Hall of Famer Joe Dumars is reportedly finalizing an agreement to become the new president of basketball operations for the New Orleans Pelicans.
ESPN’s Shams Charania was the first to report the news, which has not been confirmed. DailyMail.com has reached out to the team for comment.
Dumars, who has been the NBA’s executive vice president and head of basketball operations since 2022, would replace David Griffin, who was fired Monday after a 21-61 season.
The 61-year-old was elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player in 2006. A six-time All-Star guard, he won consecutive titles with the Detroit Pistons in 1989, when he was the NBA Finals MVP, and 1990.
Of course, the team will be equally remembered for its physical – some would say ‘dirty’ – style of play. However, Dumars was an outlier in Detroit, typically allowing players like Rick Mahorn, Dennis rodman and Bill Laimbeer to mix it up with opposing stars.
But Dumars will be best remembered as the irreplaceable complement to point guard Isiah Thomas, with whom he formed one of the greatest backcourts in NBA history.
Hall of Famer Joe Dumars is reportedly finalizing an agreement to become the new president of basketball operations for the New Orleans Pelicans in his home state of Louisiana

Pistons teammates Joe Dumars (left), Dennis Rodman (center) and Isiah Thomas in 1992
To many, Dumars (left) and Thomas (right) still rank among the best backcourts in NBA history
The Pistons hired Dumars to head their basketball operations after he retired in 1999 and he served from 2000-14.
He was the 2002-03 NBA Executive of the Year, one season before Detroit won another championship.
However, his tenure in Detroit’s front office was tainted by his 2003 decision to draft Darko Miličić rather than Syracuse star – and future Hall of Famer – Carmelo Anthony.
Dumars later worked in the Sacramento Kings’ front office from 2019-22 before moving to the league office.
He also has strong ties to Louisiana. A native of Shreveport, he went to high school in Natchitoches and college at McNeese State in Lake Charles.
The Pelicans fired Griffin on Monday, ending a six-year chapter during which the club drafted former Duke superstar Zion Williamson but still struggled to win consistently with three different coaches.
Griffin, whose title was executive vice president of basketball operations, leaves his post one day after a 115-100 loss to Oklahoma City that extended the injury-plagued club’s season-ending skid to seven games.
‘This was a difficult decision, but one that I feel is necessary at this time to bring a fresh approach to our front office and build a culture that will deliver sustainable success,’ Pelicans owner Gayle Benson said in a written statement.
The Pelicans’ 21-61 record – fourth worst in the NBA this season – was the franchise’s second-worst mark since arriving in New Orleans in 2002 and worst since the 2004-05 season, when the club, then called the Hornets, went 18-64.
But the Pelicans’ failures this season – their first in the past four without a postseason berth – appeared less tied to the level of talent on the roster than the health of all of their starters and even prominent reserves.
Injuries were so rampant that Griffin never got to watch top players on the team he assembled last summer all play together under the direction of Willie Green, the coach he hired four years ago.
‘I haven’t had any discussions, any talks yet,’ Green said Sunday when asked about his future with the club. ‘I didn’t do great. I have to take full ownership of where we are as a team. We failed. I failed.’
But Green said he hoped that the club’s evaluation of him would include the previous three seasons, when New Orleans qualified for the Western Conference play-in and twice advanced to a first-round playoff series.
‘I think that’s important. You try to look at the body of work,’ Green said. ‘But I didn’t give myself this job. I had to be chosen for this position, and I’m grateful.’
The Pelicans fired Griffin on Monday, ending a six-year chapter during which the club drafted former Duke superstar Zion Williamson (pictured) but still struggled to win consistently
Green succeeded Stan Van Gundy, who was fired in 2021 after just one non-playoff season. Van Gundy was hired in 2020 after Griffin fired Alvin Gentry, a coach he inherited in 2019 and kept in place for one campaign that also ended short of the postseason.
This season, Williamson missed 52 games because of several injuries, his hamstring strain being the worst of them. Now the former Duke standout is facing trade rumors amid the Pelicans’ uncertain future.
Starting guard Dejounte Murray – seen as the club’s highest-profile acquisition last offseason – missed 51 games because of hand and Achilles injuries.
Herb Jones, recognized as one of the NBA’s top defensive players, missed 62 games with repeated right shoulder injuries.
High-scoring wing Brandon Ingram, who began this season unhappy about the lack of a contract extension he sought, appeared in just 18 games with New Orleans because of an ankle injury before he was traded to Toronto in February.
Trey Murphy III missed 29 games with multiple injuries.
Griffin, who did not speak with media on Sunday, joined the Pelicans in 2019. Shortly afterward, the Pelicans won the NBA’s draft lottery, giving them the opportunity to draft Williamson, the consensus top overall prospect that year.
But what appeared to be good fortune at that time in retrospect looks more like a curse.
Pelicans executive vice president of basketball operations David Griffin was fired this week
Plagued by injuries, Williamson has missed 258 out of 472 regular-season games since he was drafted – and has never appeared in a postseason game.
The Pelicans have a regular season record of 209-263 since Griffin arrived and drafted Williamson, and the club lost both of the first-round playoff series it reached during that period.
This season’s record also was the Pelicans’ worst since Benson’s late husband, Tom, bought the club in 2012.
Those results have left an air of uncertainty around the coming Pelicans offseason – not just for the front office and coaching staff.
‘We truly don’t know who’s going back. I’m just trying to be honest with you,’ Murphy said. ‘Nobody is safe.’