
Across the overall NBA landscape, there aren't many individuals who have had a bigger impact than former Los Angeles Lakers and Miami Heat coach Pat Riley. While most people know him for his work as head coach and president of the Heat, Riley has also left a great legacy with the Lakers.
Due to this, Showtime immortalized his legacy by unveiling a statue outside the Crypto.com arena, with the now 80-year-old man himself attending the event along with several prominent figures from the Lakers' past, including Magic Johnson, according to a post on X by Heat Culture.
🚨 Pat Riley Statue Unveiled 🚨 pic.twitter.com/IIDuJqgNTn
- Heat Central (@HeatCulture13) 22 February 2026
Riley's nine-year head coaching run with the Lakers from 1981 to 1990 produced an astonishing 533–194 record (.733 winning percentage), four NBA championships and seven Finals appearances. More importantly, he served as the architect of the Showtime Lakers, a dynasty built around superstars like Magic and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
The statue makes Riley the first coach in Lakers history to receive such recognition, joining icons such as Magic himself, Kobe Bryant, Jerry West, Shaquille O'Neal and legendary broadcaster Chick Hearn. While Showtime is often remembered for its core offense, Riley also emphasized physicality and defensive discipline, popularizing principles such as the 1-3-1 half-court trap and cementing his famous championship mantra that rebounding and defensive commitment bring titles, the same system he also brought forward for the Heat.
Glad the Lakers erected a statue to their greatest coach [squints] nic cage
- Robbie Kalland (@rkalland.bsky.social) 2026-02-22T21:55:05.053Z
His Lakers teams reached four consecutive Finals and produced one of the greatest single-season teams of all time in 1987, finishing 65–17 before defeating Boston for the championship. Riley also fulfilled one of the NBA's most prestigious guarantees, promising a repeat title in 1988 and becoming the first team to successfully defend the championship in nearly two decades.
During his coaching career, Riley earned five championships as a head coach, produced 17 seasons of 50-plus wins, seven 60-win campaigns and earned Coach of the Year honors with three different franchises, the Lakers, Knicks and Heat.

