mirrornick wrote:buckzxl wrote:No. With all his stupid mistakes like letting Anderson chuck all season, illogical time outs, playing Aaron Gray instead of JV, watching leads diminish without correcting any players for mistakes, playing small ball in crunch time where rebounding is crucial especially against big teams, subbing out players who start getting hot, leave players in that have been playing terrible all game, not running any specific plays for our star players, not being able to draw up a decent play after time outs, you know what. There are too many damn mistakes to list that he constantly makes EVERY game. He won't win the COY and he shouldn't even be in contention for it to be honest. His coaching is fairly bad and he consistently gets credit for when players bail him out.
I know what you mean. Most of us see it this way as well. But the NBA will not look at it this way, because they don't follow every game like we do. And there's no statistics that can prove that Casey is a bad coach.
The 8th seed is the only statistic that can solely dictate if Casey is a good coach or a bad one.
I think at least someone will take note of the fact that the turnaround from 4-19 began at approximately the same time that the Raps "best player" and "leading scorer" got injured...a guy that this supposed COY candidate had insisted on starting and playing heavy minutes despite the fact that he was useless.
No freaking way he wins the award.
That said, I do agree that the team's storyline is the best indicator of the COY winner. My best guess at the winner this year:
Mark Jackson - Golden State (assuming they can recover from their swoon and hold on to a playoff spot, they'll have the best storyline in the league)
George Karl - Denver
Frank Vogel - Indiana
Personally I think the winner should be either Tom Thibodeau or Pop, but those choices would imply a selection made primarily on actual coaching ability rather than the team's storyline...