The Los Angeles Lakers appointed Tony Bennett as an NBA draft advisor, installing the former University of Virginia head coach in a scouting role three months after his March retirement. Bennett, who won the 2019 NCAA championship and compiled a 364-136 record across 15 seasons in Charlottesville, will report directly to General Manager Rob Pelinka and Vice President of Basketball Operations and General Manager Jesse Buss.
The hire gives the Lakers institutional scouting infrastructure at a moment when their draft assets remain constrained. Los Angeles currently holds only its own first-round pick in the 2025 draft—projected in the 23-28 range depending on playoff seeding—and no second-round selection after trading it to Orlando in the Mo Bamba deal. Bennett's college network runs deep: he coached 13 NBA players during his Virginia tenure, including Malcolm Brogdon, De'Andre Hunter, and Ty Jerome, and maintained close relationships with high school programs in the DMV corridor.
Bennett's hiring follows a pattern. Since 2021, nine NCAA head coaches have moved into NBA front offices, most in advisory or scouting capacities. The Lakers are betting Bennett's pack-line defensive philosophy translates to evaluation: his Virginia teams ranked in the top 15 nationally in adjusted defensive efficiency for 12 consecutive seasons, and his ability to identify second-tier recruits who fit a system—players like Kyle Guy and Braxton Key—maps directly to late-first-round draft logic. The Lakers have not drafted a rotation player outside the top 10 since Jordan Clarkson in 2014.
The timing matters for two reasons. First, Bennett's Rolodex is active. His former assistant coaches now occupy key roles at six Power Five programs, and his recruiting pipelines into the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic remain warm despite his exit. The Lakers will leverage those relationships ahead of the May 20 draft lottery and the June 26-27 draft in New York. Second, the Lakers' front office has been running thin. Pelinka has operated without a dedicated college scouting director since 2022, relying instead on a patchwork of regional scouts and analytics staffers. Bennett centralizes that function under a name with credibility.
The Lakers' draft position is not the only constraint. Their 2025 first-round pick is owed to New Orleans if it falls outside the top 10, a vestige of the 2019 Anthony Davis trade. That creates downside risk: a poor finish to the season could leave Los Angeles without a first-round pick entirely. Bennett's role becomes more critical in that scenario. Late-second-round picks and undrafted free agents require the kind of granular film study and background vetting Bennett specialized in at Virginia. His 2018 recruiting class—which included Hunter, Key, and Kihei Clark—ranked 38th nationally but produced two lottery picks and a 2019 title.
Bennett's deal is believed to be two years with a team option for a third, according to a person familiar with the structure. His compensation was not disclosed, but similar advisory roles at playoff teams have ranged from $400,000 to $750,000 annually, well below head coaching salaries but competitive for scouting positions. Bennett's decision to return to basketball surprised Virginia administrators, who had prepared for a longer hiatus. His relationship with Pelinka dates to 2016, when Pelinka—then an agent—represented several players Bennett recruited against in the ACC.
What to watch: Bennett's first live evaluation period runs through the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament in mid-April, where 64 draft-eligible seniors compete in front of NBA scouts. The Lakers will also monitor whether Bennett's hiring triggers similar moves by other teams with aging front offices. The May 20 lottery results will clarify whether Bennett is evaluating late-first-round talent or pivoting entirely to second-round and undrafted depth.
Bennett will not attend games from the Lakers bench or travel with the team during the regular season. His role is pure evaluation, with a secondary mandate to consult on defensive scheme adjustments during the offseason. The Lakers ranked 17th in defensive rating this season, a decline Pelinka has attributed to personnel age and transition defense breakdowns. Bennett's first report to the front office is due April 10, two weeks before the lottery.