http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_ ... -is-oxygen
...player development experts I've talked to at length are unanimous that one of the best things one can possibly do to help a rookie's career is to bless him with the confidence of a supportive coaching staff and minutes to get used to the NBA game -- and very few players get that. Just a week ago an elite player development coach told me that every single player in the NBA can play, and it's really just a matter of opportunities and coaching and the team.
David Thorpe has been making similar points for years. He talks all the time about "the royal jelly." Literally, that's what worker bees feed a chosen baby bee to make her the queen. But it's also, says Thorpe, what coaches and others can feed players to help them achieve their potential. A lot of it has to do with building confidence.
"Playing time is the first part," says Thorpe. "A coach's support is another thing -- it helps you grow as a player if you know you're not going to get yanked the first time you miss a shot. That gives you the confidence to be creative and expand your game. And then the final aspect of the ideal set-up is coaching you up on the new things you're adding to your game. A great recent example of this was Trevor Ariza with the Lakers last season. In the spring, everyone was wondering why they'd let him shoot all those 3s. It wasn't productive. But they needed him to be able to do that, they let him do that, they didn't yank him for doing that, and they coached him how to do that better. And in the playoffs he was amazing at that and helped them win a championship."On a lot of teams, Ariza would have been condemned to the low-earning life of a non-shooter, but the coaching situation, and minutes, turned him into a sniper.
I'm not saying that playing time is all it takes to make any bench player good. I am saying that if you have the goods to be really special, playing time is an essential ingredient in developing to elite status. (Oxygen isn't all you need to be an Olympic runner. But Usain Bolt can't win any medals without oxygen. It's one of many essential ingredients.)
http://espn.go.com/blog/truehoop/post/_ ... ng-players
Of all the things coaches hate, globally televised boneheaded mistakes surely top the list.
That's why so many teams keep young players stapled to the bench in big moments.
Coaches are playing "correct" Grays over "still learning" Valanciunases all over the league. It satisfies a coach's sense of order and control. Every coach wants his team to play the right way -- which is not so different from following coach's orders. Without that, what's the point of having a coach?
Meanwhile, the guy who plays the "wrong" way often helps his team more, thanks to the many advantages of youth.
Popovich gets the same unproven players every team gets -- in fact, he gets worse ones. The Spurs haven't had a lottery pick since Tim Duncan in 1997. Nevertheless, he plays young players relentlessly and aggressively all season long. He plays young unproven players when his team is ahead. He plays them when his team is behind. He plays them when his team is in first place and when they're in last. He plays them in all four quarters and in overtime. And, most importantly, he does it season after season.
In 2001-02, the Spurs were a 58-win contender with an unconventional 19-year-old rookie French point guard who couldn't really shoot, didn't rack up a lot of assists, was undersized and didn't play great defense. Any coach would have benched Tony Parker while he was learning, and it's no secret why. I'm not sure I can recall a coach more openly exasperated with Parker than Popovich was that season.
But you know what Popovich did? He played Parker more minutes that season than Parker played this season -- when he was an MVP candidate -- saying all along that he wanted to see if Parker could develop into the kind of player he knew he could become.
It's about keeping the stars fresh, which is crucial. And it's about developing the young corps. The right way to distribute minutes is up and down the roster. When you get it right, you can end up with fresh veterans and trusted young players, both of whom can work wonders.
I share a lot of these same thoughts, and its part of the reason I think that Cliff is the wrong coach for MKG and perhaps Charlotte as a team in the long term. Don’t get me wrong. Cliff did the best coaching job that the Bobcats had ever had up to last year overall, but he has some fundamental weaknesses as a coach. His insistence on running ‘his’ system regardless of team personnel was detrimental to several players on the team. His rotations, especially his refusal to let young players ‘play thought mistakes’ hindered the development of the younger guys. The talk about limiting the number of rookies on the team was also telling about Cliff’s trust and ability to develop players. He also appears to strongly believe that part about vets = win now.
That said I do view the presence of Mark Price and Ewing as positive indicators for “getting it” about the need to develop the young guys. I also think that Cho not giving up draft picks at the trade deadline last year was a good sign for the future.
But where I go with this is that if the Hornets sign Deng and move MKG to the bench, he may never develop here in Charlotte. Without playing time or the trust of his coach MKG’s odds of success go WAY down. Similarly if you turn PT into a competition instead of an opportunity I think that you run the risk of destroying both the team chemistry overall and the young guys confidence in particular. Not many 18 to 20 year olds will really feel comfortable with the idea of being one mistake away from losing their starting job and potentially being out of the league after their rookie contract.
Similarly I have no real trust that the team could develop a guy like LaVine (who needs a lot of work) or even Young (who needs less, but still isn’t fully NBA ready yet) with the #9 pick … not yet anyway. I think this is a big part of why we see McDermott (as NBA ready as a college guy can get) as the guy outsiders see the team drafting this year if they keep the pick.
I honestly don’t know what to hope for at this point. Trading MKG might be best for both him and the team at this point. Ditto for the 9th pick. But I can’t help shaking the feeling that, if they do that, then the team is going to end up in the same situation they were in under LB. Good veteran team, but with no real future.