Doctor MJ wrote:gaf234 wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:In the previous 2 games the Cavs torched the Warriors' defense. This was what I was referring to, and I think it's frankly strange to talk about Game 7 as a coaching sin and then essentially point out that the Warrior defense was much more effective in that game that they'd been before while blaming a guy who was only out there to help on defense for the team losing.
I do agree that Ezeli's mistakes directly accounted for more than the difference in the game, so in that sense I don't disagree with you, but from a coaching perspective, to me it's just a riddle you don't know the answer to until after you try it.
Re: can't be outcome-oriented...said the man belaboring a point he wouldn't be talking about if the outcome had been different.
Huh? The Warriors defense was more effective than it was in previous games, that's true. Ezeli was out on the floor ostensibly to help out the defense, true, yes.
Are you saying the first point was caused by the decision to make the second...?
And I'm glad you know exactly what I'd be saying in a counterfactual...
No, I'm literally telling you that if you seriously blame Kerr for plays Ezeli made in this game, you would seem to be focused on outcome rather than process.
There's a lot of interesting analysis of Kerr's decisions to play Ezeli/Varejao on these twitter feeds:
https://twitter.com/haralabob
https://twitter.com/bballbreakdown
They both concluded (and I agree) that Varejao was far worse than Ezeli. Didn't necessarily feel that way in realtime, but after watching a couple times, it's pretty obvious to me.