Lawrence Frank

Coach

Birthday August 23, 1970

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace New York City, New York, U.S.

Age 53 years old

Nationality United States

#48025 Most Popular

1970

Lawrence Adam Frank (born August 23, 1970) is an American basketball coach and executive who serves as president of basketball operations for the Los Angeles Clippers of the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Frank formerly served as head coach of the Detroit Pistons and the New Jersey Nets, he has also been an assistant coach for the Boston Celtics and the Nets.

1988

He graduated from Teaneck High School in 1988 but never made the school's basketball team.

He attended Camp Greylock for Boys, a sports camp in the Berkshires.

Frank, who is Jewish, played for a Jewish Community Center team and was also a player-coach for a Catholic Youth Organization team.

During his time at Indiana the Hoosiers won the Big Ten Conference championship twice, once in the 1988–89 season and again in the 1990–91 season.

1991

His senior year, during the 1991–92 season, Indiana reached the 1992 NCAA Final Four but fell to Duke in a foul-plagued game in Minneapolis.

Frank has frequently cited Knight as a role model and mentor.

Asked what he learned most of Knight, he said, "It's more of what he stood for. If you work hard and are trustworthy it will carry you a long way. Master your subject matter, have confidence, be reliable and sincere. He is a great mentor and teacher to have at age 18. With him you started at the bottom and were given nothing. Everything you got, you earned—sweat equity."

Frank served as an assistant coach at the University of Tennessee for three seasons under Head coach Kevin O'Neill.

1992

He earned his B.S. in education from Indiana University in 1992, where he spent four seasons as a manager for the Hoosier basketball team coached by Bob Knight.

Frank first worked with O'Neill as a staff assistant at Marquette University in 1992 and during his tenure, helped lead the Marquette Warriors to two NCAA tournament berths and a Sweet Sixteen appearance in 1994.

Frank then spent three seasons as an assistant coach for the Vancouver Grizzlies under Brian Hill.

Hill would later serve as Frank's assistant with the New Jersey Nets.

His responsibilities with the Grizzlies included scouting upcoming opponents as well as practice and bench coaching duties.

2004

Frank became the interim head coach of the New Jersey Nets on January 26, 2004, succeeding Byron Scott, after serving as an assistant coach with the team since the 2000–01 season.

He officially became the head coach of the Nets on June 21, 2004.

Frank began his NBA head coaching career by achieving a 13–0 record from January 27 to February 24, 2004, setting a new NBA record for the most consecutive wins by a rookie NBA head coach.

The 13-game winning streak was also the longest winning streak of a rookie head coach in any of North America's four major professional sports leagues.

During this streak, the Nets won six consecutive games on the road, giving Frank the mark for the most road-game wins by a rookie head coach.

2006

The Nets picked up the extension option in Frank’s contract on June 6, 2006, and added a two-year extension on July 23, 2007.

2009

However, Frank's tenure as Nets head coach ended on November 29, 2009, after the Nets began the season with an 0–16 record.

This streak was ongoing at the time of his dismissal and continued afterwards.

Frank was the only coach ever in the NBA to start and end his tenure with a team with a double-digit winning streak and losing streak.

Following his firing, Frank worked as an analyst for NBATV.

2010

On July 15, 2010, Frank was hired by the Boston Celtics, replacing Tom Thibodeau as the lead assistant coach on Doc Rivers' coaching staff.

2011

On August 3, 2011, Frank was introduced as the head coach of the Detroit Pistons.

2012

After a loss to Oklahoma City Thunder on November 12, 2012, the Pistons fell to 0–8.

This made Frank the third coach in the history of the NBA to start at least 0–8 with two separate franchises.

2013

On April 18, 2013, Frank was fired by the Pistons after going 54–94 in two seasons.

On June 28, 2013, he gave in to rookie coach Jason Kidd's rather public recruiting efforts to make Frank (who had coached Kidd when he played for the Nets) his lead assistant coach on the now-Brooklyn Nets.

Frank's contract made him the highest-paid assistant coach in the NBA at the time (approximately $6 million over 6 years).

Preferring to delegate his authority, Kidd stated that Frank's role would be to run the team's defense, while being Kidd's head-coaching mentor.

Kidd placed another assistant coach, John Welch, in charge of the team's offense.

On December 3, 2013, Frank was demoted—relegated by Nets head coach Jason Kidd to merely filing team evaluation reports.

This so-called "re-assignment" meant that Frank would be banned from being on the bench during games and from even attending team practices.

This resulted from escalating tensions and squabbling between the two over the 'right' coaching philosophies, strategies, and tactics for the team.

2014

On September 25, 2014, Frank joined the Los Angeles Clippers staff after reaching a buyout agreement with the Nets.

2020

Frank was honored with the 2020 NBA Executive of the Year Award after acquiring both Paul George and Kawhi Leonard during the 2019 offseason.

Frank was born in New York City, and grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey.