CoolBreeze44 wrote:lipoli390 wrote:Camden wrote:Also, I'm just going to throw this out there. I believe that individual players are largely responsible for developing their games. They are the ones who have the most control in that aspect. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink, so to speak. The player has to buy-in to his own future.
Game management and preparation is entirely different. I do feel like a head coach can make a positive, negative, or no impact at all in that regard. Obviously, if the roster is bad there's only so much that can be done, but you will still be able to see differences between a good coach and a bad coach. We've seen bad teams exceed their projected win totals in part because of good coaching. It's happening this year with the Knicks and the Spurs. We've also seen the opposite, especially in Minnesota, where talented teams fall short of projected win totals in part because of bad or poor coaching. We've seen new coaches take essentially the same roster as the last coach had and implement different schemes to achieve much better results. We've seen coaches use players differently to yield better results. We've seen playoff teams get out-coached in the playoffs leading to unexpected upsets. The idea that coaching just doesn't matter -- even in a star-studded league like the NBA -- is false.
I agree that coaching matters. You mentioned game management and preparation. I would add Gersson's favorite work, "system" - as in designing offensive and defensive systems that fit the players on the roster, blending and maximizing their strengths while minimizing or covering their weaknesses. My small quibble is that I just don't buy this "culture" thing. If there is such a thing as a "winning culture", it comes from winning. And winning comes from a combination of talent, and yes, coaching. When it comes to individual talent, it's not just physical talent, it's also IQ and mental toughness. When it comes to overall talent, it's a matter of having the right blend of talent with complementary skill-sets and adequate balance.
The best example of what I mean was what happened when the Wolves acquired Jimmy Butler and Taj Gibson. Adding one all-star caliber player who was also mentally tough and really smart along with a really solid big man elevated a 21-year old Towns from the lottery to the playoffs in one season. And it likely would have taken him to a 4th or 5th seed of not for Butler's injury. The Wolves had a "winning culture" that season because they had the talent to win and a coach who knew how to get the most out of that talent.
The only time the Wolves had a winning culture was in the best days of the Garnett era. That Butler team had terrible culture even though they won at a decent rate. Lip, you've talked before about how you don't buy into the culture being real, and that's fine. I happen to disagree strongly. Sure, you can throw a bunch of superstars together and they are going to win no matter what. But to maintain long term success I think a good culture from the top on down comes first. Think Utah during the Snyder era. Perfect example in my opinion.
I think "culture" is mostly bullshit as well. Did the Lakers have great culture between Kobes last seasons and acquiring LeBron? No they sucked. They were terrible with Kobe when he was older.
What is this culture thing exactly. Is it based on ownership, coaching or organizational? Because both the Celtics and Lakers had many pathetic seasons and have done so consecutively but they also have history of winning A LOT of NBA Titles.
I would say culture comes first from the players themselves if this culture thing is real. Then ownership and coaching. Players themselves need to lead others. Jordan went to a horrible franchise. I think no matter where Jordan went he would have ended up succeeding. Maybe not to the degree he did but he certainly would have won a few rings still. He was that good and also demanded his teammates to reach levels they needed.
LeBron wins no matter where he goes, but he also brings along superstars too. But on the flip side he and a bunch of basically avg NBA players were in the finals pre-supersteam Heat days.
Let's say LeBron somehow chose the Wolves over LA. Would the Wolves not be a favorite or close to right now to win the NBA Title if not won it already?
Would GSW won any Titles if Kahn chose Steph over Flynn? How would their culture be?
Players make organizations winners, not the other way around.