The Los Angeles Lakers hired Tony Bennett as an NBA Draft Advisor, the franchise announced Tuesday, placing the retired University of Virginia head coach inside Rob Pelinka's front office starting immediately. Bennett resigned from Virginia in October after 15 seasons, two months before the 2025 NBA Draft. His contract runs through June with an option year.
Bennett will evaluate college prospects, consult on pre-draft workouts, and advise on trade scenarios involving draft capital. He does not hold personnel authority. The Lakers own the 17th pick in June's draft and a 2026 first-rounder conditionally protected to New Orleans. Bennett's hiring follows the franchise's third consecutive first-round playoff exit and a summer where Pelinka traded for Dorian Finney-Smith and acquired cap flexibility but no second star. The front office now has four advisors without general manager titles.
This matters because Bennett brings the exact evaluative lens LA lacked when it drafted Austin Reaves as an undrafted free agent in 2021—the club's only recent hit outside lottery picks. Bennett produced 10 NBA players at Virginia, including Malcolm Brogdon, De'Andre Hunter, and Ty Jerome, all second-unit rotation pieces who defend multiple positions and shoot 37% or better from three over their careers. His pack-line system required high basketball IQ and positional discipline, the traits that translate to championship rosters but rarely dominate SportsCenter. The Lakers have not drafted a rotation player in the first round since 2017. They need Bennett to identify the Virginia archetype in Ivy League gyms and mid-major conferences where stats lie.
Bennett turned down Kentucky twice, in 2007 and 2019, choosing less money and smaller spotlights. He lives in Charlottesville. The Lakers are installing him in a part-time advisory role, not relocating him to LA full-time, which suggests Pelinka wants the expertise without the politics. Bennett does not recruit anymore; he evaluates without the noise of NIL deals or transfer portals. That's the bet—Virginia's decades-long development curve, condensed into 60-minute pre-draft interviews in a Santa Monica practice gym.
Watch for Bennett's influence in June. The Lakers will bring in 8-12 college prospects for workouts between the conference finals and the draft. If LA selects a low-usage, high-IQ wing who played 33 minutes a game in the ACC or Big Ten, Bennett likely shaped the board. The franchise's 2026 first-rounder, protected from picks 1-4, becomes unprotected in 2027—meaning Bennett's draft philosophy could dictate trade leverage for two years. Pelinka also hired a senior basketball advisor in March, though that role remains focused on salary-cap mechanics.
Bennett's first assignment is the Portsmouth Invitational in April, where 64 seniors play in front of NBA scouts. He'll sit courtside with a yellow legal pad, the same setup he used at Wisconsin-Green Bay in 2003. The Lakers went 47-35 this season. Bennett went 364-136 at Virginia. The numbers that matter now are the ones he circles in June.