CBA and Puerto Rico (1983–1987) In the years following the end of his playing career, Jackson began his head coaching career in the
Continental Basketball Association (CBA) and
Puerto Rico's
Baloncesto Superior Nacional (BSN). After his playing retirement, Jackson moved to his summer home near
Glacier National Park in
Montana. He was slated to lead the basketball program at nearby
Flathead Valley Community College but it was dissolved due to a lack of funds. Jackson won his first coaching championship with the Patroons, leading them to their first title in 1984. He was named the CBA Coach of the Year in 1985. In Puerto Rico, he coached the
Piratas de Quebradillas (1984 and 1987) and the
Gallitos de Isabela (1984–1986). He regularly sought NBA jobs, but was turned down. Jackson had acquired a reputation for being sympathetic to the
counterculture during his playing years, which may have scared off potential NBA employers. He was promoted to
head coach after Collins was fired in 1989. It was around this time that he met
Tex Winter and became a devotee of Winter's
triangle offense. Over nine seasons, Jackson and the Bulls made the playoffs every year and won six championships, winning three straight championships over separate three-year periods. After losing to the
Detroit Pistons in the 1990 conference finals, Jackson convinced
Michael Jordan to adopt Winter's triangle offense in order to counter the Pistons'
Jordan Rules defensive strategy, and the Bulls swept the Pistons in the 1991 conference finals, enroute to defeating the
Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals. Two more championships followed, against the Portland Trail Blazers in 1992 and Phoenix Suns in 1993. The "three-peat" was the first since the
Boston Celtics won eight titles in a row from
1959 through
1966. Jordan's first retirement after the
1992–1993 season marked the end of the first "three-peat". In 1994, Jackson's Bulls faced the New York Knicks in the playoffs for the fourth consecutive time (the third straight time that Jackson faced off against
Pat Riley who had been Knicks head coach since the 1991-92 season); this time the Knicks won in seven games in the conference semi-finals. The physical defense of the Knicks against the Bulls' superstars Jordan and
Scottie Pippen during the 1992 playoffs had led to a feud between Jackson and Riley regarding the officiating and the Knicks' rough style of play. Although Jordan returned just before the
1995 playoffs, it was not enough to prevent a playoff elimination by the
Orlando Magic at the conference semi-finals. For 1995-96, the revamped Bulls featured only Jordan and
Scottie Pippen as the returning players from the 1991-93 "three-peat", plus the controversial trade for
Dennis Rodman. Nonetheless, the Bulls set a regular season record of 72-10 before sweeping the Orlando Magic in the Eastern Conference Finals and then winning their fourth title over the
Seattle SuperSonics in six games. The Bulls won their fifth and sixth titles over the
Utah Jazz in 1997 and 1998, respectively, although the 1997-98 roster was aging and plagued by injuries to starters Pippen and
Steve Kerr. The Bulls also twice defeated the
Miami Heat coached by Pat Riley, in 1996 first round playoffs and 1997 Eastern Conference Finals, en route to their championship wins. In the 1998 Eastern Conference Finals, the Bulls needed seven games to overcome the
Indiana Pacers led by first-year head coach
Larry Bird. and Jackson in 1997 Despite the Bulls' success, tension between Jackson and Bulls general manager
Jerry Krause grew. Some believed that Krause felt under-recognized for building a championship team and believed that Jackson was indebted to him for giving him his first NBA coaching job. In the summer of 1997, Jackson was not invited to the wedding of Krause's stepdaughter, although all of the Bulls' assistant coaches were, as was
Tim Floyd, then head coach at
Iowa State, Jackson's eventual successor. After the Bulls' final title of the
Jordan era in 1998, Jackson left the team vowing never to coach again.
Los Angeles Lakers (1999–2004, 2005–2011) After taking a year off, Jackson decided to give coaching another chance with the
Los Angeles Lakers in 1999, taking over as head coach from
Kurt Rambis who stayed on as assistant coach and assistant general manager. Jackson took over a talented Lakers team and immediately produced results as he had done in Chicago. In his first year in Los Angeles, the Lakers went 67–15 during the regular season to top the league. Reaching the conference finals, they eliminated the
Portland Trail Blazers in a tough seven-game series and then won the
2000 NBA championship by beating the
Indiana Pacers, the latter coached by Larry Bird who would step down after that series. With the talented superstar duo of
Shaquille O'Neal and
Kobe Bryant, the strong supporting cast of
Glen Rice,
Derek Fisher,
Rick Fox,
Devean George,
A.C. Green,
Robert Horry, and
Brian Shaw, and the assistance of former Bulls
Horace Grant,
Ron Harper, and
John Salley, Jackson led the Lakers to two additional titles in
2001 and
2002, against the
Philadelphia 76ers and
New Jersey Nets, adding up to his third
three-peat as head coach. The main serious challenge the Lakers faced was from their conference rival, the
Sacramento Kings. However, injuries, weak bench play, and
public tension between Bryant and O'Neal slowed the team down, and they were beaten in the second round of the
2003 NBA Playoffs by the eventual champion
San Antonio Spurs. Afterward, Jackson clashed frequently with Bryant. While remarkably efficient in Jackson's "triangle offense", Bryant had a personal distaste for Jackson's brand of basketball and subsequently called it "boring". In games, Bryant would often disregard the set offense completely to experiment with his own one-on-one moves, infuriating the normally calm Jackson. But from the first day of training camp, the Lakers were beset by distractions. Bryant's
