Nationality American Listed height 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) Name Bernie Bickerstaff | Listed weight 185 lb (84 kg) Role Basketball Coach Coaching career 1968–2014 | |
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College San Diego Toreros men's basketball Teams coached Los Angeles Lakers (Head coach, since 2012), Los Angeles Lakers (Assistant Coach, until 2012) Similar People Mike Brown, J B Bickerstaff, Mike D'Antoni, Byron Scott, Steve Clifford |
Early Offenses - Bernie Bickerstaff - Basketball Fundamentals
Bernard Tyrone Bickerstaff (born February 11, 1944) is an American basketball coach. He previously worked as the head coach for the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics, Denver Nuggets, Washington Bullets/Wizards, Charlotte Bobcats, and Los Angeles Lakers. He has also been an assistant for the Portland Trail Blazers, Chicago Bulls, Los Angeles Lakers, and Cleveland Cavaliers. He has served in numerous other NBA front office positions, and has been a consultant for the Harlem Globetrotters.
Contents
- Early Offenses Bernie Bickerstaff Basketball Fundamentals
- Espnla dwight howard on bernie bickerstaff and the new coaching search
- Early years
- Professional career
- Awards and accolades
- Personal
- References

Espnla dwight howard on bernie bickerstaff and the new coaching search
Early years

He was born in Benham, Kentucky, where his father and grandfather worked in the coal mines. He often had to endure open racism. He attended East Benham High School, where he was the starting point guard of the basketball team.

After graduating in 1961, he moved to Cleveland where he had relatives, with the idea of joining the Army, but he instead accepted a basketball scholarship to play for Rio Grande College. The racial tension he experienced during his time playing there made him leave school early and head back to Cleveland to work in a steel mill. However, the difficult working conditions prompted him to accept a second opportunity to play college basketball at the University of San Diego from 1964 to 1966. As a senior, he was named team captain and MVP, when the Toreros finished 17-11 and went on to play at the Small College Regional Playoffs. He is a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity. His wife, Mrs. Bickerstaff, is a 4th grade teacher in Wykoff, New Jersey.
Professional career

After finishing his college eligibility, he was hired by his coach Phil Woolpert to serve as an assistant for the 1968–69 season. After three seasons at 25 years old, he was named the head coach of the University of San Diego after Woolpert's abrupt resignation, keeping this position for the next four years. In 1972–1973 his team finished 19–9 and his four-year overall record was 54–49.
In 1973, Bickerstaff was hired as an assistant for the Washington Bullets by then coach K. C. Jones and was a part of the 1978 Bullets NBA Championship. He left the team after 12 seasons, when Lenny Wilkens hired him for the head coaching position with the Seattle SuperSonics (1985–1990), reaching the Western Conference Finals in 1987.
Bickerstaff was the Denver Nuggets' president and general manager from 1990 to 1997, also coaching the team from 1994 to 1996.
In 1997, Wes Unseld hired him to coach the Bullets, making the playoffs for the first time since 1988 and becoming the league's all-time 34th-winningest coach. After parting ways with the team in 1999, he had a two-year stint with the International Basketball League's Saint Louis Swarm. Bickerstaff was twice named IBL Coach of the Year.
In 2003, he was hired by Ed Tapscott to become the expansion Charlotte Bobcats' first head coach and general manager.
Bickerstaff was hired by the Los Angeles Lakers in 2012–13 as an assistant coach to Mike Brown. On November 9, 2012, Bickerstaff was named interim head coach of the Lakers after Brown was fired. Three days later, the Lakers signed former Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni as their official head coach, although D'Antoni's on-court debut was delayed as he recovered from knee-replacement surgery. Bickerstaff continued to coach the Lakers in D'Antoni's absence, ending his stint with a 4–1 record, the highest winning percentage in Lakers' history, albeit in only five games. He continued with the team as an assistant coach, but was fired after the season.
In the summer of 2013, Bickerstaff became an assistant coach with the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Awards and accolades
Personal
Bickerstaff also worked as a TV and radio analyst with the Washington Wizards, San Antonio Spurs, NBA.com and the Sporting News Radio.
Bernie's son, J. B. Bickerstaff, is an associate head coach for the Memphis Grizzlies.