Kenny Atkinson makes triumphant return to Barclays Center as Cavaliers rout tanking Nets

· New York Post

Kenny Atkinson claimed that he didn’t view his return to Brooklyn — where he was fired — with the best team in the NBA as vindication.

But the competitive Atkinson came back carrying a chip on his shoulder and made his return a triumphant one.

No, make that a dominating one.

The Nets — who announced their intention to tank by trading Dennis Schroder — underscored that with a horrific 130-101 loss to Atkinson’s Cavaliers in front of 16,588 at Barclays Center.

Cam Johnson had 22 points and five assists, but the Nets shot just 42 percent and committed 22 turnovers to hand Cleveland 34 points.

Cavaliers’ coach Kenny Atkinson works the sideline at Barclays Center on Dec. 16, 2024. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Some would say this one was over as soon as the Nets (10-16) dealt away their starting point guard and emotional leader.

But it really was over in the first quarter.

The Nets led 12-5 just four minutes in after a Nic Claxton dunk, and proceeded to allow an eye-watering 32-5 run over the rest of the period.

Brooklyn was also on the wrong end of a 12-0 blitz over 2 ½ minutes in the second quarter.

Caris LeVert — an ex-Net who’d been with Atkinson — had 19 for the Cavs.

The rest of the game was garbage time. At least for the Nets, who trailed by 37 multiple times in the fourth quarter.

Ben Simmons had 10 points and eight assists in a season-high 31 minutes but the Nets attack was dismal.

Claxton was a minus-24 and spacing with Simmons was an issue.

The Nets have dropped six out of seven, and without Schroder, who was traded Sunday, the tank is clearly in full force.

Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers slams the ball in front of DayâRon Sharpe and Ben Simmons of the Brooklyn Nets during the second quarter on Dec. 16, 2024 Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

But while they’re tanking, the coach they fired is winning.

Atkinson’s Cavs improved to a league-best 23-4.

And his return was sweet, if not quite vindication.

“I don’t look at it that way. I just look at it as part of the story, right, part of your growth,” Atkinson said. “You have good things happen, you have setbacks, and — it’s like a player how do you bounce back? And it was definitely a bounce back. And in the long run, the journey after Brooklyn really helped me, helped me grow as a coach. Who knows? If that doesn’t happen, maybe I’m not Cleveland; I don’t improve as much as a coach if that didn’t happen. So I look at it more as a positive.



“Now, but I will tell you, I’m competitive, right? And when you have setbacks, you remember things, right? And players do the same thing. If something happened or a team beat you or you get fired, you’re motivated. You’re motivated to prove people wrong; and that’s kind of how I took it. It’s a chip on your shoulder or whatever you want to call it. But there’s definitely some of that. I think any competitor feels the same way.”

Atkinson coached the Nets from 2016-20, the last season spent with Kyrie Irving in and out of the lineup and Kevin Durant sidelined altogether with a ruptured Achilles.

Irving was vocal about not needing a hard-driving coach, and Atkinson was gone before the end of that season.

Trendon Watford #9 of the Brooklyn Nets jumps to defend as Caris LeVert of the Cleveland Cavaliers makes a jumping pass during the first quarter on Dec. 16, 2024, Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

And yes, Atkinson was hard-driving.

As in at HSS Training Center at 4:30 a.m. after defeats, on an exercise bike as he rewatched the loss.

“Those days are over. I wake up at 10, have a croissant and a coffee,” Atkinson laughed. “Seriously. I’ve evolved. I was a little crazy back then, quite honestly. I was desperate to make it, right? Desperate. I didn’t want to fail. So you just really got after. But I knew even after two years in Brooklyn, I knew it wasn’t good for my health. And that’s where talking about evolving as a coach, delegate a lot more. I stress a lot less about the small stuff.

“Definitely I feel like I reached a maturity as a coach. And that helps in Cleveland. And we’ve got darn good players; that helps. Not saying we didn’t in Brooklyn; but in Brooklyn we are at the bottom, worst team in the league. … There was a desperation to get better. So I wouldn’t change that approach for anything. That’s what that situation needed at the time.”