Devilzsidewalk wrote:Klomp wrote:Worm Guts wrote:McHale let players do what they were good at, I don't think Rambis did.
And yet, they were still only nine games better than this year's team. Forcing players outside their comfort zone gets players to places they've never been before, doing things they've never done before. If the players cooperate, the players are better for it.
9 games sounds like a lot to me. McHale was winning games down the stretch w/ a rookie Kevin Love and heavy minutes for Kevin Ollie, Telfair, Carney, Shelden Williams, and Cardinal, thats not bad.
But I agree w/ you on Rambis dictating a more disciplined style of basketball and that if the players cooperate w/ Rambis, they'll improve their games. In fact they have to because Rambis is the coach. McHale's free and easy style might be more comfortable to implement because every player is more likely to reach their personal potential, but a disciplined style can make them more cohesive as a team if every one on the team is working on the same philosophy.
We won games in April because Foye went **** on a few occasions. The big difference between McHale and Rambis is that McHale changed the system to cover for his players' weaknesses, while Rambis refused too.
Prime examples are allowing Al to be a black hole in the post, and especially sinking all his wing players deep into the lane on defense to cover for the undersized, unathletic frontline of Jefferson/Love, leaving the perimeter exposed. Does covering up your weaknesses win more games? Yes. does it help your players improve? No, it largely is the opposite. Good idea for an aging contender, horrible idea for a young team.
McHale is the one who refused to let love shoot 3's. Rambis gave him a green light, even if he only shot 33%, he developed his game further. Rambis refused to add help to bad post defenders, , making them prove themselves, revealing how bad really were.
I think a lot of this season was just seeing what guys could and could not do. Rambis running his system and seeing how guys adjusted so we can make determinations on these guys' futures.