[quote="therealbig3"]I’m not gonna defend Nash, I agree at this point that he’s not a great coach. I just think he’s getting scapegoated like crazy.
Let’s just keep it in context: we are getting frustrated when our offense stagnates into an iso fest with Kyrie and KD. But let’s also realize that these guys LOVE to iso and have notoriously broken offense game plans so that they can iso…it was an issue for KD especially in GS. What we’re seeing may not improve with a different coach, because it’s kind of just who our two best players are. [/quote]
I was going to ignore this so as not to digress from some good discussion, and since I'm new here not to further convince people after a few posts that I'm just a Durant sycophant instead of just a simple lover of the game. But there was another Durant ISO post later and I began to think that ISOing has gotten to mean bad.
Every player at one time or another ISOs. The greats are just really good at it. And yes, a good motion offense allows shooting specialists and even non shooters to get open shots. But it is more important for exceptional coaches to get their best players isolated from too much help defense or on lesser defenders (on picks and switches). In our case of course they are Kevin and Kyrie. Success is a made basket and what better chance is there of that being accomplished than by high efficiency shooters with the highest PPG averages. Of course the motion ends with the make or foul, but it seems ridiculous to me to blame someone for the success. There is, therefor, nothing wrong with isolating within the concepts of the offense.
A good player should also not be condemned for ISOing when a good offense has broken down or been negated by a good defense, because it often allows the team to survive the crisis. And needless to say, there is nothing else for a great player to do in a lousy offense but ISO to try to steal a win. Yes, a player can be a "black hole" or stat crazy. I find that hard to believe with Durant, who last year had more assists than anyone but the point guard (Harden) and no one else was even close. In the playoffs, with the whole defense concentrating on him he was our leader in assists.
As far as any issue or problem in GS, I didn't see it and I watched most games. It will be hard to believe after reading this, but I started watching them more because one of my favorite modern day players is Andre Iguodala. He's someone else I would always want on my team. I'm a skeptic myself, so I don't expect you to believe me. But what KD's former teammates there think is another matter:
Steph Curry -- "I love that dude" -- "Curry said his reaction to a Durant return would be a Hell Yeah" --
https://www.goldenstateofmind.com/2022/9/12/23349168/curry-was-interested-in-kd-returnKlay Thompson --
https://bleacherreport.com/articles/10053107-klay-thompson-it-bothers-me-when-people-dont-talk-about-kevin-durants-greatnessDraymond Green --
https://www.nbcsports.com/bayarea/warriors/draymond-green-why-warriors-needed-kevin-durant-win-2017-18-nba-titles