Maybe Stan Van Gundy can run against Donald Trump in four years.

The Detroit Pistons coach laced into the president-elect on Wednesday, the morning after the Republican nominee beat Hillary Clinton in a stunning upset.

Calling Trump “brazenly racist” and “misogynistic,” Van Gundy launched into a six-minute rant, according to the Detroit Free Press.

“I didn’t vote for [George W.] Bush, but he was a good, honorable man with whom I had political differences, so I didn’t vote for him,” Van Gundy said. “But for our country to be where we are now, who took a guy who — I don’t care what anyone says, I’m sure they have other reasons and maybe good reasons for voting for Donald Trump — but I don’t think anybody can deny this guy is openly and brazenly racist and misogynistic and ethnic-centric, and say, ‘That’s OK with us, we’re going to vote for him anyway.’

“We have just thrown a good part of our population under the bus, and I have problems with thinking that this is where we are as a country.”

Van Gundy, the older brother of former Knicks coach Jeff, said he was moved to address the election results after noticing members of the Pistons seemed unusually quiet and subdued Wednesday morning.

“It’s just, we have said — and my daughters, the three of them — our society has said, ‘No, we think you should be second-class citizens. We want you to be second-class citizens. And we embrace a guy who is openly misogynistic as our leader.’ I don’t know how we get past that,” Van Gundy said.

After quoting Martin Luther King’s notions of justice, Van Gundy said he understood “all the problems” with Clinton, but was disillusioned thinking “millions and millions of Americans don’t think that racism and sexism disqualifies you to be our leader.”