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The 2026 NBA Playoffs highlight the importance of coaching, with rankings for all 16 head coaches still in contention. Coaches face pressure to perform, especially with potential offseason vacancies looming.
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The rankings include coaches like Jamahl Mosley of the Orlando Magic and Tiago Splitter of the Portland Trail Blazers, among others.
Coaches are under pressure to maximize their teams' performance and navigate potential job security issues amidst offseason changes.
Tiago Splitter led the Blazers to a winning record and their first playoff appearance in five years after taking over mid-season.
Injuries to key players like Joel Embiid and Paul George have forced coaches like Nick Nurse to adapt their strategies, affecting team performance.
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The Magic were my preseason NBA Finals pick out of the East, and instead they barely snuck into the playoffs as the No. 8 seed. Orlando was the most disappointing team of the season, and it seemed likely they would try out a new head coach before making a major shake-up to the core once the season ended. Then something funny happened: the Magic finally got healthy and started playing their best basketball at the right time. Orlando looks like it can absolutely win its first-round series against the No. 1 seed Detroit Pistons. If the Magic advance, they probably canāt fire Mosley even if they never should have been the 8-seed to begin with. Mosley deserves a ton of credit for optimizing his defense to limit Cade Cunningham and shutdown Jalen Duren to this point. Everything is fluid in the playoffs, and that includes this ranking of Mosley.
Chauncey Billups was arrested in a federal gambling probe after the first game of the season, and it thrust assistant Tiago Splitter into a head coaching role the rest of the season. All Splitter did was lead the Blazers to a winning record for the first time in five years, and finally get them back into the playoffs. Splitter has been good enough to keep the job going forward, but new owner Tom Dundon is emerging as an unprecedented cheapskate who might not offer him enough money to return. Itās hard to think another coach could have squeezed out many more wins this season, but I do think it would benefit Portland to play faster going forward given their halfcourt scoring troubles. The Blazers rank No. 21 in pace after a defensive rebound, and No. 23 in pace after a turnover. Billups made them play faster before his arrest. Splitter has performed really well in general, but Iām still not super convinced heās a great head coaching candidate long-term.
Nurse won it all with the Toronto Raptors in 2019. Heās still hanging on with the Sixers in 2026, but heās lost his momentum at this point and feels like heās hanging on by a string. Philly ranked in the bottom half of the league in both offensive and defensive efficiency despite Nurse riding Tyrese Maxey so hard that he led the league in minutes per game. The constant injuries to Joel Embiid and Paul George certainly havenāt helped, but it feels like Nurseās āmad scientistā act from Toronto has lost its juice all these years later. It wouldnāt be too surprising if his head coaching days are over either after this series, or after next season.
What a disaster the playoffs are shaping up to be for Udoka and the Rockets. Houston avoided the sweep to the Lakers in Game 4, but thereās no excuses when youāre facing a team without Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves. Udoka just hasnāt been able to find any answers for how to unclog the halfcourt offense. While other teams have been able to hide bad defenders, Udoka has no plan for former No. 3 overall pick Reed Sheppard and still doesnāt trust him. Udoka took the Rockets from 22 wins to 41 wins to 52 wins since arriving, but it feels like Houston is stalling out. We predicted Udoka could lose his job if the Rockets lose the series, and it sure feels like itās trending that way.
Brown was always going to be feeling pressure in his first year as Knicks head coach after taking over for Tom Thibodeau, who had just led the team to the conference finals. So far, itās impossible to say the Knicks upgraded. New Yorkās defense rose from No. 14 to No. 7 during the regular season and the offense finished a couple spots better too, but it just feels like Brown still doesnāt have the answers to the teamās biggest questions. Heās made multiple missteps in his first-round series with the Atlanta Hawks, including playing lineups with Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns multiple times per game. The Hawks are no slouch, but the Knicks still feel like they have the talent advantage in this series, and it would be a complete disaster if they fail to advance. Could Brown be coaching for his job after just one year? Iām not sure if thereās a head coach in the playoffs feeling more heat than Brown.
