Billy Donovan Just Sent Bulls Fans A Brutal Final Message

Billy Donovan, a veteran coach and Naismith Hall of Fame inductee, is set to bring his extensive experience to the San Antonio Spurs as Mitch Johnson's lead assistant.

The San Antonio Spurs have brought Billy Donovan onto their staff, with ESPN reporting that the former Chicago Bulls coach will serve as Mitch Johnson’s lead assistant.

Donovan stepped away from the Bulls in April, and now he’s headed back to the bench in a new role. The 61-year-old is set to work in San Antonio as an assistant coach for the first time in more than 30 years, a notable turn for someone whose coaching path has mostly been defined by leading teams rather than supporting them.

His career started under Rick Pitino at Kentucky before he took over at Marshall in 1994. After two seasons there, Donovan spent 19 years at Florida, where he won two national championships. He moved to the NBA in 2015 and spent five years with the Oklahoma City Thunder and six with the Bulls, finishing with a 469-413 record.

Donovan’s NBA run had its high points and frustrations. Oklahoma City made the postseason in each of his five seasons there, but Chicago reached the playoffs only once during his time in charge.

That came in 2021-22 and ended with a first-round exit. The Bulls also missed the postseason and finished below .500 in Donovan’s final four seasons, even though the organization said after major front-office changes that it wanted him back next season.

Donovan chose to move on.

“After a series of thoughtful and extensive discussions with ownership regarding the future of the organization, I have decided to step away as the head coach of the Chicago Bulls, to allow the search process to unfold,” Donovan said. “I believe it is in the best interest of the Bulls, to allow the new leader to build out the staff as they see fit.”

Before landing in San Antonio, Donovan had drawn interest elsewhere. ESPN reported that he interviewed with the Orlando Magic before they hired Sean Sweeney.

Weeks earlier, the University of North Carolina was also said to be interested, but Donovan would not speak with UNC or any other college program until the NBA season was over. By then, Michael Malone had already been named the Tar Heels’ coach.

Donovan takes over the spot left by Sweeney, who served as Johnson’s lead assistant last season as the Spurs went all the way to the NBA Finals and lost to the New York Knicks in five games. It was Johnson’s first season as San Antonio’s full-time head coach after taking over on an interim basis when Gregg Popovich had a stroke in 2024-25.

Donovan is also a member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame’s class of 2025.

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