VooDoo7 wrote:Well you've spent enough time already this morning typing out multiple posts. Why don't you take 2 quick minutes and just give us a list of why Kidd is a good coach.
OK OK. Here's an old post that explains where I am on the subject of Jason Kidd
har13 wrote:
Please Sir, in my life even if i love someone, even if he is a guy who was my idol, even if his name is Giannis i will never change the reality or i will never protect him, i maybe be the first to point out his mistakes, you maybe need to start doing it if you don't, it helps, trust me, calling people out for not saying a good word about Jason when 9 out 10 times he is taking the wrong decisions say nothing when comes from a guy who never even once admited his HS mistakes.
With respect and sorry if i will not respond to you back because i have a plane to catch.
Salute.
I wrote:
I know you try to be intellectually honest in your critiques of Kidd, which is one reason I like you, but you should afford me the same courtesy. The assumption that I or JTK or the few other Kidd defenders are just taking a contrarian position because we like being contrarian is false.
I can't speak for others' motives, but I can tell you mine in defending Kidd. I like this to be a place of intelligent basketball discussion. I don't like post after post of "Kidd is a moron," because these posts don't foster discussion. I don't like the "looks like nobody here likes Kidd" posts because they suppress intelligent discussion. I don't like "hope we lose so Kidd gets fired" posts, because I never hope we lose.
If I don't often point out in-game decisions that appear to me to be questionable, it's because I'm taking the long view. We are still a developmental stage company. No matter what the marketing slogans say, this is not our time. But that time is getting closer, maybe a year or two away, and I'm hoping that every game is a lesson learned for coach as well as for players.
As I've posted over and over, the NBA is a players' league, and the influence of the coach is important only to the extent that it helps the players themselves develop individually and as a cohesive unit. The notion that a David Blatt-type theoretician would get this team where it wants to be sooner than a relatively non-interventionist coach such as Kidd is seriously flawed, although many here believe it. The ability to draw up a double-screen or back-cut play on a whiteboard is nice, but it's nicer to have players who are figuring out how and when to employ these strategies based on what they are learning about themselves and their teammates every night, even when they make mistakes. Especially when they make mistakes.
But since you think I never criticize Kidd, here's a New Year's present just for you: he should not have thrown a cookie at his wife.


















