Q12543 wrote:AbeVigodaLive wrote:Q12543 wrote:WolvesFan21 wrote:Q12543 wrote:Yeah, makes me jealous watching how Tatum, Brown, and Rozier are three of the four major catalysts (with Horford being the other) of a contending team. Unbelievable. How many lottery picks do we burn through before finding even one guy that is as good as any of these three? Meanwhile they draft three players over the course of three drafts and hit pay dirt on every single one of them. And two are wings for God's sake, which are supposed to be the hardest thing on the planet to find!
Now, how much of this is Stevens' coaching magic and putting them in a position to be successful and how much of it is through Ainge's ability to spot NBA talent? Probably some combination of both, but it's amazing how much each of these three have improved since their rookie year (or in Tatum's case, throughout his rookie year since he's still a freakin' rookie!!!).
Kyries defensive rating went from crap on Cleveland to great on the Celtics. I'm going to say it's mostly Stevens. Throw KAT or Wiggins in and they wouldn't miss a step. He could make both of them good.
If I were Thibs, I'd go talk to Stevens or Pop this off season and ask them how they would get the most out of Wiggins, because he clearly doesn't know the answer!
As for KAT, he's a natural offensively. Defensively, he's the opposite. I'm not sure how much Stevens could coach a big man up defensively. Having Al Horford makes a big difference since he makes everyone else's job a little easier. He's not a great shot blocker, but he is sooooo good at positioning and can switch on nearly anyone.
Eventually... it MUST be on the player.
Wiggins has had three coaches. And we're still blaming the coach and not the player?
That's where Ainge + Stevens + team culture + vet leaders all probably come into play. Maybe the Celtics see something in Wiggins or Towns or even Butler that makes them doubt they'd be a fit there... so they don't even bother?
I agree. Truly great players will be great no matter who they play for or where they play. However, there is one important similarity with Wiggins' carousel of three coaches: None of them ever held him accountable for lazy play. Same with KAT. Both were gifted tons of minutes from the start and groomed as offensive players first and foremost, defensive/hustle players a distant second priority. I think that hurt their development big time.
That's the rub though.
How many great players needed to be benched for a lack of energy or aggression or poor play or whatever... even early in their careers?
Either potentially great players have that drive to be great (the best) or they "settle." It's really that simple. And I don't think we should ignore the money part of this. I've mentioned him before, but Glenn Robinson is a prime example.
He was a good player. But he never became great. He didn't need to be in his mind, apparently. Remember he got paid like he was great as a rookie before proving he could be. And even though it's not his rookie deal, Wiggins is getting paid like he's great before he actually is.
Some players are driven more by money than anything else.
[Note: I'm not saying we know definitively either way with Wiggins. Only that it wouldn't be unprecedented at all if he basically plateaus for the rest of his career ala Robinson and many many others. Likewise, others can point to guys who "got it" after a few years and excelled. The Wolves, who have much more intel than we do, are banking on Wiggins. Let's hope they're right.]