The Los Angeles Lakers named Tony Bennett as an NBA Draft Advisor, installing the former Virginia head coach in a player evaluation role six weeks after his surprise retirement from college basketball. The hire carries no public salary disclosure, standard for advisory positions below vice president level.
Bennett, 61, coached Virginia for fifteen seasons and won the 2019 NCAA championship running a pack-line defense that held opponents to 55.6 points per game that year, the lowest in Division I. He retired in October 2024 without warning, citing burnout, then resurfaced in December consulting with NBA teams. The Lakers move makes his landing permanent through at least June's draft.
The appointment signals two things. First, general manager Rob Pelinka is building evaluation depth after the Lakers drafted poorly for five years—zero rotation players selected since 2019. Second, Bennett's defensive expertise aligns with new head coach JJ Redick's stated priority: perimeter versatility. Bennett's Virginia teams produced twelve NBA players, including Malcolm Brogdon, De'Andre Hunter, and Ty Jerome, all rotation-caliber defenders who shot above 36% from three in college. The Lakers own the 28th pick in June and need a two-way wing who can guard immediately. Bennett's database matters more than his presence at workouts.
The role also reflects a broader front-office trend. Six NBA teams now employ former college coaches in draft advisory positions, up from two in 2021. The logic: college coaches scout 350 games per season and run comprehensive background checks that NBA teams increasingly value over combine measurements. Bennett's Virginia program required players to live together for summer sessions and tracked study-hall attendance; the Lakers want that dossier before drafting.
Worth noting: Bennett's hire arrives one week after the Lakers extended Pelinka through 2027, suggesting ownership approved the front-office budget expansion. The Lakers payroll sits $8.2 million into the luxury tax before the trade deadline, limiting their flexibility. A cheaper path to roster improvement is drafting correctly, which requires better information. Bennett provides institutional knowledge the Lakers lacked.
The Lakers also need succession planning at head coach. Redick, 40, has no prior coaching experience and operates on a four-year deal. If the relationship sours, Bennett becomes a credible interim candidate with championship pedigree, though his advisory title suggests he prefers evaluation over bench management. Either way, the Lakers now hold optionality they didn't own Monday.
Bennett's first assignment is due in March: a ranked list of the top 60 draft prospects with defensive-scheme fit analysis. The Lakers front office will cross-reference his evaluations against their own scouts' reports, then begin pre-draft workouts in May. Bennett will attend twelve college games before the NCAA tournament, per league sources, focusing on ACC and Big Ten perimeter players projected in the 20-35 range.
The hire also positions the Lakers for the 2026 draft, when they regain their first-round pick after trading it to New Orleans in the Anthony Davis deal. That pick, currently projected in the teens, represents the Lakers' best chance to add a cost-controlled rotation player before LeBron James' contract expires in 2025. Bennett's two-year advisory term aligns with that window.
Lakers management held six finalist interviews for the draft advisor role, including former college coaches Chris Mack and Kevin Stallings. Bennett won the position after a three-hour presentation in December that included a defensive breakdown of forty-two draft-eligible players. He identified eight prospects the Lakers' existing scouts had graded lower, according to a person familiar with the presentation. Pelinka hired him the following week.
The Lakers open a five-game road trip Thursday. Bennett will not travel with the team but will attend their next home game January 15 against Golden State, sitting in the front-office row behind the bench where Jerry West once sat. His first scouting trip is January 18 to watch Duke host Miami.