Rajaković earned his degree in basketball coaching from the Belgrade Basketball Academy in 2004[3] and earned his degree in sports management from Alfa BK University in 2006.
Coaching career
Early career
Rajaković began his coaching career at 16 years old with Borac Čačak in Čačak, Serbia.[4] Following his three-year stint in Čačak, Rajaković was named the head coach for the Crvena zvezda youth system in Belgrade.[5] During his eight years in Belgrade, Rajaković led Crvena zvezda to two Serbian Youth championships.[6] To increase his basketball coaching acumen and knowledge, Rajaković spent time with Lute Olson at the University of Arizona (2003) and Mike Krzyzewski at Duke University (2007) and attended team practices and meetings at both universities.[7][8]
In 2009, Rajaković become the head coach of Espacio Torrelodones of the Spanish EBA League (4th-tier). Rajaković excelled in both recruiting and developing players. In his first season, Rajaković led the Torrelodones to the Primera Division – Community of Madrid Group (5th-tier) title, promoting the team to the Liga EBA.[6] In the 2010–11 Liga EBA season, the Torrelodones finished 7th in Group B with a 16–14 record. In the next season and his last as their coach, the Torrelodones finished 8th in Group B with the same record as for season before.
Tulsa 66ers (2012–2014)
In 2012, Rajaković became the head coach of the Tulsa 66ers of the NBA Development League. Rajaković led Tulsa to a combined 51–49 record over two seasons, including a 27–23 record and NBA D-League Semifinals appearance in 2012–13. During his time with the 66ers, Tulsa was assigned seven players from Oklahoma City a total of 50 times (the most in the league during that stretch), including Oklahoma City players such as Reggie Jackson, Perry Jones, Jeremy Lamb and André Roberson. Rajaković witnessed five of his Tulsa players receive call-ups to the NBA, including four to the Oklahoma City Thunder (Grant Jerrett, Daniel Orton, Mustafa Shakur and Reggie Williams). He coached 11 Tulsa players over the two years who were on an NBA roster in the 2013–14 season.[6]
On 26 June 2019, Rajaković was hired as an assistant coach for the Phoenix Suns.[12]
On 13 September 2020, Rajaković was hired as an assistant coach for the Memphis Grizzlies.[13] On 11 January 2022, Rajaković as the interim head coach led the Grizzlies to a 116–108 win over the Golden State Warriors.[14] It was his head coaching debut in NBA.[15] After his fellow Serbian countryman Igor Kokoškov, he is the second European who led an NBA team in a regular season game.[16][17] Rajaković finished his stint as the interim head coach with a 4–1 record.
In May 2022, Rajaković was featured in ESPN's annual report on potential coaching candidates to watch. The article stated:[18]
People all over the coaching world, as well as players who have benefited from his grasp of the game, rave about Darko Rajakovic. That makes a lot of sense when you consider he has been poached twice—Phoenix and Memphis—over the past couple of years by incoming head coaches assembling a staff from scratch. A European head coach has yet to break through with a sustained career in the NBA, but Rajakovic (Serbia) has the intellect and passion for the craft that makes him the current morning-line favorite to become the first. The man has authored academic-journal style articles about the evolution of the pick-and-roll, but he's anything but academic in his warmth with players and fellow coaches.
Rajaković was fined $25,000 after he used his post-game press conference to speak out against the NBA's officiating in a 132–131 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on 10 January 2024, which he felt was biased towards the Lakers and giving the Raptors unfair disadvantages.[20]
On 9 May 2024, Rajaković and his wife Gaga donated US$46,700 to Sick Kids hospital in Toronto, St. Jude Research Hospital in Memphis and to the University Children Hospital in Belgrade. The donation was a result of a commitment of Darko and his family to donate US$20 for every assist the Raptors made.[22]