HeartBreakKid wrote:I've been considering Nate McMillan for my ballot for a while now. Anyone else?
Doc Rivers lol
Moderators: Doctor MJ, trex_8063, penbeast0, PaulieWal, Clyde Frazier
HeartBreakKid wrote:I've been considering Nate McMillan for my ballot for a while now. Anyone else?

HeartBreakKid wrote:I've been considering Nate McMillan for my ballot for a while now. Anyone else?
Basileus777 wrote:HeartBreakKid wrote:I've been considering Nate McMillan for my ballot for a while now. Anyone else?
Doc Rivers lol

ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Texas Chuck wrote:I no longer have anyone but Monty under consideration. Maybe Snyder could change my mind if those teams meet in the WCF and its clear he outcoached Williams to swing the series. Maybe Nate too again if he gets the Hawks to the Finals and outcoaches Monty.
But Williams had to fix a long-time losing culture, get his "star" guard to accept this new demanding star guard and accept being seen as 2nd fiddle by many. He got his talented young 1st overall draft pick to understand the team wins when you give us everything on defense and understand your offensive role is going to decline. He figured out how to unlock everything Mikal does well offensively so his elite defense can stay on the court and he pieced together a bench out of some guys whose careers were on the rocks.
Nate faced some similar challenges in shaping a roster but just to a lessor degree all the way around. Quin has an incredibly smart, veteran team. His coaching work was mostly done in years past. Now its just maintaining it. Thibs is Thibs. This is what he does. Playoffs showed us though that he can't work miracles when that outmatched talent wise. Not a serious candidate for me.

Colbinii wrote:
How did Nate do a lesser job?
He turned a team around mid-season, Monty has been doing his work for multiple seasons and has more top-end talent to work with.
ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Texas Chuck wrote:Colbinii wrote:
How did Nate do a lesser job?
He turned a team around mid-season, Monty has been doing his work for multiple seasons and has more top-end talent to work with.
Had head job not all year. Don't believe at all he has much less top end talent. Paul is the best player, but Trae is right there. Bogdan not much worse than Booker. Capela better than Ayton. Didn't have a decade of misery baked into the culture of the team to overcome. Team didn't finish as well in the easier conference, etc...
Nate's done a great job. But Williams done a better one imo. Especially since he's had to manage Booker and Nate is able to just let his young guy do whatever he wants.
One of the hardest things a coach has to do is convince the guy who has been the man that you being the man hasn't worked and now we have this guy who is going to make us a lot better but you have to sacrifice and you have to hear how he's the reason we are winning and you have to keep him engaged and committed.
Not easy, especially for a guy dating a Jenner, who was thrilled to score 70 and celebrate it when his team sucked and got drilled, who felt like he was hot stuff coming off the bubble. With many coaches that goes wrong. I mean you hear the narratives around Paul on this board. They are exaggerated but not completely baseless. For Williams to get Booker and Ayton for that matter to buy in was huge. Nate didn't have anything like that. The pecking order in Atlanta more clear. The vets he brought in weren't brought into challenge his young guys. Heck Collins never even faced a challenge from Gallo--was just given the job outright.

ThunderBolt wrote:I’m going to let some of you in on a little secret I learned on realgm. If you don’t like a thread, not only do you not have to comment but you don’t even have to open it and read it. You’re welcome.
Texas Chuck wrote:Colbini, you should vote for Nate. Compelling case but I'm sticking with Monty. You can cancel me out though.

Colbinii wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:Colbini, you should vote for Nate. Compelling case but I'm sticking with Monty. You can cancel me out though.
All good.
I tend to credit Chris Paul for more of the team improvement than Williams, though I am still impressed by Williams.
Krodis wrote:Hard to tell how much of the Hawks turnaround is on Nate, and how much of it is just that Lloyd Pierce was a disaster.
Sent from my SM-N981U using Tapatalk
Doctor MJ wrote:Colbinii wrote:Texas Chuck wrote:Colbini, you should vote for Nate. Compelling case but I'm sticking with Monty. You can cancel me out though.
All good.
I tend to credit Chris Paul for more of the team improvement than Williams, though I am still impressed by Williams.
And I tend to feel a need to remind people that the Suns looked incredible in the Bubble and that if they hadn't, Paul likely goes somewhere else.
The culture was a losing culture. Monty is the one who changed that. Add on top of that that all his young players have been developing nicely and the team just seems to be as strategically sound as any, and I'm very impressed.
Not looking to bash Nate, and I'll say that depending on what happens I may end up voting for Nate, but I'm really floored by what Monty's accomplished. This was a franchise that had wasted enough of Booker's years that it was plausible he'd force his way out soon. What a turnaround!

