ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -Billy Donovan is out in Orlando, and his cold feet could cost both him and the Magic.
The Magic finally let Donovan out of a $5.5 million annual deal late Wednesday night after news broke days ago he was having second thoughts. Donovan may have stained a good reputation built on two straight championships at Florida.
Orlando is still coachless, and could miss out on second choice Stan Van Gundy if the Sacramento Kings hire him quickly.
The Gators coach walked out of his first NBA job after just six days to return to Gainesville, where he won the last two national titles.
return to the Gators.”
Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley, reached late Wednesday by The Associated Press, said: “It’s great news for the Gators.”
Foley withheld further comment until a Thursday morning news conference.
Van Gundy, a former Heat coach and current adviser to Pat Riley, has said publicly he’d love the Orlando job, but the Magic’s indecision with Donovan may have cost them a shot at Van Gundy.
The Kings confirmed Wednesday that Van Gundy was in Sacramento for further discussions about becoming their head coach. Further, Van Gundy is under contract for another year in Miami, and the Heat reportedly want compensation if the division rival Magic hire him. Sacramento might not have to pay such a penalty.
The Magic could offer one or more of its three second-round draft picks, Nos. 39, 44 and 54. Orlando has no first-round pick in the upcoming draft, and the Heat have only one pick, No. 20 overall.
The Magic-Donovan romance was a carousel act that stunned fans twice – with his Thursday hiring, then an out-of-nowhere weekend reversal.
Magic fans met Donovan with rousing applause at a nationally televised news conference Friday as he replaced Brian Hill, who was fired after two losing seasons in his second stint with the team.
Donovan said he agonized over the jump to the NBA, but wanted a new challenge. He promised to bring passion to the pros and saw in the Magic a young team with enough talent and salary cap room to succeed where most college coaches failed.
Donovan always wanted to try the NBA, and the Magic job was perfect: five years, $27.5 million, and his family could even stay in Gainesville while he worked 115 miles away. Coming off the first consecutive national championships in 15 years, his stock would never be higher.
The 42-year-old took the jump. But in the end, the builder of a college power couldn’t leave Gators glory behind.
Donovan is the most successful coach in Florida history, getting to three national championship games in just 11 years. He first left Florida after the school lost its top six scorers, four of them juniors who opted to enter the upcoming NBA draft after the Gators’ second title.
Donovan was set to sign a seven-year contract worth approximately $3.5 million annually with Florida, a deal that was nearly finished when he agreed to coach the Magic.
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AP Sports Writer Mark Long contributed to this report from Gainesville.
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