Does he even have an offense? I'm so tired of watching these guys literally jack contested 3 after 3 leading to easy fast break baskets. I would have thought they learned after game 7 but they haven't.
sometimes you dont have to come up with a plan or adjustment .....just pausing the game changes the momentum..we could of use a flagrant foul last night in the third ...it would have made a world of difference
i LIKE OUR cOACH ALOT BUT HE HAS FLAWS.A coach that really effectively used small ball as a tactic not as a hardcore philosophy was Don Nelson. Nelly was great at making in game adjustments that where key to giving his team the advantage. MDA has to take a page out of his book
Yup, the thought process is they got the best iso scorers, so why run plays... The rise and fall all falls on the shoulders of players making shots, coaches hands are wiped clean. Terrible.
MDA has really done a bad job this season. The players clearly started the season unprepared and lack the mentality they had last year. Us getting big leads reflects the talent we have on the floor, us losing them reflects our poor execution and decision making, which is largely coaching. Also, the drop in defense from last year is astounding, with a lot of the same players from last year's excellent defense too. I'm not sure if I want him fired yet, we'll see how the playoffs go. But this roster has under performed all season, and it's looking like a year of Harden's prime wasted.
I don't know if I'd go that far. The roster has been plagued with injuries and players who have been sent packing by Morey and Tilman(Ennis, House, MCW, Melo, Nunnally). Not to mention Bzdelik's last minute, temporary retirement to start the season. Hard to get any kind of continuity under those circumstances. The real opportunity to judge D'Antoni's coaching performance will be after the All-Star Break. The roster will be set(aside from maybe House and/or a buyout being added), Capela will be back, CP3 will(hopefully) remain healthy, and the schedule will lighten up a bit. If the team continues to struggle at that point, then there does need to be some heat on the guy.
That's why I said we'll see what happens in the playoffs before I decide anything (not like anyone cares what I think anyway lol). But the beginning of the season was just an embarrassment, and we've had many bad chokes and bad losses where we were clearly the more talented team, even with the injuries we've had.
No argument on the horrible start. And D'Antoni deserves some of the blame for that. The team looked like they were mailing it in already. It was eerily reminiscent of 2015-16. Thankfully they've (mostly) emerged from that funk. Where I don't blame D'Antoni for the awful start was that he had Ariza and Luc taken away from him and was handed Melo, MCW, and Ennis as replacements. And Ennis immediately got hurt, CP3 got his dumb ass suspended for 2 games, and even Harden had an early season injury. And all this without his defensive assistant coach by his side.
This season has been a choke fest and at least some of it has to do with Dantoni not knowing when to call timeouts. That and we don't have enough depth of talent around Harden. If we are not hitting our threes we are not getting enough rebounds due to not boxing out and in general being undersized. Some of these games at times are hard to watch.
Can you imagine Mike D'Antoni on a car racing team? The car would never finish cause he never believes in pit stops. the car would have blown tires.
I get that he's been a coach for so long that he's seen it all, and that gives him a sort of Zen-like approach to the game, but sometimes you've gotta rekindle the fire in your players and light into them. This team lacks the discipline and fortitude to self-police. They need the coaching staff to ride them about getting back in their defensive assignments, and to stop taking such shitty shots (Gerald Green and Eric Gordon mostly). Also, I don't think there's been a single 3rd quarter this whole year where the team came out with intensity, and looked to step on the throat of the opponent. They just sort of coast until there's about 8 minutes left in the 4th, then try and turn it back on. That might work against a young team like the Kings, but against the Thunder (who are ratcheted up to an 11 usually anyways), you have to bring it right from the get-go. It's frustrating to watch it play out, and watch our coach stand around with his hands in his pockets while the other team goes on a 23-2 run.
I was really disappointed in D'Antoni tonight. he was out-timedout by Rick Carlisle in every quarter of the game.