Which is why the Kings need to hire the best coach they can. One who can maximize the talent of the roster (especially Cousins) not the one who Cousins will get along best with.
Because if Boogie really cares about winning, he'll get on board with a guy that can help him succeed. And if he doesn't? Then he's not the guy I thought he was and certainly not a guy worth building around.
Agree with all of this. Have a "like".
I will say this though: I think DeMarcus Cousins is a soldier. 25 year old Boogie is not the same as 19 year old Boogie. I think, even if he hates the coach, he'll line up and try to execute as he's asked.
Last year, Cousins and Karl obviously did not get along. Cousins wanted fire from the coach, to hold the team accountable, to feel connected with someone who was loyal. Karl had no energy last year, so most of the hands-on work was delegated to his assistants. As a result, there was never a personal connection established between the two. Meeting once a week or whatever just isn't the same; as basketball guys, that relationship is developed by the work they do on the court together. All the rumors about Karl wanted Cousins traded and the little jabs in the media didn't help. Karl hardly had the energy to fight for his players to the refs. And without that pre-existing connection between Cousins and Karl, Boogie naturally felt that Karl was distant, didn't care about the roster, and was a "snake in the grass". Cousins didn't know George Karl and didn't trust him.
Undoubtedly this was the proximate cause of many of Cousins' blowups this season. The technical fouls, suspensions, ejections, etc. Assign blame however you want as to why the relationship between coach and star failed, whether its Karl's distant aloofness or Cousins' thin skin.
BUT: is that the *main* reason the Kings were a losing team last year? Teams can have friction in the locker room and still win; see David Blatt and the Cavs before he was fired. Teams with poor relationships can still win as long as they execute a sound plan. So the question is, were the Kings, despite their relationship and trust issues, executing Karl's plan?
I think they were. The problem wasn't that Boogie or Rondo or whoever were out there disregarding what Karl wanted them to do. The problem was that the offensive and defensive systems were absolute crap. I saw a team trying to fit a bunch of poor ballhandlers into a Dribble-Drive offense that had no structure, motion, or plan other than "run really fast in transition". I saw that bare-bones offense break down time and time again. I saw a defensive system that might just be the worst ever seen in the basketball world. *That* is why they were losing. And that is why, in every report you hear, the Kings' players want both accountability and *structure* from a new coach.
X's and O's are paramount in the modern NBA. Great coaches have more influence on the game than ever before because the complexity of the game has exploded. That's why you can take the Portland Trailblazers, strip them of 80% of their starting lineup, and still see them in the Playoffs the next season. That's why the Dallas Mavericks can make the Playoffs with a geriatric roster full of near-retirees. That's why the Golden State Warriors can lose the league MVP and one of the greatest offensive weapons ever and still crush their Playoff opponents, even in the second round.
You look around the NBA and there are so many successful teams without a dominant player like the Hawks, the Heat, the Raptors, the Celtics, the Pistons, the Mavs, etc. etc. Systems
matter in the modern game. The key to rising above it all now is to have a dominant player, have a strong supporting cast, and have a system that ties all of it together.
That's why the Kings can't overemphasize the Boogie connection too much. Cousins will line up however the coach wants him to, even if he hates the coach. Obviously it would be better for a coach to be able to build a relationship with Boogie because that will make him less temperamental. But really, Boogie's volatility didn't cost the Kings many games. The X's and O's did. Get a guy who knows schemes.
Its not really that hard to find someone who will build a good relationship with Boogie; someone who will his hands dirty with his team in practice, will advocate for them in front of refs, and won't say one thing to his face while saying something else in the media will do just fine with DeMarcus Cousins. Even if that connection doesn't exist, they can still win games just fine, as long as the coach's system is getting the most out of the players. This roster was the most underachieving and misused roster in the NBA. It can win as-is, even more so if some of its holes are addressed this offseason. And all of this is independent of a relationship with DeMarcus Cousins.