Gravy wrote:Chanel Bomber wrote:Gravy wrote:You know they have 6× all-star, 3× All-NBA First Team, MVP Jason Tatum. Jalen Brunson is just as good?lol Overrating our players like this is delusional
Tatum is a better player than Brunson and Mazzula is a better coach than Thibs.
Which gap makes the bigger difference is debatable. I do generally lean towards the talent gap.
While Mazzula may be better how do we really know when this is the only team he's ever coached? He was given a 50 win team with a 24year old mvp. This could be like Nurse where he was given a ecf team and Kawhi and people thought he was elite when every scheme he came up with would work when you have elite players.
Mazzula is a pragmatist. His decision-making is analytically and statistically driven rather than ideological, and he implements his thinking in a strong way. He's also thoughtful and open-minded, and seeks insight from other fields to inform his coaching. We shall see how his coaching career pans out, but he has succeeded in taking the Celtics to the next level.
Any coach needs elite talent to succeed. But I don't think it's accurate to say coaching doesn't make a difference.
Some middling coaches have won championships off the back of elite basketball talent. I don't think Frank Vogel or Mike Budenholzer were anything special, for instance. Some elite coaches (at least for their time) never won a championship. Context matters for coaches as much as it does for players. But we can still assess these coaches based on how their teams play relative to their talent level.
I don't think it's reasonable to say that Thibs is a "bad" coach. Some people here pretend he is and repeat it ad nauseam but frankly people think and say a lot of things - you're not going to change the mind of someone who needs a scapegoat to remain hopeful about the future.
But it's fair to point out that Thibs has core philosophical tenets that he struggles to deviate from. He's not the most agile or adaptable coach. He's not as pragmatic as Mazzula and a few other coaches are showing to be. When he's given a roster that fits his philosophy, like last year's Knicks, he can extract the most of it and do a masterful job. When he inherits a roster that doesn't, like this year's Knicks, he does appear to hold the team back a bit.