These are the current coaches for each NBA team:
Atlanta Hawks: Larry Drew
Boston Celtics: Doc Rivers
Charlotte Bobcats: Paul Silas
Chicago Bulls: Tom Thibodeau
Cleveland Cavaliers: Byron Scott
Dallas Mavericks: Rick Carlisle
Denver Nuggets: George Karl
Detroit Pistons: John Kuester
Golden State Warriors: Keith Smart
Houston Rockets: Rick Adelman
Indiana Pacers: Frank Vogel
Los Angeles Clippers: Vinny Del Negro
Los Angeles Lakers: Phil Jackson
Memphis Grizzlies: Lionel Hollins
Miami Heat: Erik Spoelstra
Milwaukee Bucks: Scott Skiles
Minnesota Timberwolves: Kurt Rambis
New Jersey Nets: Avery Johnson
New Orleans Hornets: Monty Williams
New York Knicks: Mike D'Antoni
Oklahoma City Thunder: Scott Brooks
Orlando Magic: Stan Van Gundy
Philadelphia 76ers: Doug Collins
Phoenix Suns: Alvin Gentry
Portland Trail Blazers: Nate McMillan
Sacramento Kings: Paul Westphal
San Antonio Spurs: Gregg Popovich
Toronto Raptors: Jay Triano
Utah Jazz: Jerry Sloan
Washington Wizards: Flip Saunders
There are 30 major league teams. Each team has @8 coaches ( this varies by team) for a total of around 240 coaches. There are 5 managers and 37 total black coaches in the major leagues. The Dodgers have the most with 4 while 6 teams do not have any black coaches. Of the 37 coaches 13 are of Latino decent. The break down is 16 1st Base Coaches, 9 Hitting Coaches, 5 3rd Base coaches, 4 Bullpen coaches, 2 positon coaches and 1 bench coach. There are 0 black pitching coaches. I got these numbers by going to each team's site on MLB.com so feel free to go behind me and double check my numbers.
i think its bill Russel because in terms of winning championships, he has 9 rings on his fingers.. in coaches wins in an nba finals, Phil Jackson is the most wins having 10 championships and its latest win against Orlando magic..
9
No NBA team has ever had an 82-0 season. The most wins in a season was 73-9 by the 2016 Golden State Warriors.
The NBA season is 9 months long.
His head coach in college was Dean Smith. His head coaches in the NBA were, in order: Kevin Loughery (1984/85) - 1 season Stan Albeck (1985/86) - 1 season Doug Collins (1986/87-1988/89) - 3 seasons Phil Jackson (1989/90-1997/98) (545-193) - 9 seasons
82 games unless there is a tie, 16 teams play in the playoffs
9
Teams? There ain't none.
The typical NBA basketball season lasts 82 games for 9 months. The college season lasts about 6 months and the teams play from 24 to 32 games.
During his NBA career Earl Boykins has played for 9 different teams. He has played for the New Jersey Nets, Orlando Magic, Los Angeles Clippers, Golden State Warriors, Denver Nuggets, Charlotte Bobcats, Washington Wizards, and the Huston Rockets. He also for the Cleveland Cavaliers and Milwaukee Bucks two times each during two different seasons.
Bill Russell has 11 NBA rings as a NBA player out of 12 NBA Finals in 13 years as a player in the NBA: Most NBA rings in total by players, head coaches, GMs, and Presidents: 1) Jacob Arnold Auerbach 15 NBA rings in 17 NBA Finals (9 NBA rings as a coach and 6 NBA rings as an executive being GM/President or President for his 6 NBA rings as a NBA team executive) 2) Bill Russell 11 NBA rings as a player in 12 NBA Finals as a player in 13 NBA seasons as a player from 1956 to 1969 (plus 2 NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956 and 1 Gold Medal and 1956, or 14 major championships from 1955 to 1969) 3) Sam Jones 10 NBA rings as a player in 11 NBA Finals as a player in 12 NBA seasons from 1957 to 1969 4) K. C. Jones 10 NBA rings (8 NBA rings as a player in 9 NBA Finals as a player playing 9 years in the NBA as a player from 1958 to 1967; 2 NBA rings as a head coach in 4 NBA Finals from 1984 to 1987 (rings in 1984 and 1986 as a head coach); plus played on 2 NCAA championship teams in 1955 and 1956 (where Pete Rozelle was a public relation official at the University of San Francisco; K.C. Jones was ineligible to play in the NCAA playoffs in 1956 when his team won the NCAA title but played the entire regular season) and 1 Gold Medal in 1956; drafted in 2nd Round by the Celtics in 1956 and drafted by the U.S. Army in 1956, so spent 2 years in the U.S. Army (1956-1958) as property of the Celtics; signed by Pete Rozelle as a DB with the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL in 1958) 4) Tom Heinsohn 10 NBA rings (8 NBA rings as a player in 9 NBA Finals as a player in 9 years as a NBA player from 1956 to 1965, plus 2 NBA rings as a head coach in 2 NBA Finals) 5) Phil Jackson 10 NBA rings (1 NBA ring as a player in 2 NBA Finals (1972 Finals-lost, 1973 Finals-won) in 12 NBA seasons as a player, 6 NBA rings as head coacho of the Chicago Bulls, 3 NBA rings as head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers) 6) Satch Sanders 8 NBA rings in 8 NBA finals in 13 NBA seasons as a player (1960 to 1972 as a NBA player) 6) John Havlicek 8 NBA rings as a player in 8 NBA finals in 16 NBA seasons as a player (1962 to 1978 as a NBA player with NBA rings in 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976) Most rings ONLY as a NBA PLAYER: 1) Bill Russell 11 NBA rings in 12 NBA Finals 2) Sam Jones 10 NBA rings in 11 NBA Finals 3) K. C. Jones 8 NBA rings in 9 NBA Finals 3) Tom Heinsohn 8 NBA rings in 9 NBA Finals 3) Satch Sanders 8 NBA rings in 8 NBA Finals 3) John Havlicek 8 NBA rings in 8 NBA Finals (including rings in 1974 and 1976) Most NBA rings as a NBA player among current active NBA players or NBA head coaches as of the end of the 2006-2007 regular season: 1) Robert Horry 6 NBA rings 2) Don Nelson 5 NBA rings (1965, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976) HONORABLE MENTION: The first player to seven titles was George Mikan with six titles in a seven year period with the Minneapolis Lakers and one title before joining the Minneapolis Lakers with Chicago American Gears: George Mikan of the Minneapolis Lakers (1948, 1949, 1950, 1951, 1953, 1954) George Mikan of the Chicago American Gears