uballer wrote:It makes me wonder if GoodDayLA is a troll.
That was my thought as well.
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uballer wrote:It makes me wonder if GoodDayLA is a troll.
steady wrote:I don't really have a beef with McHale - he seems an okay guy who had some tough decisions to make, not my choice for a coach but hey there are worse.
I am just not a fan of having him held up as the coach who knows Lin's game best // cause he obviously did not appreciate Lin's strengths as well as other coaches have. They were just a little bit oil and water. Plus I really disliked how he handled the whole benching thing and think it's just human nature for him to want to say Lin was not that good before ...
leeramundo wrote:steady wrote:I don't really have a beef with McHale - he seems an okay guy who had some tough decisions to make, not my choice for a coach but hey there are worse.
I am just not a fan of having him held up as the coach who knows Lin's game best // cause he obviously did not appreciate Lin's strengths as well as other coaches have. They were just a little bit oil and water. Plus I really disliked how he handled the whole benching thing and think it's just human nature for him to want to say Lin was not that good before ...
I agree, probably at this point, Clifford is the coach that knows the full dimensions of his game the best, being his most recent coach and one that utilized him well within his system.
lin is ok wrote:pretty hard now to make to playoffs , our bench PG is in shambles.
steady wrote:leeramundo wrote:steady wrote:I don't really have a beef with McHale - he seems an okay guy who had some tough decisions to make, not my choice for a coach but hey there are worse.
I am just not a fan of having him held up as the coach who knows Lin's game best // cause he obviously did not appreciate Lin's strengths as well as other coaches have. They were just a little bit oil and water. Plus I really disliked how he handled the whole benching thing and think it's just human nature for him to want to say Lin was not that good before ...
I agree, probably at this point, Clifford is the coach that knows the full dimensions of his game the best, being his most recent coach and one that utilized him well within his system.
Yep I would pick Cliff too. Also I just trust Clifford's basketball judgment and straight way of talking about things more.
TinmanZBoy wrote:steady wrote:leeramundo wrote:
I agree, probably at this point, Clifford is the coach that knows the full dimensions of his game the best, being his most recent coach and one that utilized him well within his system.
Yep I would pick Cliff too. Also I just trust Clifford's basketball judgment and straight way of talking about things more.
coach McHale knows Lin's game, but he does not believe Linsanity can strike twice...
Coach Clifford probably taught Lin the most, made Lin a more versatile player...
steady wrote:TinmanZBoy wrote:steady wrote:
Yep I would pick Cliff too. Also I just trust Clifford's basketball judgment and straight way of talking about things more.
coach McHale knows Lin's game, but he does not believe Linsanity can strike twice...
Coach Clifford probably taught Lin the most, made Lin a more versatile player...
Yes you're right lol
but just not believing can get in the way of allowing something to happen sometimes
Even in that interview, mchale said Lin will make mistakes (even though they are mistakes of effort, mchale says), Lin can be reckless (though he says now that is a good thing), and that sometimes you have to tell Lin not to go full out all the time. I sympathize with McHale more now -- Lin wasn't the player then that he is now. But Lin always had this potential -- and McHale just did not see it.
lin is ok wrote:steady wrote:TinmanZBoy wrote:
coach McHale knows Lin's game, but he does not believe Linsanity can strike twice...
Coach Clifford probably taught Lin the most, made Lin a more versatile player...
Yes you're right lol
but just not believing can get in the way of allowing something to happen sometimes
Even in that interview, mchale said Lin will make mistakes (even though they are mistakes of effort, mchale says), Lin can be reckless (though he says now that is a good thing), and that sometimes you have to tell Lin not to go full out all the time. I sympathize with McHale more now -- Lin wasn't the player then that he is now. But Lin always had this potential -- and McHale just did not see it.
Screw Mchale / Morey, he is a bad coach. Plus he had an axe to grind to against Lin , it was so obvious. Harden/Lin backcourt could have worked, if not for him.
