Yes, a coach's success on the NBA level generally is more about his ability to navigate the personalities of the locker room and find ways to motivate them than his skill with the X's and O's. George Karl (and a few others - Skiles, Carlesimo, Thibodeau, etc) has largely flipped that script as a guy who has been much more about installing his scheme than developing relationships. These types of coaches generally get short term results and then end up wearing out their welcome.
The issue this season is that George Karl hasn't worked wonders with a scheme that led to wins. So you got the bad (not building trust with his players) and not the good (turning around a team and winning). It's been really unfortunate and frustrating to watch unfold. Especially as the Kings are poised to be a national joke yet again, by firing yet another coach.
So I do blame George Karl.
That said - Players that want to win play hard every night. Period.
The players may not like Karl or his offensive & defensive principles but if they actually came to play with great effort every night they'd be in the 8th spot right now. I don't think the team would go much beyond that and I think a parting with Karl is inevitable because he's not the right fit, but he's not the guy failing to stop the ball or close out on shooters in transition. He's not the guy ducking under picks instead of trying to jump them or force their man. He's not the one that isn't winning loose ball situations and hustle plays. And he's not the one that let the Celtics out rebound the Kings and score 46 points in the first quarter.
I can buy the - "these are grown men, you can't treat them like college kids" rationale for firing a guy like David Blatt.
But then I can't buy the rationale that you need a coach to get you to play hard and try to win games.
Doesn't work both ways. These are grown men who are wasting yet another season by not coming to play every night. Period.
i'm just gonna take a completely opposing view than most on this forum, but i honestly think this "play hard" stuff is seriously overblown when we discuss the sacramento kings. like,
seriously overblown. the kings play
extremely hard--on
one side of the ball, and that is the problem. marco belinelli has been an abject disappointment this season, but has anybody watched him sprinting around the court in search of space off those silly curls the kings like to run that rarely work? that dude works
hard. but it doesn't often result in points, and it doesn't often translate to effort expended on the
other side of the ball. that latter point is of
great importance, and it is unmistakably an issue of culture and coach...
i don't understand why fans like to compartmentalize issues that are deeply interconnected. it's rather simple, in my view: this franchise hired a head coach with a track record of valuing offense over defense, and whose preferred play style requires its roster to move as fast as humanly possible as often as humanly possible. now, you don't run up and down the court at the pace these kings do unless you're "playing hard" every night. this coach absolutely has his team "playing hard" on the side of the ball he most values, but he's also tried to shoehorn them into defensive schemes recycled from his 90's playbooks in an effort to exert the least amount of energy coaching to the
other side of the ball, where this team requires the most help. beyond all of that, and despite the rhetoric surrounding team sports, "playing hard" isn't actually what nets
results so much as "playing right," and "playing right" is a concept that shifts on a team-by-team basis...
the warriors "play right" in that they've maximized the talents of their roster and they've crafted a style of play on
both sides of the ball that effectively fits the talents of their roster. an owner/gm/coach/franchise that looks at the warriors' formula and says "that's the way to win a championship" has learned all the wrong lessons from the warriors' success. everyone would love to have a roster shaped like the warriors so that they can play like the warriors, but so few teams have the kind of flexibility to do so. i've repeated this ad nauseam since mike malone was fired, but you should
always coach the roster you
have, and not the roster you
wish you had. for example, one could take the ungenerous view that boogie's utter exhaustion in this latter part of the season is a result of poor conditioning, or one could more reasonably suggest that a man who is 6'11", 265 lbs probably shouldn't be exerting so much of his energy from within such a high octane offense, and that a more optimal pace would be one that doesn't completely wear down, ya know, the team's best player...
however, george karl seems to have little concern for any of that. he's only interested in coaching this team in his way, regardless of the shape of the roster being mismatched to the shape of his preferred offensive and defensive systems. personally, i'd say all the running up and down the court at the league's fastest pace for a coach that seems largely disinterested in the defensive side of the ball is where this perceived "lack of effort" actually comes from. the kings can't locate focus or effort on defense because their coach lacks some combination of interest or drive or desire or will to prioritize defense and to make the necessary adjustments to his game plan so that his roster is equipped to succeed on that side of the ball...
in short, george karl is an ideologue. he believes that basketball should be played at the fastest pace possible, and he's always treated defense as a secondary concern. a few of his teams have shown well in defensive efficiency metrics, but few fans of any team that he has ever coached would suggest that defense was ever a priority of karl's. it's not. it's never been. for a team like the kings with many weak links in their defense, it's just death to have a coach who 1) doesn't emphasize defensive effort and efficiency with any regularity, and 2) makes use of a system that
constantly rotates players out of position and into unfavorable mismatches. again, it's an issue of culture and coaching. until defense becomes a priority for this entire franchise, this lack of focus and effort will persist. both focus and effort are most often achieved as the result of great leadership, and great leadership most often starts with the coach. these guys live and die based on their ability to motivate five guys to play together
as a team, and on
both sides of the ball. and in my opinion, karl just doesn't have it anymore...