Boogie just "controls what he can control", you know like his temper and the quality of his relationship with refs.
This is classic Boogie for those following along, which is to portray yourself victim of circumstances. So when things go south he can absolve himself of blame. You don't know what is going on? Why don't you ask somebody? You don't feel like it might, just might, be a decent idea to take control of your career and get a sense of the philosophy and strategy of the decision-makers in your inner circle?
What do you talk about with Joerger and Vlade, the best buffets in Vegas?
Here's the deal. Boogie is being disingenuous. Because he knows the team is slanting towards defense. They want a grittier and grindier team ( if I can make up a word
![Smile :) :)](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
). But Boogie doesn't want to cop to that because you know, he's just along for the ride. This is immaturity and frankly a lack of intelligence. You have a new coach who has been super successful. He knows how to bring team together and get the most out of the collective talent.
Why don't you maybe pick his brain based on his past experience and success with a team that actually went somewhere besides the bottom of the lottery?
And maybe try to ascertain his vision for the future? After all, it is your career. Or does you massive ego not allow you inquiry into someone else and their experiences since it requires conversational shift away from yourself? This is my perception of what is going on here. Fans won't like but this is Boogie's personality and we are stuck with it.
The other elephant in the room is we are positioning ourself to trade Boogie for a massive haul if he doesn't get his poopoo together. He looks to be in great shape and can have his best year ever. If he self-implodes on schedule with a rash of outbursts or other challenges and frustrations with refs and teammates, even the coach, our front office has an escape hatch and Plan B, just like we did with the draft when we astutely swung a 3-for-1.