Prokorov wrote:ChokeFasncists wrote:^
I'm not sure Lin has a greater effect on winning games than Harden. It might be the case tho if the whistles are taken away.
Not sure Lin will be HOF, it's possible if he totally gets his shot back, tones down on his TOs and plays well consistently.
OTOH, do remember that Morey and McFail were responsible for waiving Lin for Jonny Flynn and indirectly catalyzing Linsanity. Their boss got real mad, scolded them and demanded them to get Lin back. Well, what can one expect from them when the opportunity presents itself?
Harden has a much bigger impact on wins then Lin. in fact only 4 or 5 players have a bigger impact on wins then harden does.
Mentioning lin and the hall of fame is a joke. if you took his career year, projected i PEr36 and he did that for say 8 or 10 straight years he still wouldnt be close to HoF numbers
leeramundo wrote:leeramundo wrote:I'm here to assure everyone that as a Lin fan, I'm not under the delusion that Lin is even close to being likely to become a HOFer. All I'd hope for is for him to string together a few near all-star seasons, and maybe even 1 legitimate all-star season. If he does that, I'd consider his career a great success. He's an undrafted guy out of Harvard, who most people didn't even think would be in the NBA at all. He's really overachieving already if he does what I said, anything more than that I would be ecstatic. BTW, not agreeing that Lin is going to average 70% shooting is nothing to brag about.
Also there is no comparison to Yao, Yao was the best center in the league for a couple of years. Lin has never been the best at his position nor will he.
TinmanZBoy wrote:lin is ok wrote:steady wrote:
Yes you're right lol
but just not believing can get in the way of allowing something to happen sometimes
Even in that interview, mchale said Lin will make mistakes (even though they are mistakes of effort, mchale says), Lin can be reckless (though he says now that is a good thing), and that sometimes you have to tell Lin not to go full out all the time. I sympathize with McHale more now -- Lin wasn't the player then that he is now. But Lin always had this potential -- and McHale just did not see it.
Screw Mchale / Morey, he is a bad coach. Plus he had an axe to grind to against Lin , it was so obvious. Harden/Lin backcourt could have worked, if not for him.
McHale is not a bad coach, not a great coach either, but he is a good coach... Lin/Harden backcourt worked fine, one of the best at the time... it is just the Beverley/Harden, Lin sixth man combinations made the team more balanced and deeper... Being the sixth man of a team is not a slight, nothing to be shamed of ... if it were not for Bosh, they would not have traded Lin... all in all, Lin was pretty solid in Rockets, but he would never be Linsanity in Rockets, it is that simple, he will not have the ball with Harden in the picture....
it really boils down to how lin sees himself as a player... if he wants to settle to be a sixth man, or a leading guard to run a team, we know the answer now...
uballer wrote:It makes me wonder if GoodDayLA is a troll.
Prokorov wrote:ChokeFasncists wrote:Prokorov wrote:
its not so much that lopez is bad.... its that his limitations REALLY put pressure on the other 4 guys:
he cant switch on to smalls, which means we have to either help on every screen he is involved in, or trail/trap every screen he is involved in. and he is poor at trapping, so its usually trail.
he is very cumbersome, so while he does a good job preventing FG's at the rim when he is already near the rim, he isnt very good at being a rim protector in the sense that he cant often help and get in position to protect them rim in help situations.
in order to combat his slowness, he uses this low crouch, making him go from 7 feet to like 6'4" taking his size out of the equation.
we are always dead last defending threes because we have to have our wings pinch in on 1-5 screens all the time. leaves the perimeter threes open. all 7 coaches had no awnser for this. its the biggest problem with lopez.
put 3 or 4 excellent defenders around lopez and he probably looks solid on D. but his limitations really hurt you if you dont. and we certainly dont
I do understand that it's a big weakness but does the starters' defense deserve the label "putrid" just cuz of it?
