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Reeves, two other pro coaches fired

6 min read

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP) – Dan Reeves had only one request for his boss: If you’re going to fire me, let me know first. When Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank delivered the grim news, Reeves reacted in typical fashion.

Too proud to hang around as a lame duck, Reeves asked to be let go immediately. So, a 23-year run as an NFL head coach may have ended Wednesday with three games left in a disappointing season.

The Falcons (3-10) had high hopes after making the second round of the playoffs last season. But the team collapsed after Michael Vick broke his leg in a preseason game.

Reeves’ firing came just three days after Vick made his first start of the season, leading the Falcons to a 20-14 overtime victory over NFC South-leading Carolina.

“If the decision had already been made to release me, my feelings were that I would like it to be immediately,” said Reeves, the sixth-winningest coach in NFL history. “It’s like calling a player in and saying, ‘I’m going to release you but I want you to play three more games until I find somebody to replace you.”‘

Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips, a former head coach in Denver and Buffalo, will take over for the rest of the season.

On Tuesday, Blank told Reeves that he would be fired at the end of the season but wanted him to coach the last three games. Reeves wouldn’t think of it.

Jagr does in Caps’ Cassidy

ODENTON, Md. – The daring move ultimately failed for the Washington Capitals.

The team pulled Bruce Cassidy from the minor leagues 18 months ago, hoping the bright and brash coach with no NHL bench experience could handle the likes of Jaromir Jagr.

But with the Capitals tied for last place in the NHL, Cassidy was fired Wednesday.

“We are in this spiral this season, and I couldn’t sit back any longer,” general manager George McPhee said. “We still have every intention of making the playoffs. Ten games under .500 this time of year is dangerous. We can’t lose any more ground.”

Assistant coach Glen Hanlon will replace Cassidy, and he immediately promised a patient approach that appears a stark contrast from the in-your-face style that hindered Cassidy’s adjustment to the big leagues.

Hanlon joined the staff last season after spending three seasons as coach of the Portland Pirates, Washington’s AHL affiliate.

Suns’ Johnson fired after 8-13 start

PHOENIX – Frank Johnson was fired on Wednesday as coach of the Phoenix Suns, a young team with high expectations that is off to an 8-13 start and has lost six of its last seven games.

The Suns promoted lead assistant Mike D’Antoni, a star player and highly successful coach in Italy who coached the Denver Nuggets in the lockout-shortened 1998-99 season.

“There’s been something amiss all year, in my opinion,” Suns owner Jerry Colangelo said. “The more I saw on the floor, the more I disliked what I saw as it related to body language, communication or lack of same.”

D’Antoni, under contract through next season, promised to immediately try to boost the tempo, beginning with the next game Thursday night at home against New Orleans.

“It should be exciting the first couple of nights. Balls should be flying around. We’ll try not to hurt anybody,” D’Antoni said.

“But hopefully it will make it exciting, anyway.”

Bryan Colangelo, the owner’s son and president of the Suns’ basketball operations, accompanied the team on its four-game trip to the East. He watched Phoenix blow a 22-point early lead in Orlando on Monday night and lose to a Magic team that had dropped 19 straight.

On Tuesday night, the Suns looked unmotivated in a 92-72 loss at Miami.

On the long plane ride home, the younger Colangelo said, he began seriously thinking about a coaching change.

“Reflecting back to a few things that I was observing on the road trip, and just reflecting back over the past several weeks and months, it became pretty apparent,” he said.

Johnson spent 10 years in the Suns organization as a player, community relations official and coach. Known as “Fourth-Quarter Frank” for his shooting ability, he was a key reserve on the 1993 team that reached the NBA Finals.

Johnson replaced Scott Skiles as the Suns’ head coach late in the 2001-02 season, going 11-20 the rest of the way.

Last season, Johnson guided the team to a 44-38 record and a surprising playoff berth. The Suns – led by the athletic trio of Stephon Marbury, Amare Stoudemire and Shawn Marion – played San Antonio tough in the first round but lost to the eventual NBA champions.

This year’s season began with high expectations, but it was obvious that last year’s chemistry had, for the most part, disappeared.

“Everybody’s got to be in the trench together and it just didn’t seem that way,” Jerry Colangelo said. “That’s not pointing fingers at anyone, but the bottom line was something’s got to change.”

Injuries to Stoudemire and first-round draft pick Zarko Cabarkapa added to the team’s woes. Stoudemire is out for about four more weeks with an ankle injury. Cabarkapa will be sidelined for five to seven weeks with a broken wrist.

But D’Antoni, who expressed admiration of Johnson’s work and accepted part of the blame for the team’s failures, said the Suns can be much better.

“It just wasn’t working out for whatever reason,” D’Antoni said. “It is a change, and it does put the onus back on the players, and they understand that.”

D’Antoni, 52, has dual citizenship in Italy and the United States. A star point guard at Marshall, he played one season for the Kansas City-Omaha Kings before spending 13 seasons with Milan of the Italian League.

He led the team to five Italian League titles and two Cups of Europe championships. D’Antoni coached Benetton Treviso of the Italian League from 1994-97, capturing the Cup of Europe title in 1995 and the Italian League crown in 1997. He returned to coach Benetton again in 2001.

D’Antoni, whose Denver team went 14-36 in 1998-99 season, wants to restore some energy to the Suns.

“We’ve got to get some excitement into the arena,” he said. “Sometimes this year, it felt kind of down, like we were waiting to let the cannon fall on our head, like “When are we going to mess up so people can talk bad about us?”‘

He wants to give the players freedom to run.

“We’re getting up and down,” D’Antoni said. “It will be some adjusting and there will be some bad shots going up. I’m going to tell you that right now. It will take awhile to get that out of their system. But I’m not going to pull the reins back on them.”

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