Post#27 » by Wammy Giveaway » Tue Oct 9, 2018 8:46 pm
The main worry about Doc and rookies is that, if he plays them significant minutes, they're automatic losses. Playing rookies is a symptom of a team predicted to miss the playoffs instantly, whereas veterans lead you to wins and a playoff appearance. Doc is all about playoffs and winning - he has no time to develop players.
ESPN radio personality and play-by-play man John Ireland recalled a remark from Phil Jackson where he described rookies as being "lower than pond scum." One of my biggest gripes with Doc was that when he defeated somebody in the playoffs, he would "absorb" one of their egos. By defeating Phil in the 2008 NBA Finals, Doc believed he became Phil, thus absorbing his personality. Let's see if we could put that to the test.
I will have a later post on this, but at least one reader provided a list of rookies who Doc played which I will go over with some help. Some qualifiers that would be looked at are:
1. Games Of Significance: Which games did the rookies play within the 20 minute range or greater where they exclusively weren't restricted to garbage time? Did the player help or hurt his team simply by participating - how many points did he allow when he was on the court? What were the records when he had 20 minutes or more of playing time?
2. Opportunity Vs. Experience: More often than not, Doc lets injury be the determinant factor to a rookie's playing time. The more players that are injured, the higher the probability of a rookie seeing the floor; this was pretty evident last year with the Clippers. How many players were needed to be injured before a rookie got playing time? Was the injury to a superstar or a bench player? Doc Rivers forced Jared Dudley to play through an injury, but did he do so because of Reggie Bullock, a rookie, and the fear of automatic losses?
3. Placement Of Draft: What was their draft selection? Who else was out that the team should have taken? Who drafted them? The third question is important, as you will recall Doc Rivers took the GM job when he became Clippers coach. Part of Doc's reasoning for total say had to do with the shrewd Donald Sterling, and how he had a history of always screwing things up.
4. Before and after the 2008 NBA Finals: Was Doc more welcome to playing rookies when he first started out? After winning his first championship with Celtics (as coach), did veterans become Doc's new top priority? What was the minutes played average for rookies before and after 2008? What was the percentage weight between rookies and veterans before and after 2008? Did not playing in the 1994 NBA Finals (he was injured) and losing to the Rockets had anything to do with his habit of ring chasing - is that what Doc's doing at this point?
5. The coach's son: Doc Rivers traded for Austin Rivers in 2014-15 using Bullock in a three-team trade; Bullock was a Doc Rivers selection at 25. Bullock (9.2 in 2013-14, 10.5 in 2014-15), C.J. Wilcox (4.8 in 2014-15 and 7.3 in 2015-16) and Branden Dawson (4.8 in 2015-16) had less minutes per game than Austin's first year with Clippers (19.3 in 2014-15) in a mid-season trade - while on a rookie scale contract that was guaranteed to be declined. If Doc detests playing rookies for fear of losses and a lottery team impression, why didn't Austin get the same treatment as the others? That's part of the outlier.