Reputations can change quickly in the playoffs, and it feels like Darko RajakoviÄās is turning for the better during his first-round series against the Cleveland Cavaliers. RajakoviÄ was hired as a developmental coach, but Scottie Barnes regressed in his first season a year ago, and recent first-round picks JaāKobe Walter and Gradey Dick havenāt contributed much. Well, Barnes roared back to form with the best season of his career in his second season in the system, rookie Collin Murray-Boyles has been an instant impact hybrid forward, and RajakoviÄ squeezed a 16-win improvement out of Toronto this year. RajakoviÄ is drawing praise from every corner for evening the series with Cleveland through four games, showing impressive adaptability on both sides and coming up with a plan to limit the Cavsā pick-and-roll combinations as much as possible. I had Darko a couple spots lower before the weekend, and he could be a couple spots higher by the time this series is over.
Adelman was facing championship-or-bust expectations from the moment he took over for Mike Malone. He performed well in an incredibly difficult situation after getting the job at the very end of last yearās regular season, leading the Nuggets to a 7-game first-round win over the Los Angeles Clippers and then a tough 7-game loss to the eventual champion Thunder. This yearās Nuggets won 54 games even with long injuries to Nikola Jokic, Aaron Gordon, Peyton Watson, and more, but the playoffs havenāt been so kind to them. Minnesotaās Game 4 victory to take a 3-1 series lead despite major injuries to Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo is the type of loss that can blow up a franchise. The Nuggets are getting out-classed in the series, and Adelman hasnāt had any answers to their various problems. Itās possible Denver can still mount a comeback with Minnesotaās starting backcourt out for the series, but Denver simply looks flat and dead right now, so itās hard to expect it will happen. Adelman could quickly find his reputation in the gutter with one more loss.
Bickerstaff once took the Cavs from 22 to 44 to 51 wins, and now heās pulled off a similar turnaround with the Pistons. He inherited a 14-win team when he was hired by Detroit, and immediately won 44 games and then pushed for 60 wins this season to grab the Eastās No. 1 seed. Now Bickerstaff is fighting for his reputation as the Orlando Magic have given him all he can handle in the first-round. The Pistonsā halfcourt offense was middling all year for a team that won at such a high clip, and this playoff run has exposed even more issues, including a failure to maximize Jalen Duren. The Pistons canāt bully the Magic in the same way they pulled a lot of opponents this year, and there have been some questions about how heās handled a deep rotation in this series. Getting eliminated by Orlando would do major damage to Bickerstaffās reputation, and would essentially invalidate the 2026 NBA Coach of the Year that he may win. Add in his struggles in the playoffs in Cleveland too, and Bickerstaff badly needs to take these Pistons on a deep run. Heās definitely a solid coach who deserves a lot of credit for building an elite Pistons defense, but he needs to prove there isnāt a better option out there for a team with NBA Finals aspirations.
Mitch Johnson entered his first full season as Spurs head coach just trying to make the playoffs. Instead, San Antonio blew past its preseason over/under of 44.5 wins by winning 62 games and claiming the No. 2 seed in the West. It might feel like anyone could coach Victor Wembanyama to success, but Johnson did well to convince his superstar big man to cut out some three-point shots, play more frequently at the basket, and cut down his turnovers. Johnson also seamlessly juggled a backcourt with one highly paid veteran (DeāAaron Fox) and two hungry youngsters in DeāAaron Fox and Dylan Harper. He deserves some credit for coaxing career-years out of Julian Champagnie and Sixth Man of the Year Keldon Johnson, too. Johnson is only 39 years old, and will have every opportunity to grow alongside Wembanyama long term.
Atkinson took the Cavs from 48 wins to 64 wins in his first season on the job, but a second-round playoff flameout took some of the shine off his 2025 NBA Coach of the Year award. This season has continued to be a bit sobering for Atkinson and Cleveland, as the Cavs dipped to 52 wins in an injury-marred season that saw the team swap out Darius Garland for James Harden. Cleveland regressed on both ends of the floor, and its No. 1 ranked offense from 2024-25 was exposed as unsustainable. Atkinson has been out-coached by Darko RajakoviÄ at times in this series, and Cleveland risks getting upset if he doesnāt tighten things up and figure out how to puncture a flawed Raptors team. Again: reputations can change quickly in the playoffs, and Atkinson feels like he might be starting to live on the edge, and not in a good way.
