Treebeard wrote:sidney lanier wrote:truly wrote:My biggest fear is that somehow the Bucks get lucky and win a playoff series purely due to talent (Giannis/Midds gets hot etc) and they decide to keep him.Honestly i dont see what can change if he is fired now and someone from his staff takes over.If i could i would fire them all and bring in Fizdale.
Who knows what winning a playoff series would lead to? Maybe eventually the ECF, the Finals, a ring? The mental picture of Giannis and Kidd hoisting the Larry O'Brien trophy must give you nightmares.
If the Kidd led Bucks go to the ECF or finals, all is forgiven in my book and I will eat all the fricasseed crow you can serve. Honestly, I do not expect that Kidd can get the Bucks to that outcome, even with more years allowed.
Spoken like a true Bucks fan, which I know you are.
Even though it took a long time, I'd say the anti-Kidd sentiment here has finally risen to the level of anti-Stotts sentiment at its peak. Now, as then, everybody is sure the coach is the problem and that he doesn't know what he's doing, makes bad scheme and rotation decisions, and is stupid. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Speaking of scheme, it's always puzzled me why some people believe that basketball offense is as schematic as football offense, as though every possession were planned in a huddle or templated to some secret sauce plan instead of essentially improvised on the court, on the fly. I remember hearing Jeff Van Gundy, who is pretty funny in a dry humor way, discussing the triangle offense run by the Phil Jackson Bulls. He said something to the effect that the triangle looked to him like "just pass the ball to Jordan," which of course it was.
He had something interesting to say on the subject of scheme generally that's pertinent to the comments in this thread:
I think anybody confusing a system with a reason for success is making a huge mistake. Systems don’t win games. Players do. All you try to do in any system you incorporate is put players in their areas of strength and try to hide and minimize their weaknesses. The triangle for [Scottie] Pippen and [Michael] Jordan with a lot of shooting around them was a tremendous system. Same with [Kobe] Bryant and [Shaquille] O’Neal. Then [Pau] Gasol and Bryant. It can work and other systems would’ve worked and they would’ve won it.
A lot of young folks here confuse the living breathing NBA with something on a spreadsheet produced by one of the tiny-necked analytics guys. I think this confusion has fostered a lot of misplaced hatred of Kidd. When you're measuring the wrong things in the wrong ways, and think you're measuring the right things in the right ways, you're bound to be led astray.
















