Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Pelicans executive VP of basketball operations Joe Dumars confirmed that the team will embark on a head coaching search and that in-season replacement James Borrego will be a candidate for the permanent job, according to Rod Walker of NOLA.com (subscription required).
“What makes him a viable candidate is his ability to communicate with the team every day and to do it in a positive way every day,” Dumars said of Borrego, who took over for Willie Green in November. “What James did well this year was never let the building completely collapse. He always tried to keep the team up and positive. That’s exactly what you want to see, especially in a situation where he took over and it could have slid.”
Names like Darvin Ham, Kevin Ollie, and Jamahl Mosley have also been connected to the Pelicans’ head coaching position, but Dumars suggested the team isn’t far enough along in the process to have a list of legitimate candidates yet.
“Some of the stuff you wake up and see in this seat is so far-fetched and not even remotely close to being true. I saw a lot of that this year, if I’m being honest. I saw names pop up in trades. I saw coaches lists,” Dumars said. “We don’t even have a list like that right now. We have got names that we’ve been talking about.
“Sometimes I’m just thinking, ‘Where is that coming from?’ It’s amazing. We are going to go through this process the right way. We are going to figure out what’s best for New Orleans.”
Here’s more on the Pelicans:
- Rather than citing specific positions or skills the Pelicans will be targeting this offseason, Dumars pointed to a certain mentality that he’ll be focusing on as he and the front office consider roster additions, per Walker. “I would add more toughness to this team,” he said. “We have to be able to compete every night. We cannot get banged around, pushed around. We have to be physical and compete every night. There were some nights we did it, but too many nights we didn’t compete at a high enough level for me. You can’t get past that in this league. We have talent. But if you think you’re just going to roll talent out on an NBA court and that’s all you need to do to win, that’s not going to happen.”
- Dumars told reporters, including Walker, that he doesn’t believe the Pelicans are that far away from being a winning team and that he’d not anticipating a protracted rebuilding process. “We had a tremendous amount of very close games that we should have won,” he said. “When you have that many games where you are right there to win and you don’t know yet how to close out games, that’s different than getting blown out by 20 every night. When you get blown out by 20 every night, I’ve got to look around the room with staff and scouts and say, ‘We are not good enough, we are not talented enough and don’t have enough depth to win here.’ I don’t feel that. I feel that we are close enough. But it takes some work.”
- Asked about whether Zion Williamson and Derik Queen can play alongside one another in the Pelicans’ frontcourt, Dumars – who dismissed the idea of seeking a Williamson trade this offseason – suggested that he’s willing to be patient and give the duo a chance to prove it can succeed. “I always chuckle when people ask, ‘Can they play together?'” the veteran executive said, according to William Guillory of The Athletic. “You’ve got to allow people to grow in this league. I didn’t know if I could fit with (former Pistons guard) Isiah (Thomas) or not. But I knew we had great IQs and we could figure it out. Sometimes, you’ve got to let players figure it out.”
- New Orleans doesn’t control its own first-round pick, having traded it to Atlanta last year in order to draft Queen. However, Dumars expressed confidence in the Pelicans’ ability to acquire a first-rounder this June if they want to, tweets Guillory. Of course, trading into the back half of the first round is far more realistic than getting back into the lottery.

Thank you Joe Dumars – A Hawks fan
Another dumpster run franchise
Zion can only fit in between a bun.
Not much to do here in all honesty
Extend Sadiq is a given and priority number 1, 2 and 3
They can scope the market on Herb but I don’t think they will like the intel it brings back . A once sell for profit candidate might have slipped to just a sell to get off the salary with Herb – Luckily he fits (by 200k) into the MLE which about 20 teams have access too this summer
Id think netting something like the 25th pick via Lakers (cap) would be about his highpoint on value if shopped . As a Laker fan Id pass just giving an example on what Pelicans might be able to do. Most likely just a hold on Herb until next trade deadline
They’re not far away from being a winning team. Before last year, the NOP were a 49 win team (and in at least a play-in team the prior 2 seasons). All with a roster no better than their current one, just healthier. If the NOP can move on from Zion and Poole in the next year, their talent-to-payroll-to-age ratio actually becomes quite good. The lack of a star will keep them below the true contention level, but this is not an untalented roster when healthy.
NOP are one of several teams that I would think would not want the tanking rules changed, at least as it affects the next couple of drafts. I’m not thinking of the teams that might want to tank themselves in the future, as they just won’t or might not based on the changes. It’s the teams that are currently holding unprotected FRPs of other teams that figure to be very bad. NOP, for instance, holds MIL’s 2027 FRP. The opposite situation exists for teams currently holding FRPs of other teams that figure to be pretty good. BKN, for example, holds the NYK’s 2027, 2029 and 2031 FRPs. The value of NOP’s MIL pick goes down, and that of BKN’s NYK picks go up, upon enacting of the changes.