Ime Udoka a candidate for Rockets, Pistons head coach jobs

Ime Udoka, suspended by the Celtics for the entire 2022-23 season for having an affair with a married staff member, has been named a possible head coaching candidate for vacancies with the Rockets and Pistons, according to ESPN.

The Athletic also reported that Udoka, the former Boston head coach, will likely be one of approximately eight candidates Houston will consider after parting ways with Stephen Silas on Sunday.

ESPN reported Sunday that the Rockets declined to pick up Silas’ fourth-year option. Dwane Casey stepped down as Pistons coach after five seasons and a 17-65 campaign this year.

Udoka’s future with the Celtics — already in question with the suspension — became clearer when the organization removed the interim label from Joe Mazzulla, who replaced Udoka after the alleged code of conduct violation — that included sending inappropriate text messages and a “volume of violations” — and suspension, in February.

When Udoka was suspended by the Celtics in September, the organization said in a statement that his future with the team would be determined “at a later date.”

Udoka emerged as an candidate for the Nets opening when Brooklyn fired Steve Nash earlier this season, but backlash followed and the team opted to instead hire Jacque Vaughn by removing his interim label.

Udoka’s coaching career began as an assistant in San Antonio, where he spent seven years on Gregg Popovich’s staff before adding a year with the 76ers and a year with the Nets.


Ime Udoka has been suspended for the entire 2022-23 season by the Boston Celtics.
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Then, ahead of the 2021-22 season, the Celtics hired Udoka, and he guided them to the NBA Finals in his first year as a head coach.

But by the end of September, just three months after the Celtics lost to the Warriors, Udoka had been suspended.

He had been in a relationship with actress Nia Long since 2010, but after the alleged affair, People reported in December that the pair broke up after 13 years, and one son, together.


Ime Udoka led the Celtics to the NBA finals in his first season as head coach, but he was suspended three months later.
Ime Udoka led the Celtics to the NBA finals in his first season as head coach, but he was suspended three months later.
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With Udoka suspended this year, Mazzulla led the Celtics to the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference, and they’ll face the team that emerges as the No. 7 seed from the play-in tournament.



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Celtics nip 76ers after Joel Embiid 70-footer comes too late

PHILADELPHIA — Jayson Tatum buried the 3-pointer that put Boston ahead with 1.3 seconds left and casually backpedaled on defense before he turned to greet his teammates and — woosh! — a 70-foot shot sailed over his head and into the basket.

Joel Embiid shook his head no. The 76ers’ All-Star center knew his tying, desperation heave was just a tick too late.

Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla needed a second look to know the Celtics were in the clear and he wasn’t positive until “they showed it on the Jumbotron.”

Time to celebrate.

Tatum hit the winning 3 that capped Boston’s comeback from 15 points down in the third quarter and he finished with 18 points, 13 rebounds and six assists to help the Celtics hold on for a 110-107 win against Philadelphia on Saturday night.

“I dream about taking those shots,” Tatum said. “The worst thing that can happen is you miss.”

He didn’t miss.

Jaylen Brown scored 26 points, Derrick White added 18 and Al Horford hit five game-changing 3s for 15 points.

“Our guys have been there,” Mazzulla said. “They’ve been through it all.”

Embiid finished with 41 points and 12 rebounds. He also made 17 of 18 free throws. James Harden scored 21 points and Tobias Harris had 19.

The late-game thriller proved worthy of a showdown between two of the top teams in the East.

Boston, though, proved it’s still the team to beat.


Jayson Tatum celebrates after hitting the game-winning 3-pointer with 1.3 seconds left in the Celtics’ 110-107 win over the 76ers, who nearly tied the game when Joel Embiid followed with a 70-foot make that was just after the buzzer.
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The Sixers dug deep trailing by five with 3 minutes left. With booming “MVP! MVP!” chants filling the arena, Embiid hit two free throws and followed with a jumper that pulled the Sixers within one. Embiid then blocked Brown’s layup and Tyrese Maxey went the other way for a go-ahead driving layup that sent another packed house into a frenzy.

Horford, once considered a key cog in the 76ers’ chase for a championship, instead hit the clutch 3-pointer inside Wells Fargo Center that the city craved from him in 2019-20. He put the Celtics ahead by two points and a bucket by Tatum made it 107-103.

Harden and Embiid made four straight free throws that tied the game and put every fan — there was a smattering of green in the stands — on edge.

Tatum, though, calmly hit a 3 to put Boston ahead. Embiid then heaved one from inside the opposing 3-point line and it fell through the basket — just after the horn.


A dejected Joel Embiid walks off the court after his 70-foot make came after the buzzer in the 76ers’ loss.
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“I kind of had a feeling it wasn’t going to count,” Tatum said. “But it’s the NBA, right? Anything can happen.”

Just not on this night for the Sixers.

“Unfortunately, story of my life,” Embiid said.

Tatum celebrated by giving his game-worn jersey to Philadelphia Eagles star wide receiver — and noted Celtics fan — DeVonta Smith.

