Stratmaster wrote:jnrjr79 wrote:Stratmaster wrote:
Yes. After 4.5 seasons Billy finally made the change.
Yep. And I'm not sure why anyone is particularly chuffed with Billy giving a high lottery pick a long leash on a middling team that wasn't going to win anything meaningful, anyway.
If you want to be mad about Patrick Williams (and I am!), I'd be mad at Patrick himself and at the FO that elected to extend him.
You seem to be willing to accept anything from Billy. Remember, this is the same coach who said Matas hadn't prepared himself for the season, and that is why he wasn't getting playing time, and then changed the story to "you can't just give a young player entitlement minutes. They have to earn them". So which is it. Why wasn't Matas starting day 1 for this middling team that wasn't going anywhere. He was certainly as prepared as PWill ever was. It was jaw dropping to hear him say that when the conversation was ABOUT Williams starting over Matas. And at this point, he had 4 years of results to tell him Williams wasn't the guy. I mean, seriously?
Yeah, none of this bothers me much, and I'm not sure why it seems to enrage you.
I wanted Matas to play more at the beginning of the year, too, but he seemed to develop well, so I'm not really sure why to be upset about it.
I guess I fail to see why Matas not being ready at the start of the season is a Billy Donovan issue, unless you think he's lying about it.
There were a lot of us who really wanted to see Giddey, Lavine and Matas starting with either Coby or Ayo and Vuc/Smith(I preferred Ayo/Smith...some some preferred Coby). We never got to see it and I think that was a huge mistake. Instead, PWill got his entitlement minutes. 20% of the Bulls starting lineup from the day he entered the league, after never even starting in college. And people wonder why this team never gelled into anything?
I do not think it was a "huge mistake" that we did not get to see a starting lineup combination that included Zach LaVine, a player destined to be traded this season. The idea that it was a "huge" mistake just seems totally bonkers. How so? Did we fail to unlock a lineup that would have led the team to 60 wins? Of course not. You can rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic all you want. This team was not going to do appreciably better than it did under any circumstance. This team never "gelled" to anything because of its overall talent level, not because Patrick Williams was given a relatively long leash before being benched.
I think the difference of opinion here is you appear to hold a much higher view of the level of talent on the roster than most others do.