longstrangetrip wrote:Camden wrote:At what point does Thibodeau deserve credit for the positive things this team does? Or is that never going to be the case?
I think it's never going to be the case until the players themselves start to give Thibs some credit. When I attend games (and read quotes from the locker room) it appears to me that Thibs has lost this team, and that they are playing around him sometimes rather than for him. It's astonishing to me how seldom the players say anything positive about the coach, and either openly criticize him or ignore him. Examples? Teague questioning Thibs' rotations and refusal to play Tyus enough or Okogie. Players actually taking themselves out of the game when they are tired rather than waiting for Thibs to make a move. 20-year-old rookie Okogie (and others) completely ignoring the head coach during time outs. After a stirring second half comeback, Towns pointedly saying postgame that the players made defensive adjustments in the locker room rather than waiting for Thibs. And on and on. If not before, Thibs lost this team last summer with his baffling inaction during the Butler drama. Fortunately this team has more talent than most other teams in the league, so they are going to win a lot of games...but it seems to me they are winning in spite of Thibs rather than because of him.
LST, you know I have love for you on this forum, but I find your takes regarding Thibodeau to be in the silly category. You generate your own feelings and emotions of disliking him and hoping for his downfall and eventual displacement from the franchise as though they were coming from the Wolves players themselves.
Teams that have quit on the coach don't often play as well as the Wolves have over the last 11 games -- winning eight of them.
Players are rarely asked directly about their feelings towards the head coach, but there have been more "we trust in Thibs' game plan" and "Thibs always has us prepared" comments than there have been open criticisms.
Your examples of negativity towards the coach are mild and once again reading into something that isn't there. Teague had made a comment about wanting to see Jones get more run since he had been playing well. That's more of a vote of confidence towards the young guard than it is a jab at the coach and I'd bet it was received that way from the locker room too.
A 20-year old rookie was enjoying himself on the bench during a pretty exciting game. Oh, no! Fire Thibs. He must secure all happiness at once.
Players often diagnose what they're doing wrong. That's the nature of the game. Again, you see it as players disregarding the coach -- weirdly enough -- when in reality it was likely just a reminder amongst themselves of what they had been doing beforehand that was successful for them: helping the helper, rotating down on P&R, contesting three-point shooters, getting back on defense, etc. All things we know Thibs likely stresses every chance he gets and it's likely, just maybe, that the coach implemented the same or different strategies during halftime himself.
Thibs is not without his faults, but the constant overanalyzing and overall lack of positive credit that goes his way is well past the point of ridiculousness. You'd think Thibs was Kurt Rambis with how he's talked about yet he's somehow getting this team to win when most considered this a lost season from the jump. Amazing. The idea that this team is somehow winning in spite of their coach is silliness to me.