The Suns are getting pulverized by the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder in the first round, but that shouldnāt take away from the incredible job Ott did in his first season this year. The Sunsā preseason over/under was set at 30.5 wins, and Ott ended up leading the team to 45 victories and a playoff berth no one saw coming. He found edges on the margins by going all-in on offensive rebounding and trying to force turnovers defensively, and it ended up getting the most out of a group that didnāt have the most talent but always played hard. Taking the next step will be even more difficult for Ott and the Suns, but his first year was a huge success regardless of how this series ends.
Snyder missed the playoffs his first two years with the Jazz before making six straight trips to the postseason, including three 50-win seasons. Are the Hawks on the brink of a similar run of sustained success? Snyder got the Hawks back into the playoffs in his third season with the team despite massive midseason roster turnover. The preseason optimism for Atlanta started with Trae Young and Kristaps Porzingis. Both were traded before the deadline, and now Snyder is coaching up C.J. McCollum, Jonathan Kuminga, and Nickeil Alexander-Walker to go toe-to-toe with the Knicks. Atlanta has consistently found ways to frustrate Jalen Brunson, and they made a sharp move by putting Kuminga on Karl-Anthony Towns. I also give Snyder credit for making the tough decision to take former No. 1 overall pick Zacch Risacher out of the rotation right now. I donāt know if Atlanta will actually win its series against the Knicks, but I do know they should feel good about their head coach long-term.
It wasnāt long ago that the Wolves went 13 straight years without making the playoffs. Under Chris Finch, theyāve made the playoffs in five straight seasons, including two Western Conference Finals trips. Minnesota was on its way to waxing the Denver Nuggets in a first-round series upset when Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo both suffered long-term injuries. If Finch can still get Minnesota to advance despite missing his starting backcourt, it will be proof that heās one of the best coaches in the league. Minnesota fans can get frustrated with his lack of development for young players on the roster, but you canāt argue with the results ā especially for a franchise like the Wolves that spent so many years in the wilderness.
No one expected the Lakers to mount a playoff run without Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves entering the postseason, but somehow they are on the brink of advancing to round two largely due to Redickās brilliance. The Lakers coach has taken full advantage of the Rocketsā shortcomings in terms of ball handling and shooting to put Houston on the precipice of crisis. Redickās strong connection with LeBron James is evident in this series as the 41-year-old continues to play at a high level, but heās also getting good play out of Luke Kennard and Marcus Smart. Redick has zero coaching experience when he was hired off his podcast a couple years ago, but heās made the most of a changing roster in a pressure-cooker environment. The Lakers are being rewarded for their belief in him, and now he may be one of the best coaches in the league.
Mark Daigneault spent his first three seasons building up the Thunder without a playoff appearance. Ever since, theyāve been one of the best teams in the league, and now theyāre trying to make history. No NBA team has won back-to-back championships since the Kevin Durant-era Warriors, but the Thunder are the favorites to repeat after winning their first title since moving to OKC last year. Daigneault has done well to set up an elite defense that blurs the lines between physicality and fouling, and he knows how to stay out of Shai Gilgeous-Alexanderās way on offense. It might feel like anyone could coach the Thunder to success, but that would be taking Daigneaultās success for granted.
This was supposed to be a gap year for the Celtics with Jayson Tatum coming off a torn Achilles. Instead, Boston zoomed right past their 41.5-win preseason over/under to earn 56 wins and eventually emerge as the Eastern Conference favorite once Tatum made his return. Mazzulla deserves most of the credit for turning the Celtics into a machine at both ends of the floor despite losing key veterans Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis over the offseason. He maximized an inexperienced front court to help make Neemias Queta into a legitimate starting center, he did well to re-center the offense around Jaylen Brown, and he got the most out of Derrick White even during a season where he was ice cold from three. The Celtics just play their game every night out and thatās a credit to Mazzulla. Still only 37 years old, Mazzulla should be an elite coach for a long, long time.