NEW YORK, September 27, 2005 –
New York Knickerbockers President of Basketball Operations Isiah Thomas
announced today that Phil Ford and Dave Hanners have been hired as assistant
coaches, and will join Herb Williams, Mark Aguirre and George Glymph on Larry
Brown’s staff.
Phil Ford
Ford comes to the Knicks with 13 years of coaching experience, including one
season with the 2004 Eastern Conference Champion Detroit Pistons under Larry
Brown. During his 12-year stint as a University of North Carolina assistant
coach, Ford was part of the National Championship team in 1993, six NCAA Final
Four appearances, six NCAA Regional titles and five Atlantic Coast Conference
Tournament titles. A former NBA player, Ford was the second player selected in
the 1978 NBA Draft by the Kansas City Kings and won the 1979 NBA Rookie of the
Year award. He was also named to the NBA All-Rookie Team and to the All-NBA
second team that season. Ford played seven seasons in the NBA with Kansas City,
New Jersey, Milwaukee and Houston, averaging 11.6 points and 6.4 assists in
482 games. As a player at North Carolina, Ford earned All-ACC first team
accolades in 1976, 1977 and 1978 and was named All-ACC Tournament first team
in 1975, 1976 and 1977 and second team in 1978.
He was listed on multiple All-America teams, earning first-team status in 1976,
1977 and 1978. Ford was named ACC Player of the Year in 1977 and 1978 and also
was a member of the gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic team at the 1976 Montreal
games.
Dave Hanners
Hanners comes to the Knicks with 17 years of coaching experience, including
two seasons with the Pistons and three with the Philadelphia 76ers under Brown.
Prior to his NBA coaching experience, Hanners spent 12 seasons on the
University of North Carolina basketball staff. During his tenure at Carolina
from 1989-90 to 1999-2000, the Tar Heels played in six Final Fours, won an NCAA
title in 1993 and captured four Atlantic Coast Conference championships while
compiling a 292-92 record (.760). Hanners
served on Larry Brown’s Olympic coaching staff for the 2004 Olympics, serving
as the team’s video coordinator. A native of Columbus, OH, Hanners played
guard at UNC from 1972-76, earning four letters and was a tri-captain of the
1976 team. Hanners entered the collegiate ranks, serving as an assistant coach
at UNC Wilmington for three years, at Furman University for two years and at
East Tennessee State University for four years. Hanners served as head coach of
UNC’s junior varsity team in three different stretches from 1976-78, 1994-96
and finally in 1999-2000, where he guided the team to a 12-3 record.