and have apologized," he said at a news conference in Gainesville. "It was my decision, it was my mistake. I have to take responsibility for that, which I'm trying to do.
"Really, it was my decision. There were no lures, there was no pressure by anybody to come back. It was what was in my heart."
Orlando is expected to introduce Van Gundy as its new coach later Thursday at a news conference.
Van Gundy coached the Miami Heat for more than two seasons, resigning in December 2006 but remaining with the team as an adviser to coach Pat Riley. He also was being courted by the Sacramento Kings.
Issac Baldizon/NBAE/Getty Images
Stan Van Gundy helped round the Heat into championship form and will look to do the same with the Magic.
"Stan enjoyed tremendous success during his tenure with the Heat," general manager Otis Smith said in a statement on the Magic's Web site. "He has a great basketball mind, tremendous respect around the league and will get the most out of our players. Stan was sought after by many teams this summer and we feel very proud to welcome him to the Magic family."
Van Gundy was under contract with the Heat for another year, and the Magic had to give Miami undisclosed compensation, reportedly a second-round pick in this month's draft. Orlando had three picks, all second-rounders, in the June 28 draft while Miami had no second-round selections.
Van Gundy did not immediately return a message left at his home Thursday.
Donovan stunned the Magic by changing his mind within a day of his introduction June 1, deciding he couldn't leave the Gators after two straight national championships. Donovan contacted the Magic on Saturday to say he wanted out of his 5-year, $27.5 million deal. The Magic tried all weekend to get him to stay, but finally announced late Wednesday he was let out of the contract.
"When I made the decision, the next morning it just did not feel right for me," Donovan said. "I've got too much respect for the Magic, for the organization, for their team, for their fans, to continue on."
The Magic said they had a "legal right to hold Billy to the contract he signed," but let him go because his change of heart.
Neither the team nor Donovan would discuss specifics of the breakup, but Donovan acknowledged Thursday he was prevented from coaching in the NBA. He didn't specify for how long, but reports have circulated it was five years.
"I think it's been out there pretty much about the whole NBA thing down the road," Donovan said. "That was something we both talked about, and that was something I was glad to accept because I knew in my heart that's not where I wanted to be. I wanted to be at Florida."
From the beginning, Van Gundy was Orlando's No. 2 choice. He was also considered by the Charlotte Bobcats and Indiana Pacers, but those teams hired other coaches.
Van Gundy was Riley's longtime protege before taking over as Heat coach shortly before the start of the 2003-04 season, Dwyane Wade's first with the Heat. That team got off to an 0-7 start, but wound up 42-40 and with a No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Wade, the MVP of last season's NBA finals, still credits Van Gundy for turning that season around.
Now, they will be going against each other four times a season, with Miami and Orlando both in the Southeast Division.
"It'll be exciting to go against a coach that I feel really helped me develop to this point and, as always, there's that mutual respect," Wade said this week as speculation loomed that Van Gundy was Orlando-bound. "So best of luck to Stan and his family and hopefully he gets what he wants and what he deserves."
Van Gundy's brother Jeff has spent parts of 11 seasons as coach of the New York Knicks and Houston. Last month, Jeff was fired as coach of the Rockets. Their father, Bill, was a successful college coach in upstate New York.
"Stan's a guy who knows the game. You can see that from his whole family line, from his father to his brother to himself," Wade said. "I know it's something he loves to do. So for him to be back ... it's great."
Donovan and Jeff Van Gundy are close friends because the Florida coach played under him in college at Providence. The two even conferred as Donovan wrestled over the Magic decision.
Van Gundy resigned as the Heat's coach 21 games into the 2005-06 season, citing personal and family reasons. Riley said he tried several times to get Van Gundy to stay but took over, leading the Heat to their first championship. Van Gundy was 112-73 at Miami, and in 2004-05 won the Southeast Division and made the Eastern Conference finals. The team won 59 games that year, second best in franchise history.
The hiring ends a chaotic two weeks in which Orlando fired Brian Hill, hired Donovan and then had to find another replacement because he got cold feet and returned to the Florida Gators.