The 76ers had another packed house and fans were hyped from pregame warmups for a game with a definitive playoff feel. Both teams came out firing — they each hit four 3s and shot at least 50% in the first quarter. The scoring swings were so one-sided for a stretch that the Celtics went on a 20-4 run and only led 39-32.

The Sixers entered this one with something to prove after a miserable effort in a 106-99 loss earlier this month in Boston. The reigning Eastern Conference champion Celtics remain the class of the conference. The Sixers are still out to show under coach Doc Rivers they’re more than a 50-win, second-round exit team. They’re going to need Embiid to lead the way. After a difficult shooting night against Memphis on Thursday, Embiid had a game worthy of the “MVP! MVP!” chants that serenaded him with each trip to the free-throw line.

He bullied his way down the lane for big buckets. Embiid’s three-point play late in the fourth stretched the lead to 11 and he had an assist on De’Anthony Melton’s 3-pointer on the next possession.

Horford made three straight 3s to bring Boston back into the game. Horford’s fourth 3 of the quarter keyed an 18-3 run and helped the Celtics lead 80-78 through three.

“It’s not extra motivation,” Horford said of his return. “It’s just fun. Those are the games you want to be a part of.”

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Undersized Nets outmatched by Celtics in lopsided loss

BOSTON — Styles make fights — but so does size. And the undersized Nets were never in this one, battered around and beaten up 139-96 by the Celtics on Wednesday night.

How bad was it? Boston dominated so thoroughly, from wire-to-wire that the sellout crowd of 19,156 at TD Garden didn’t even bother to boo Public Enemy No. 1 Kyrie Irving by the end. Whatever punishment they wanted to exact on their former player, the Celtics already had, leading by as much as 49 in a thorough thrashing.

The Nets played without Kevin Durant, Ben Simmons and T.J. Warren against a team with more big, talented wings than anybody in the league. Their Hobbit-esque lineup — with Irving (20 points, minus-31) and Seth Curry in the backcourt together — got predictably overwhelmed, just like it had in the past.


Nets forward Joe Harris (12) passes the ball while pressured by Boston Celtics center Al Horford on Wednesday.
AP

Jayson Tatum had a game-high 31 points, and Jaylen Brown added 26 as Boston sprinted out to a 27-4 lead. It got far worse from there, the Nets punching up a weight class or three against the much bigger Celtics (37-15), and spending almost the entire evening on the mat.

The Nets (31-20) have now dropped 10 straight to Boston, including last season’s humiliating first-round playoff sweep that rocked the franchise and brought on some soul searching. Wednesday was as humbling as any one of those defeats.

“They are just a unique group,” Nets coach Jacque Vaughn acknowledged, before what would become by far the worst loss of his tenure since replacing Steve Nash. “The fact Brown and Tatum — what they are capable of doing at the size — just creates a different challenge for every team, especially for us if we are going to start Ky and Seth. So, it becomes, how can we help those two guys?


Jason Tatum drives to the basket against the Nets on Wednesday night.
AP

“That’s where Joe [Harris], Royce [O’Neale] and Nic [Claxton] fit in. Nic has to be exceptional — and that’s on both ends of the floor, being a threat at the rim on offense and defense and being able to keep Williams off the glass. They do some things where they get crossmatched a little bit, so hopefully we can take advantage of that. We won’t change who we are and hopefully use our bench.”

It didn’t happen, out-rebounded 57-32 and beaten 30-10 on the fast break.

The Nets watched the Eastern Conference-leading Celtics scorch them on .576 shooting, and 26 of 54 from 3-point range. Cam Thomas had 19 off the bench, with no other Net higher than Harris’ dozen.


The Celtics laugh it up on the bench during their win over the Nets on Wednesday.
NBAE via Getty Images

A year ago this week — last Feb. 8 — the Nets had taken a 126-91 beating at the hands of Boston. In that one, they’d fallen behind 14-0 and 28-2.They reenacted the nightmare again Wednesday, in by far the Nets’ worst showing since losing Durant to a sprained MCL on Jan. 8.Their previous worst effort in this 11-game span had been an 11-point loss at home to these same Celtics in the game immediately following Durant’s injury. They’d already hit that deficit 3:31 into Wednesday’s game, behind 14-3 on Brown’s pull-up 3-pointer.That deficit hit 27-4 on a Tatum pull-up 3 with 5:35 left in the first, the Nets shooting a wretched 1 of 11 while Boston had hit 11 of 17. It looked like a misprint, but it wasn’t the scoreboard that was malfunctioning, but the Nets.

The Nets trailed 46-16 after the opening quarter, the biggest first-quarter lead in Celtics’ franchise history — and the 17-time champions have a ton of history. The deficit ballooned to 34 at halftime and 38 to end the third quarter.

By the time Luke Kornet’s running dunk pushed it to a mind-bending 127-78 with 7:32 left to play, the contest was for all intents and purposes over. The benches had been cleared and the rest was garbage time.

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