long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:Illuminaire wrote:Plus infinity plus one.
Admittedly, there is some truth in willbcock's screed. Losing brings on irrational frustration...
But, as someone who spent ten years responsible for hiring, training and yes firing coaches, I see multiple signs of a coach who is a bad fit for this team. To wit:
1. Calling out players through the media. Often works short term, never long term. Be critical, but keep it in the family.
2. Walking out of practice... Impudent. Sends a message to players that you feel you are too good to coach them up.
3. Lack of consistency. The constant rotation changes sends a message that you don't have a plan.
4. standing up for a former player over a current one. Garnett over Dray. At any level, players want to feel supported and, yes, loved.
I could go on, but the bottom line is that Flip hasn't been a good fit to manage this group.
You have a point on issues 1, 2 and 4. I'll defend Flip on issue 3. The lack of a consistent lineup is mostly due to injury, guys returning from injury, suspensions, or the Arenas trade.
There was a little lineup confusion when Wall first got back from his first injury and Flip had to work out whether we should start a 3-guard lineup or keep Thornton as a starter. And then there was a little flux when Flip couldn't figure out whether to start Gee or Thronton. In both cases, the problem wasn't really Flip. It was that we didn't have a starting-caliber small forward. Other than that, Flip's starting lineups were mostly dictated by injury - except when he was disciplining Blatche and McGee.
Things have settled into place of late with the emergence of Nick Young as a consistent 2-guard, and with the acquisition of Lewis. I think Flip would like nothing more than to have a stable starting rotation consisting of Wall, Young, Lewis, Blatche and McGee.