Stan Van Gundy: Kings’ treatment of Tyrone Corbin ‘inexcusable’

Jan 4, 2015; Auburn Hills, MI, USA; Detroit Pistons head coach Stan Van Gundy during the first quarter against the Sacramento Kings at The Palace of Auburn Hills. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports
Jan 4, 2015; Auburn Hills, MI, USA; Detroit Pistons head coach Stan Van Gundy during the first quarter against the Sacramento Kings at The Palace of Auburn Hills. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-USA TODAY Sports /
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Stan Van Gundy, via Vince Ellis of the Detroit Free Press:

"“I think it’s an unfortunate situation the way it’s been handled. I think Tyrone Corbin has been treated very, very poorly by their organization. I think the way they’ve treated him is unfortunate and inexcusable for one of the real class acts in our business.“To have a very public coaching, not search, courting going on and while you’re asking him to coach games I think he’s handled it with a great deal of class.”"

"“I didn’t like that obviously with Brendan on the staff, but coaches get fired all the time,” Van Gundy said. “But then you give Tyrone the job and if you want to make a change, even if people don’t like it, obviously as an owner you have a right to make a change and that’s up to you.“But you don’t need to do it the way they’re doing it now. That thing’s been in the news for two weeks now and Tyrone’s coaching and they obviously don’t have any problem treating him like that. I have a hard time understanding that one, I really do. Tyrone Corbin is a class act. He was a class act as a player. He’s a class act as a coach and he’s being treated very, very poorly.”"

The Kings fired Michael Malone, son of Pistons assistant Brendan Malone. They replaced him with assistant Tyrone Corbin, even giving Corbin a new contract to coach the rest of the season. Then, they fired Corbin to hire George Karl.

Van Gundy is making this his crusade. He just took up for fired Magic coach Jacque Vaughn, and he’s slamming Sacramento.

Of course, he didn’t bring up how he treated the Kings in 2007, when he was negotiating with them after initially believing the Heat – who still had him under contract – wouldn’t release him to the Magic.

Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel:

"Van Gundy agreed to become the Magic’s coach, signing and faxing a copy of his contract back to Orlando from a Sacramento Kinko’s.Van Gundy did not keep the Kings abreast of the developing situation in Orlando, however.“I’m not happy with the way I handled the whole thing,” Van Gundy said before the Magic faced the Kings on Tuesday night.“I was not forthcoming on that day and I should have been when things started to break in Orlando.“I was totally acting in my own self interest.”"

Me at ProBasketballTalk:

"To the contrary, the Kings were pretty forthcoming with Corbin. He was struggling, and they replaced him with a better coach. How else were they supposed to go about it?They had to make sure all their ducks were in a row – including with franchise player DeMarcus Cousins – and negotiate a contract with Karl. In the meantime, they needed someone to coach their games.That was Corbin, who got a new contract after Sacramento fired Malone. Corbin will still get his money, and so it’s hard to get too upset about this.I get why coaches stick up for other coaches. They understand the perils of the profession, and they don’t like when one of their own gets fired. But if they whine about every dismissal, they lose credibility on their reasonable complaints.Corbin just wasn’t up to the job. That – not the Kings’ treatment of him – was the problem."