yes. we werent the worst team in the league last year because of some fluke. foye and booker help, but they arent elite defenders. its one of those things hard to see on paper... lopez isnt a bad defender, but he really makes it an uphill battle to be good defensively as a team. you just cant do the things you need to succeed defensively in todays nba with him at center.
the year he got hurt and KG was center it was night and day for us defensively, especially against the 3pt shot
Thanks for the honesty.MorbidHEAT wrote:My dislike for Lin started during Linsanity. It was absurd. It's probably irrational dislike at this point, but man he gets on my nerves. He's been tearing us up though.
spaceballer wrote:Apparently, NYU held a special 5th anniversary Linsanity panel last week. It's a bit strange for two reasons. One, JLin is from Harvard and not NYU. Two, he didn't attend nor was he a part of the proceedings. It seems NYU loved Linsanity so much that they held the event on their own, even though we're 5yrs removed.
The hashtags reference #nyuRLHU (NYU Residential Life and Housing Services) and #nyuFFIR (Faculty Fellows in Residence). So I guess the special Linsanity 5th Anniversary discussion panel was organized by Residential Life and Housing Services with some Faculty Fellows who may have been around in NYC 5yrs ago for Linsanity and still remembered. Linsanity left a huge impression on NYC, and apparently also on the faculty fellows at NYU who went and organized this anniversary celebration event for the students.
Thanks for the honesty.MorbidHEAT wrote:My dislike for Lin started during Linsanity. It was absurd. It's probably irrational dislike at this point, but man he gets on my nerves. He's been tearing us up though.
TinmanZBoy wrote:lin is ok wrote:steady wrote:
Yes you're right lol
but just not believing can get in the way of allowing something to happen sometimes
Even in that interview, mchale said Lin will make mistakes (even though they are mistakes of effort, mchale says), Lin can be reckless (though he says now that is a good thing), and that sometimes you have to tell Lin not to go full out all the time. I sympathize with McHale more now -- Lin wasn't the player then that he is now. But Lin always had this potential -- and McHale just did not see it.
Screw Mchale / Morey, he is a bad coach. Plus he had an axe to grind to against Lin , it was so obvious. Harden/Lin backcourt could have worked, if not for him.
McHale is not a bad coach, not a great coach either, but he is a good coach... Lin/Harden backcourt worked fine, one of the best at the time... it is just the Beverley/Harden, Lin sixth man combinations made the team more balanced and deeper... Being the sixth man of a team is not a slight, nothing to be shamed of ... if it were not for Bosh, they would not have traded Lin... all in all, Lin was pretty solid in Rockets, but he would never be Linsanity in Rockets, it is that simple, he will not have the ball with Harden in the picture....
it really boils down to how lin sees himself as a player... if he wants to settle to be a sixth man, or a leading guard to run a team, we know the answer now...
Thanks for the honesty.MorbidHEAT wrote:My dislike for Lin started during Linsanity. It was absurd. It's probably irrational dislike at this point, but man he gets on my nerves. He's been tearing us up though.
GoodDayLa wrote:leeramundo wrote:leeramundo wrote:I'm here to assure everyone that as a Lin fan, I'm not under the delusion that Lin is even close to being likely to become a HOFer. All I'd hope for is for him to string together a few near all-star seasons, and maybe even 1 legitimate all-star season. If he does that, I'd consider his career a great success. He's an undrafted guy out of Harvard, who most people didn't even think would be in the NBA at all. He's really overachieving already if he does what I said, anything more than that I would be ecstatic. BTW, not agreeing that Lin is going to average 70% shooting is nothing to brag about.
Also there is no comparison to Yao, Yao was the best center in the league for a couple of years. Lin has never been the best at his position nor will he.
Yao was not the best center in the league at any time. Please don't insult Shaquille O'Neal. Yao was a one way player who couldn't dunk on Nate Robinson or play defense despite giving 100% effort. He's in the HOF because he's from China and made a handful of all star games, most of which NBA fans from China voted for.