Colbinii wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:Colbinii wrote:
All good.
I tend to credit Chris Paul for more of the team improvement than Williams, though I am still impressed by Williams.
And I tend to feel a need to remind people that the Suns looked incredible in the Bubble and that if they hadn't, Paul likely goes somewhere else.
The culture was a losing culture. Monty is the one who changed that. Add on top of that that all his young players have been developing nicely and the team just seems to be as strategically sound as any, and I'm very impressed.
Not looking to bash Nate, and I'll say that depending on what happens I may end up voting for Nate, but I'm really floored by what Monty's accomplished. This was a franchise that had wasted enough of Booker's years that it was plausible he'd force his way out soon. What a turnaround!
Minnesota has room for Booker at any time.
Yes, the suns were incredible and yes, the Suns have developed their young talent in a tremendous way.
Its impossible to separate what Monty has done and what Chris Paul has done and I tend to give Paul more of the credit than Monty.
Doctor MJ wrote:Colbinii wrote:Doctor MJ wrote:
And I tend to feel a need to remind people that the Suns looked incredible in the Bubble and that if they hadn't, Paul likely goes somewhere else.
The culture was a losing culture. Monty is the one who changed that. Add on top of that that all his young players have been developing nicely and the team just seems to be as strategically sound as any, and I'm very impressed.
Not looking to bash Nate, and I'll say that depending on what happens I may end up voting for Nate, but I'm really floored by what Monty's accomplished. This was a franchise that had wasted enough of Booker's years that it was plausible he'd force his way out soon. What a turnaround!
Minnesota has room for Booker at any time.
Yes, the suns were incredible and yes, the Suns have developed their young talent in a tremendous way.
Its impossible to separate what Monty has done and what Chris Paul has done and I tend to give Paul more of the credit than Monty.
...or it would be if we handed seen these players look like they'd figured it out while Paul was still playin in another city.
I'll just put it this way:
Prior to the Bubble we were wondering how teams would respond to the hiatus. It had the potential to make some teams fall apart and some teams get tighter, and we saw both happen.
The single most exciting team going into the Bubble was arguably the Pelicans...and we just saw pretty quickly that they looked like a bunch of guys on different planets out there. Unfocused, disoriented, apathetic.
And this was what I expected from the Suns. This was a franchise that had been getting worse and worse ever since Sarver bought it, and there were just all sorts of things wrong there. And yet they showed up to the Bubble as a unified whole. The team played not just focused, but great together, and we started seeing guys emerge as "really good players" who had previously just been prospects - Mikal Bridges chief among them.
I understand all the stuff about "just because they were good in the Bubble doesn't mean..." and that's true, but when a team full of young guys take a step forward look good both during and after the Bubble, the most reasonable explanation is not coincidence, or "luck the first time, CP3 the next", and credit CP3 for recognizing what he could do with this rising tide when he signed on.

Colbinii wrote:I dont think anyone is saying "100% CP3, fire Monty" here, which seems to be what you are insinuating I am saying.
I'm saying that Chris Paul had a tremendous impact last season on an extremely young and inexperienced team and then did the same this year.
Yes, the bubble was great, but they beat Washington, Dallas by 2 points because Hardaway/Kleber/Smith combined 3/21 shooting, Heat with no Butler or Dragic, 76ers no Embiid/Simmons, Mavericks (13 minutes Luka and no KP.
Max123 wrote:Wonder how big of a hit Gobert’s stock takes because of, mainly, 2 games against the Clippers?
Sent from my iPhone using RealGM Forums