On Thursday, Donovan apologized to the Magic, his family and Florida.
"I feel terrible about it. [The Magic are] a great organization. They have great ownership, and they're great people. I feel sorry and have apologized," he said at a news conference in Gainesville. "It was my decision, it was my mistake. I have to take responsibility for that, which I'm trying to do.
"Really, it was my decision. There were no lures, there was no pressure by anybody to come back. It was what was in my heart."
Orlando is expected to introduce Van Gundy as its new coach later Thursday at a news conference.
Van Gundy coached the Miami Heat for more than two seasons, resigning in December 2006 but remaining with the team as an adviser to coach Pat Riley. He also was being courted by the Sacramento Kings.
Issac Baldizon/NBAE/Getty Images
Stan Van Gundy helped round the Heat into championship form and will look to do the same with the Magic.
"Stan enjoyed tremendous success during his tenure with the Heat," general manager Otis Smith said in a statement on the Magic's Web site. "He has a great basketball mind, tremendous respect around the league and will get the most out of our players. Stan was sought after by many teams this summer and we feel very proud to welcome him to the Magic family."
Van Gundy was under contract with the Heat for another year, and the Magic had to give Miami undisclosed compensation, reportedly a second-round pick in this month's draft. Orlando had three picks, all second-rounders, in the June 28 draft while Miami had no second-round selections.
Van Gundy did not immediately return a message left at his home Thursday.
Donovan stunned the Magic by changing his mind within a day of his introduction June 1, deciding he couldn't leave the Gators after two straight national championships. Donovan contacted the Magic on Saturday to say he wanted out of his 5-year, $27.5 million deal. The Magic tried all weekend to get him to stay, but finally announced late Wednesday he was let out of the contract.
"When I made the decision, the next morning it just did not feel right for me," Donovan said. "I've got too much respect for the Magic, for the organization, for their team, for their fans, to continue on."
The Magic said they had a "legal right to hold Billy to the contract he signed," but let him go because his change of heart.
Neither the team nor Donovan would discuss specifics of the breakup, but Donovan acknowledged Thursday he was prevented from coaching in the NBA. He didn't specify for how long, but reports have circulated it was five years.
"I think it's been out there pretty much about the whole NBA thing down the road," Donovan said. "That was something we both talked about, and that was something I was glad to accept because I knew in my heart that's not where I wanted to be. I wanted to be at Florida."
From the beginning, Van Gundy was Orlando's No. 2 choice. He was also considered by the Charlotte Bobcats and Indiana Pacers, but those teams hired other coaches.
Van Gundy was Riley's longtime protege before taking over as Heat coach shortly before the start of the 2003-04 season, Dwyane Wade's first with the Heat. That team got off to an 0-7 start, but wound up 42-40 and with a No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Wade, the MVP of last season's NBA finals, still credits Van Gundy for turning that season around.
Now, they will be going against each other four times a season, with Miami and Orlando both in the Southeast Division.
"It'll be exciting to go against a coach that I feel really helped me develop to this point and, as always, there's that mutual respect," Wade said this week as speculation loomed that Van Gundy was Orlando-bound. "So best of luck to Stan and his family and hopefully he gets what he wants and what he deserves."
Van Gundy's brother Jeff has spent parts of 11 seasons as coach of the New York Knicks and Houston. Last month, Jeff was fired as coach of the Rockets. Their father, Bill, was a successful college coach in upstate New York.
"Stan's a guy who knows the game. You can see that from his whole family line, from his father to his brother to himself," Wade said. "I know it's something he loves to do. So for him to be back ... it's great."
Donovan and Jeff Van Gundy are close friends because the Florida coach played under him in college at Providence. The two even conferred as Donovan wrestled over the Magic decision.
Van Gundy resigned as the Heat's coach 21 games into the 2005-06 season, citing personal and family reasons. Riley said he tried several times to get Van Gundy to stay but took over, leading the Heat to their first championship. Van Gundy was 112-73 at Miami, and in 2004-05 won the Southeast Division and made the Eastern Conference finals. The team won 59 games that year, second best in franchise history.
Source: ESPN.com
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