Micah Nori | |
Birth Date: | April 8, 1974 (age 50) |
Birth Place: | Middletown, Ohio, U.S. |
Nationality: | American |
Team: | Minnesota Timberwolves |
Position: | Assistant coach |
League: | NBA |
College: | Indiana |
Coach Start: | 2009 |
Cyears1: | 2009–2013 |
Cteam1: | Toronto Raptors (assistant) |
Cyears2: | 2013–2015 |
Cteam2: | Sacramento Kings (assistant) |
Cyears3: | 2015–2018 |
Cteam3: | Denver Nuggets (assistant) |
Cyears4: | 2018–2021 |
Cteam4: | Detroit Pistons (assistant) |
Cyears5: | 2021–present |
Cteam5: | Minnesota Timberwolves (lead assistant) |
Micah Nori (;[1] born April 8, 1974) is an American basketball coach currently serving as the lead assistant coach for the Minnesota Timberwolves of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He previously served as an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, Sacramento Kings, Denver Nuggets and Detroit Pistons.[2]
He garnered attention in 2023 for his "ingenious, often comic analogies" during sideline interviews at Timberwolves’ games.[3]
Nori grew up in Middletown, Ohio, where his father coached high school football, baseball and basketball.[4] A three-sport athlete himself in high school, Nori ended up at Indiana University, where he was captain and middle infielder of the baseball team. Injuries and a self-professed "lack of athleticism" kept him from pursuing a professional career.[5]
After graduation, Nori earned a master's degree in sports organization at Miami University while serving as a graduate assistant on the baseball team's coaching staff.[6]
In 1998, Nori was considering a job as a high school athletic director when family friend (and newly hired Raptors head coach) Butch Carter called and offered him a job in Toronto. He started as a coach's assistant intern before becoming an advance scout. After a brief run as the hitting coach for his alma mater Hoosiers in 2005, he eventually ascended to the Raptors' coaching staff as an assistant.
Nori spent four seasons with the Raptors under head coaches Jay Triano and Dwane Casey before moving on to the Sacramento Kings in 2013. Nori had met their coach, Michael Malone, for dinner while Malone was an assistant for the Golden State Warriors. After the dinner, Nori texted him saying that when Malone got a head coaching job, he hoped to be considered for his staff.[7]
When Malone became the Nuggets' head coach in 2015, Nori joined the staff as an assistant. That year, he served as head coach of Denver's NBA Summer League team, which included future three-time MVP Nikola Jokic. The team went 3–0.
In Denver, he bonded with fellow assistant Chris Finch. Finch was in charge of the team's offensive schemes, and the two honed a free-flowing style of basketball that would become his calling card in later years.
By 2018, Nori had taken a head assistant job with the Detroit Pistons under his former boss Casey. He served as the team's offensive coordinator.
He kept in touch with Finch, and when Finch was named head coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves before the 2021-22 season, he brought on Nori as his lead assistant. Nori describes his role as like a bench coach in baseball: "the right-hand man with a broad array of input and oversight".[8]
He's often seen doing strategy breakdowns and sideline interviews on Timberwolves' broadcasts, where he gained notoriety for his metaphors, like: "He makes everybody comfortable—he's like popcorn during Saturday night movies." ESPN called him a "unique coaching mind, one who ... breaks down defensive strategy in depth pre-game, with a real level of focus and clarity."[9]
Nori coached Team Pau during the 2024 All-Star Rising Stars Challenge.[10]
On April 28, 2024, Timberwolves head coach Chris Finch injured his patellar tendon after colliding with guard Mike Conley Jr. with 1:41 remaining in Game 4 against the Phoenix Suns, so Nori served as the interim head coach for the remaining 1:41 of the game. [11]
Nori and his wife Melissa have two kids, Dante and Mia. Dante, a talented baseball outfielder, was invited to play in the MLB High School All-Star Game in 2023, and plays professionally in the Philadelphia Phillies organization.[12]