But V, all what you listed is either an excuse (however well-justified) or a patience gospel. I am talking actual abilities. For instance, from my untrained point of view -- Brad Stevens is great with ATOs. Simple to show and see. There are dozens of videos to illustrate. Pop is clearly great at getting people to play within the system. Yes it took years to show that (can't be otherwise), but it's there. JVG was a great defensive coordinator, poor offensive coordinator and a lousy motivator/leader. Again -- evidence exists (as much as there is an evidence in such a case). There are coaches that are universally considered bad. Byron Scott comes to mind. So, there is some qualification, not only quantification (how many games the team won, or what are their advanced metrics). What is it? In my mind, all you guys are saying is distilled to: "well, he is a nice guy, people seems to like him, but we weren't able to see his abilities yet because... Let's give him some time, so we can decide". Boggles the mind.
Well had Steve Kerr not come back, Luke coulda rode that 29-4 wave into the playoffs and maybe they win it all that year instead of lose to Bron haha. Also you brought up BScott, but ironically he led the Nets to back to back Finals within 3 years of 1st starting as a head coach. Of course a future HOF PG in Kidd helps in that regard, and Luke just acquired Bron... Seriously tho just think about the team he's inherited, how young they are, the flux involved and we haven't even discussed the injuries he's experienced (forget Zo for a moment, 20% of our cap was held hostage by a dude that played 13 mins last year). Its hard to evaluate Luke's impact on a "team" like that. Zen your concern is valid and Luke has so much to improve on, but I just can't find him at fault with all the instability and lack of continuity around him. You can't build a foundation in that type of environment. This year needs to be looked at as year 1, since the FO literally cleaned house and this is the team (outside of 14m this year and 5 m for the next 3 years in dead cap) that they wanted to start with. Obviously they're still not done and next summer will bring some finality to that. So I feel its fair to look at this year as his year 1. Now we can amend that window of scrutiny by shortening it some since technically he's 2 years in the game...so by next year at this time if we are still talking about how we're running rudimentary sets on offense like PnR and Horns while still being defensive bottom feeders (last year we just missed top 10 believe it or not), then Luke deserves a 2nd look as our coach moving forward...no doubt. Till then, imho I think dude deserves to lay down the foundation and let this team develop into what he envisions his offense/defense to look like.
He took the team from pitiful to very respectable on defense last year. That's something. If they play as bad all year as they have in games 1-3, he'll be fired. But to say his seat is hot right now? Not buying it.
A lot has to improve. Our halfcourt offensive system has been garbage the last 2 seasons. We're giving up 130 ppg a night on defense. That has got to change. If we don't see some major changes, we could miss/barely make the playoffs. Too many people are using "team chemistry" and "it's early" as a blanket excuse, but there are serious execution flaws that have more to do with coaching than getting used to one another. And quite honestly, he's had training camp to fix it. It's one thing if we were incorrectly executing our offense, or missing rotations on defense. But when the underlying system doesn't exist for the players to take advantage of it, thats a COACHING problem, not a TIME/CHEMISTRY/NEW TEAM problem. We can let this team play 500 games, have the greatest chemistry in the world, but the system in place won't take us anywhere. It really reminds me of GSW under Kerr vs. Jackson. The talent is there, we just need the framework to take advantage of it.
Zen, what do you think Phil Jackson did well as a coach? If it’s anything system oriented, that’s to Tex’s credit. What he did better than anyone else was get them to buy into the system, commit to a role and bring them together as a team. Luke, by Jackson’s own evaluation, has some of those same qualities. Steve Kerr says the same about him. I get you don’t like the guy but they know more about coaching potential than any of us do.
Sure. Wait and see. Phil benefited IMMENSELY from having Jordan. Before and during his prime. And Tex. He himself was infuriating. The difference, however, was that, by all accounts, it was immediately clear there is a progress from Collins. Same with the Mark Jackson - Kerr situation. Do you see the same improvement from Scott? I could probably argue, just as easily, that Scott got the raw end of the stick, getting a bunch of misfits, DAR, Young, Boozer and all them dudes... He never had a roster quite like what Walton got. Bottom line though, the product on the floor is sub-par and I don't see an improvement. P.S. I truly believe that defensive improvement came with Zo and BI. IIRC when Zo went down our defensive plummeted... Of course we were starting a midget as well, but still...
Yeah, he made the adjustments we were all clamoring for; I'm glad those suspensions game, and I knew they would be a blessing in disguise. It gave him the advantage of tinkering and finding out what works and what doesn't; let's hope he sticks with it. Good job, Luke.
so when rondo and ingram comes back. what is Luke gonna do. put rondo and ingram back on starting 5. or keep the starting 5 right now and have rondo and ingram off the bench?
I like Zo, Hart, LeBron, Kuz, and McGee a lot. The ball moves well, Kuz is more a catch and shoot guy than BI, Hart can hit the 3 unlike KCP. Honestly I don’t know that you rush back to starting Ingram with his struggles from 3 and iso play. Maybe you let him find his rhythm with the bench. I think Rondo and Zo are pretty interchangeable starting though, if Rondo feels better starting, it’s fine, Zo’s game fits/adapts with pretty much any lineup.
Yeah I do. I think Luke’s players like playing for him. My impression is the team culture is much better. But I admit I like Byron about as much as you like Luke.
It has nothing to do with who is starting... Y'all killing me with this s*** hahaha. Now that small ball s***, I can f*** with you on that.
Ballers have ink and Zo's shooting better after getting some work done ...hey Luke, start Zo and bench Hart for KCP...Oh wait. #sTATistics Better being a butthole than having holes poked in your analytics
This is the most quantifiable thing Luke has done. He's created a competitive culture that players like to be a part of. How many players have we lost the last few years who didn't want to return? Julius I think is the only one and clearly there were plenty of extenuating circumstances with him. We're just 4 games into the season. All I want is consistent improvement and competitiveness. It's far, far, far too early to be calling for his head. I honestly don't even understand the impulse. If any of you were bakers, you'd have no bread!
I don't think you'll ever like him as our coach or give him a shot and that's okay. We can agree to disagree on this. Like Real said in another thread. We're never going to be a great defensive team on paper given the pace we play at. I think communication and being able to relate to players in this day in age is paramount. Luke excels in this area. Rondo said a week or so ago after practice when asked how this staff and team compares to others he's been on. Rondo said he's never played for a team and coach that are so player centric and personable. This isn't about feeling and making everyone feel good as the coach. It's how can you communicate the things you want to get done as a coach and get your players to believe in that process. It's trust and I know our young guys believe in that process will help the team in the long run when we build this continuity that we haven't had in the last few years.