trial for sexual assault, continued public sniping between O'Neal and Bryant, and repeated disputes between Jackson and Bryant all affected the team during the season. Despite these distractions, the Lakers beat the defending champion Spurs en route to advancing to the
2004 NBA Finals and were heavy favorites to regain the title. However, they were upset by the
Detroit Pistons, who used their strong defense to dominate the Lakers, winning the title four games to one. This marked the first time in ten attempts as head coach that Jackson had lost in the
NBA Finals. On June 18, 2004, three days after the loss to the Pistons, the Lakers announced that Jackson would leave his position as Lakers coach. Jackson was seeking to double his salary from $6 million to $12 million on his expiring contract. He had a contract offer outstanding from the Lakers, but he had not acted on it. Winter said Jackson announced at the
All-Star break that he would not want to return to the Lakers if Bryant returned. resigned midway through the season after coaching just 41 games, citing health issues not related to his past bout with
bladder cancer, which immediately led to speculation that the Lakers might bring Jackson back. On June 15, 2005, preceding the
2005–06 season, the Lakers rehired Jackson. Jackson subsequently led the Lakers to a seventh-seed playoff berth for the
2006 playoffs. Once again promoting the notion of selfless team play embodied by the triangle offense, the team achieved substantial results, especially in the last month of the season. Jackson also worked very seamlessly with Bryant, who had earlier shown his desire to bring Jackson back to the bench. Bryant's regular-season performance won him the league scoring title and made him a finalist in MVP voting. However, the Lakers faced a tough 2006 first-round matchup against the second-seeded
Phoenix Suns, who were led by eventual MVP winner
Steve Nash. The Lakers jumped out to a 3–1 lead following a dramatic last-second shot by Bryant in overtime to win game four, but the Suns recovered to win the last three and take the series. It was the first time that a Jackson-coached team had failed to reach the second round of the playoffs. (left) On January 7, 2007, Jackson won his 900th game, then placing him 9th on the all-time win list for NBA coaches. With this win, Jackson became the fastest to reach 900 career wins, doing so in only 1,264 games and beating
Pat Riley's previous record of 900 in 1,278 games. On December 12, 2007, after announcing he would return to his position as coach just a few days prior, Jackson inked a 2-year contract extension to continue his tenure with the
Los Angeles Lakers through the end of the 2009–2010 season. During the 2007–08 season, the Lakers were able to obtain
Pau Gasol in a trade with the
Memphis Grizzlies. With another star to pair with Bryant, Jackson coached the Lakers to an appearance in the
2008 NBA Finals against the
Boston Celtics. Boston went on to win the series 4–2, in the process handing Jackson and the Lakers their worst playoff loss ever in Game 6, a 39-point defeat. It was only the second time in 11 appearances that Jackson had lost an NBA Finals. On December 25, 2008, Jackson became the sixth coach to win 1,000 games, with the Lakers defeating the Celtics in their first matchup since the last year's finals. He was the fastest to win 1,000 games, surpassing Riley, who had taken 11 more games than Jackson. Jackson again coached the Lakers to the NBA Finals in
2009, defeating the
Utah Jazz,
Houston Rockets, and
Denver Nuggets in the process. In the Finals, the Lakers defeated the
Orlando Magic 4–1, clinching Jackson's 10th NBA championship as head coach and surpassing the record for most championships won by a head coach previously held by him and
Red Auerbach. On February 3, 2010, Jackson recorded his 534th win as Lakers head coach, surpassing Pat Riley to become the most successful coach in franchise history. The Lakers would go on to a fifth consecutive playoff berth in
2010. They defeated the
Oklahoma City Thunder, Jazz, and Suns in the playoffs before defeating the Celtics in the
2010 NBA Finals, earning Jackson his 11th NBA championship as head coach and his fifth with the Lakers. On July 1, 2010, Jackson, after giving it tremendous thought and consulting with his doctors over health concerns, announced that he would return to coach the Lakers for the 2010–11 season. On August 2, 2010, Jackson signed a new contract with the Lakers to return for what he mentioned was "his last stand", meaning the 2010–11 season would be his last. In January 2011, he reiterated that it would be his final season, explaining that in the past there was the possibility that maybe he would reconsider. "This year, there's no maybe", said Jackson. He retired after the Lakers were swept out of the playoffs in the conference semifinals by that season's
eventual NBA champions, the Dallas Mavericks, meaning that he would not get a fourth three-peat (after previously achieving that feat in 1993, 1998 and 2002). In his final news conference that season, he noted that he did not have much of a relationship with Jerry or
Jim Buss, and said, "When I leave here, I don't anticipate Lakers management will call me up and ask my advice." After the Lakers fired Jackson's successor,
Mike Brown, early in the
2012–13 season, they first approached Jackson to replace Brown. Jackson requested two days to consider the opening. He believed the Lakers would wait for his response, but the Lakers thought it was understood they would continue their search. The next day, the team talked with
Mike D'Antoni and hired him in a unanimous decision by the front office. They felt D'Antoni's fast-paced style of play made him a "great fit" for the team, more suitable than Jackson's structured triangle offense. Jerry Buss' preference has always been for the Lakers to have a wide-open offense. In the two games leading up to D'Antoni's signing, Lakers fans at
Staples Center had chanted "We Want Phil!" ==Executive career==