Post#43 » by tsherkin » Sun Jun 1, 2008 2:38 am
Doc Rivers is generally a good "player's coach;" he does seem to manage egos pretty well and always has. He's not very good at the Xs and Os; his rotations are whacked sometimes, for example, and he's never put together a really compelling offense. He's not a "system" coach like Jerry Sloan, Phil Jackson, Rick Adelman, etc, he doesn't have a codified offensive system he likes to use and that generally makes him pretty weak offensively. Of course, historically he has not enjoyed deep teams with lots of offensive talent but you can see that the sets his teams are running are rarely very good. You have to credit him for using T-Mac in the post relentlessly while he was in Orlando, though, that was definitely a good move.
As for Boston, the major differences are not related to Rivers; he still blows decisions on a regular basis. The major differences between this year and last year are Ray Allen, Kevin Garnett and a massively upgraded defensive team.
Let's not forget that Thibodeau is in his first year with the Celtics; he spent time with Jeff Van Gundy in New York and Houston. He even has some college head coaching experience with Salem State and was inducted into the New Britain, Connecticutt Hall of Fame a decade ago. The man has an outstanding coaching pedigree and he is of considerably more value than Rivers, who is mainly a figurehead.
You've got the DPOY, one of the best defensive coaches in the league, three guys with 20+ ppg capability... what does Rivers have to do? The Celtics aren't especially well-prepared at the end of games, they've been giving up leads a lot, they don't have a well-organized offensive attack (though you must credit him for not SCREWING the offense, he does let Ray, Paul and Kevin all attack from their favorite spots and he has done a semi-respectable job of keeping Garnett in the post)...
Doc Rivers isn't anything special as a coach. He's not, you know, ridiculously incompetent or anything but he's no more than a mediocre head coach. His COY is as ridiculous as Sam Mitchell's, both awarded to unimpressive teams with nice turnarounds and absolutely nothing to claim as far as postseason success: Mitchell's Raptors won 47 games and got smoked by the Nets; Rivers' Magic, pre-McGrady, won 41 games and didn't even MAKE the playoffs; he received attention because he took a craptacular, injury-riddled roster and made it to .500, with no one paying any attention to Ben Wallace and Corey Maggette.
Rivers? Meh.
Boston is a team defined by star power and defense, none of which have anything to do with Rivers' contributions to the team.