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Scott Fowler: New Charlotte Hornets head coach Charles Lee has one job that matters most of all

Scott Fowler, The Charlotte Observer on

Published in Basketball

In Charlotte, that’s by far the hardest part.

When Lee looked out at the crowd gathered for his news conference Tuesday — held at Lowe’s Tech Hub in South End because the Spectrum Center is under renovation — the team’s co-owners Rick Schnall and Gabe Plotkin were on his right. Several of his future players filled in the seats to his left. General manager Jeff Peterson sat directly next to him.

While the men on his right are going to pay his salary and while Peterson will supply his roster and talk to him constantly, it’s the men on the left who will actually be most important to his future. One is Brandon Miller, who had a stellar rookie season and — unlike LaMelo Ball — showed a predilection last season for durability.

A guard himself during his own playing days at Bucknell, Lee has something of a reputation as a guard whisperer. What he can get out of the Ball-Miller tandem will go a long way toward determining how poorly or well these Hornets play.

Toward the end of his 30-minute news conference, I asked Lee what he could promise the team’s about the future. “What I would say to the fans right now is that as I went through this process, Gabe, Rick and Jeff made it clear to me that they wanted this to be one of the premier franchises in the NBA,” Lee said. “And they explained to me how passionate a fan base the Carolinas can be. And as soon as I heard those two things, I was all in. ... The things we can promise from this team is they’re going to be very competitive, they’re going to be very together, and we’re going to be focused on what we can control is our daily progress, process and effort.”

It’s true that Schnall and Plotkin — who bought the team from former owner Michael Jordan almost a year ago — are aiming high. They toss that word “premier” around pretty often, and it’s a pretty word to aspire to.

Lee knows what world-class talent looks like. He just left the world champion Boston Celtics, after all. But he insists that the Hornets aren’t that far off.

 

“I think we have a very, very good team,” Lee said. “We’ve been snake-bitten, I think, with some injuries. But I’m looking forward to this talent-rich group doing everything they can to be healthy.”

Did that quote sound like it was pointed toward LaMelo? Ah, that’s probably just me being cynical. I’ve watched too many hundreds of Hornets losses to get very optimistic in any offseason. Ball played in only 22 of a possible 82 games last season, due to the same old ankle injuries that flare up for him most every year.

The Hornets still have free agency and the 2024 NBA Draft to improve a roster that has talent but certainly isn’t “talent-rich,” as Lee said.

There is, in other words, a lot of work to do. Lee sounded Tuesday like a man very much looking forward to doing it, and he better be.

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