


Moderator: THE J0KER
The Rebel wrote:Well the good news is that COY winners seem to get fired a year or so later.
Mac1958 wrote:While we're on the topic, can someone explain to me why The Coach of the Year would change his lineup, taking out his season-long starting center, for the playoffs?
ChuckS wrote:Mac1958 wrote:While we're on the topic, can someone explain to me why The Coach of the Year would change his lineup, taking out his season-long starting center, for the playoffs?
That's an interesting question. I think if Faried had been totally ready in the first two games, Koufos might have survived, or if Karl had inserted Faried into the starting lineup for Fournier instead of Koufos. But it could also be argued that Bogut took Kosta out of the lineup. The latter shot 58% during the regular season, but only (particularly bad for a center) 37% in the playoffs. His rebounds went from 7 to 3.5 and he had an efficiency of six. He had zero points and two rebounds in the blowout game two loss at home.
But (in Karl's defense) in addition to Koufos' poor play, it probably made some sense to try to adapt to the GS lineup without Lee. It seemed to help in the third game, but then we were again blown out in game four. Karl then made another adjustment, finally replacing Fournier with McGee. We still lost the series, but that reduced their scoring from 112 points per game to 96. I'm always smarter in retrospect, but I think that should have been done in game three. (This might seem to contradict the following conclusion, as might the possibility of starting Brewer - although he didn't play all that great himself - from the beginning, to help our defense with Jack and maybe even Curry.)
So, while Karl might not have been totally without sin, I really cannot blame this loss on just coaching. (Did you ever notice everyone says it's a players game until a loss?) With neither center, or both collectively, unable to offset Bogut's rebounding, and with their perimeter players sometimes seeming not to miss any shots anyways, we could not be expected to run as well. Without Gallo, with Chandler shooting 36/31%, and Fournier giving us nothing on offense or defense (this is not an attack - he is a nice rookie with limited playing time and experience), I think we lacked the fire power to outscore them the way they were shooting, in spite of our averaging a pretty good 103 points/per. In addition, I think the loss of Gallo hurt us infinitely more than their loss of Lee, with Bogut returning to health and form.
Denver coach George Karl, voted the NBA's Coach of the Year, has been discussed as a possible candidate within the Clippers' front office, sources said.
Karl has one year left on his contract, and Denver holds an option that would trigger three more years. In the past, Karl has always been uneasy about entering the final year of deals and has been eager to discuss a possible extension with the Nuggets, sources said.
Denver Nuggets coach George Karl's status has become "unsettled" following the departure of general manager Masai Ujiri for the Toronto Raptors, two sources close to the situation said late Saturday night.
Karl, who was named the NBA's coach of the year following the Nuggets' 57-win season, is not in any imminent danger of losing his job, the sources stressed. But Ujiri's departure, coupled with Denver's disappointing first-round playoff exit, has shaken things up in Denver to the point that Karl, who is under contract for just one more season, could, incredibly, begin the season on the hot seat after winning the league's top coaching honor for the first time in his long career, instead of beginning extension talks.
SportsCenter @SportsCenter 2m
BREAKING: Nuggets part ways with head coach George Karl, league source tells @WojYahooNBA. Karl spent 9 seasons with Denver.
MomaDance wrote:Collapse? The only time he ever lost a playoff series in which he was favored with the Nuggets was this year. Sure, he could have had a couple upsets here and there but to say HIS team was upset every year is absolute revisionist history.
MomaDance wrote:And again, the only time he ever lost a playoff series with the Nuggets in which he was favored to win was this year. The notion that he continually choked in the playoffs throughout his tenure in Denver is simply untrue.