Report: New York Knicks fire head coach Derek Fisher
Fisher was hired last season by Knicks president Phil Jackson as part of a team and culture overhaul.
In Fisher's first year, the Knicks went a franchise-worst 17-65. This season, the Knicks are more respectable 23-31, but they have lost nine of their past 10 games and are in danger of falling out of the playoffs.
The move still comes as a shock, as Fisher's job seemed secure with Jackson in place.
The Knicks have placed an emphasis on a slow, proper rebuild, and it seemed Fisher's development as a head coach - after going straight from playing to coaching - would be met with patience.
Frank Isola of the New York Daily News reported, however, that Knicks owner James Dolan was growing impatient with the team's recent struggles and disagreed with Fisher's recent comments that missing the playoffs this season would not be a big deal for the Knicks.
Early reports say assistant coach Kurt Rambis will be the interim coach. But with a loaded coaching market this offseason - Tom Thibodeau, David Blatt, Jeff Hornacek, and Kevin McHale, to name a few - the Knicks will have a wide pool of candidates to look at. ESPN's Brian Windhorst said Golden State assistant coach Luke Walton (who coached the Warriors this season while Steve Kerr was out) and former Nuggets coach Brian Shaw are expected to be the top candidates.
Fisher's record with the Knicks was 40-96.