I said it before but I'll repeat it in case you missed it:
Joerger AND Williams sealed their own fates when they put the drama out there in the middle of the year. Vlade didn't fire them on the spot because he didn't want to be grist for the national media's mill. He did, however, silence the situation at the time and wait for the right moment. The right moment came about after the last game - he fired Joerger and he fired Williams. As others have said, knowing that his first choice - Walton - was going to come onto the market made firing Joerger a no brainer to Divac.
As others have also said, the coach that turns a team around is often replaced when it's time for the next level. Joerger had taken this team about as far as he could - the games after the ASB told that tale in a pretty obvious manner. You can talk about Vlade's poor decisions, but as time passes only a blind man can deny that MOST of his decisions have turned out to be right.
Joerger did a great job in getting us back to feeling like we have a TEAM and not just a bunch of guys who found a box of matching uniforms. That doesn't make him immune to criticism. I defended Joerger a lot this past season, but let's be real. His substitution patterns irritated just about everyone on this board at one time or another. He did a good job and I'm very grateful to him but the Kings lost too many close games at least in part because of Joerger's stubbornness in keeping starters out too long, not holding WCS accountable for some of his antics, and not playing Bagley in places where he could have made a real difference.
I firmly believe history will show that once again Vlade made the right decision.
Well, it helps when you replace a great coach with a great coach. Been a big fan of Walton for a long time and I'm fairly certain if we went back to the previous "who to hire" thread we had before Joerger, he was one of my top guys we should look at .
Most of his decisions are good though? How?
The Bad:
-Trading Shump for a 2020 late 2nd rounder and Alec Burks who did nothing? Noticeable affect on team chemistry and player psyche.
-Drafting Malachi, PapaGiannis and Justin Jackson only to dump or trade them 1 year and a half into their career? Wasted 3 1st round picks
-Drafting Frank Mason over Jordan Bell?
-Trading an unprotected 1st, 2 pick swaps, a former lottery pick and a couple contracts for cap space when he could have just stretched JT and Landry and done the same thing? Only to sign Rondo for a season, Beli and Kosta Koufos to lead us to a 30 win year.
-Being hurt by said pick swap, losing 2 spots in draft capital from #3 pick to #5.
-Firing a coach who just improved your team by 12 wins a day after the season? Yeah I really like Walton, but any sane person would question the validity of getting rid of a coach with that on your resume.
-Letting Seth Curry walk to sign Matt Barnes to $2/12 only to let him walk after 50 games?
-Signing Zach Lavine to a 4/78 offer sheet when we had 2 duplicate guards already with his skill-set? Thankfully saved by the Bulls from ourselves.
-Waiting way too long to trade Boogie and then actually telling people he had a better trade earlier in the week, but didn't jump on it. Buddy and Giles are going to work out okay, but we got absolutely rocked in value in that trade, getting pennies on the dollar for a top 15 player. The haul would have been enormous had we traded him a year earlier.
The Good:
Acquiring Bogdan for Chriss. Although he absolutely failed the Papagiannis pick in the deal, great talent evaluation to have him included in the trade. Although some comments on the board were ready to send him out for a bag of peanuts at one point or another this season, so do they think he's still worth the #8 pick?
-Giles talent evaluation. Another great talent grab here and using a mid-1st round pick to take a calculated gamble on a high upside guy with a ton of talent if he could stay healthy. Just a home-run pick and possibly might define his tenure as a GM if he can breakout and showcase more of that all-star potential we saw.
-De'Aaron Fox. Obvious, but still deserves credit for not overthinking things and making the quality obvious pick. Pick swap could have been disastrous if the Suns were an actual real NBA franchise and took Fox as they should have done in the first place.
-Nemanja Bjelica- Great contract, not tied up long-term, was a huge reason we saw improved play overall. Quality signing
The "Meh, possibly good"
-Harrison Barnes trade. It's good evaluation of our yearly standing in free agency and acquiring a need. I like Barnes and thought he played well for us, but I don't love the idea of being tied to him with a contract like 4/80 to a guy who's probably like a top 80-90 player in the league (if that). Depending on his extension, could end up being a good deal for just Justin Jackson.
-Marvin Bagley. Love the talent, love the growth we saw from Summer league to him being a legit 15/8 by the end of the year. But his status is always going to be tied to Luka Doncic and what he ends up being as a player. If Luka ends up having a HoF career, Bagley can't just be "pretty good" for this pick to be worth it. He's got to hit on being the franchise cornerstone, which thankfully he looks like he's on that path.
-WCS pick. Lower end starter for a 6 overall pick. Could do worse. Not a bust obviously, but not a home-run either. Firmly in the "meh" category
So, all this to say "Started off extremely rough as one of the worst GMs in NBA history, gotten more competent in the past year." What makes you think that "most of his decisions have turned out to be right?"