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<![endif]--> MINNEAPOLIS -- In 1½ seasons with the
Minnesota Timberwolves, Dwane Casey became known for his even-keeled
demeanor, for never getting too high or too low. His team never could capture that same consistency on the court,
which ultimately led to the coach's ouster. Timberwolves vice president of basketball operations Kevin
McHale fired Casey on Tuesday, one day after Minnesota lost its
fourth consecutive game.
"I've been in basketball 29 years, and this is going to be my first
time out of basketball," Casey told ESPN Insider's Chris Sheridan. "But
you understand what you're getting into when you enter this business." ESPN's Ric Bucher first reported the firing earlier Tuesday. "We were at a point as a team where we were just treading
water," McHale said. "The ups and downs, we just couldn't find
any consistency." The month of January was a microcosm of Casey's tenure. The Timberwolves looked to be turning the corner at the start of
the new year, when they opened 2007 with seven wins in their first
eight games. But they lost their next four games, including one to Phoenix
without leading scorers Kevin Garnett and Ricky Davis, who were
suspended. Garnett was suspended by the league for a confrontation
with Detroit's Antonio McDyess, while Davis was suspended by the
team for acting out during Friday night's game with the Pistons. "It was just basically two steps up the hill and two steps
down," McHale said. "We were never able to establish a style of
play that we could bank on over and over again." Team owner Glen Taylor did not return messages from The Associated Press. Assistant coach Randy Wittman will take over as interim coach in
a situation similar to 2005, when longtime coach Flip Saunders was
fired in midseason and replaced on the bench by McHale. McHale had no designs on taking over permanently, so he turned
to Casey, who spent the previous 14 years as an assistant. Casey
was just 33-49 in his first season, one made more difficult by an
eight-player trade with Boston at midseason that upset the
chemistry of a group that had been together for some time. The Wolves brought Wittman and longtime assistant Bob Ociepka
onto Casey's staff for this season, hoping an influx of experience
would help the first-time head coach with his game management. "We've got to find our way off the roller-coaster," Wittman
said Tuesday night after the team's practice in Portland, Ore. While the team has shown some improvement this season,
especially in closing out close games, the inconsistencies on both
ends of the floor left them 20-20 following Monday night's 106-91
loss at Utah. "I'm not bitter," Casey told Sheridan. "It's a situation where today
we're in the playoffs. I'm proud that I've given them a lot of hard
days' work and never shortchanged them." The .500 record wasn't good enough for Taylor, who wants his team to return
to the form that made it a Western Conference finalist in 2004. He
also knows that the Timberwolves have to start winning now to
placate Garnett, the former MVP who has made it clear on more than
one occasion that he is growing tired of the mediocrity. "We just had these unbelievable swings inside of a week, inside
of a game," McHale said. "We were just very erratic." But Garnett has most frequently directed his ire toward McHale,
who has struggled to surround the superstar with enough talent to
compete in the powerful West. Garnett has seldom criticized Casey
in his tenure here. McHale traded veteran Sam Cassell and a No. 1 draft pick to the
Clippers for Marko Jaric, and sacrificed valuable cap room by
spending millions on contracts for Jaric, Troy Hudson and Eddie
Griffin, all of whom have not panned out in Minnesota. "The success of the team starts with me and ends with me,"
McHale said. Casey and the Timberwolves improved to 20-16 last week after a
94-90 victory at Detroit. But they followed that up with an ugly
home loss to Atlanta and a double-overtime loss to the Pistons
before starting a five-game road trip with back-to-back blowouts
against Phoenix and Utah. "We all feel responsible," forward Mark Madsen said. "We wish
we had got the job done, and we would not be in the position we are
in now." Now it's Wittman's turn. It will be his second try as a head
coach, having compiled a 62-102 record in two seasons with
Cleveland from 1999-2001. Wittman is plenty familiar with the Timberwolves, having served
as an assistant here in three different stints for a total of 10
seasons. "He knows Kevin, our top player, very, very well," McHale
said. "Witt's going to be the coach for the rest of the year. I
fully anticipate Randy being here a long time." Casey's firing means Saunders, who spent almost 10 seasons at
the helm, is the only coach in the franchise's 18 years to last
more than two seasons. "I will do all in my power to put them in a position to win,"
Wittman said. "But they've got to win."
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