He respectfully graded all levels of the organization to include ownership. He accurately stated that this is the least successful ownership group, by winning percentage, in the Kings tenure in Sacramento. He stated it is time the owner(s) evaluate the executives on staff and spend what it takes to bring an experienced, successful basketball operations staff. He was very respectful. This ownership group has clearly been quite successful in everything off the court and in the community, but on-court has been a complete failure.
Thanks.
Most successful companies have reviews of upper management anywhere from quarterly to annually. Performances are graded against expectations.
It doesn't appear Sac does this. If they do it isn't genuine as people who've made terrible decisions time and again are still employed. One thing this organization appears to run low on is accountability. The vision, whatever the hell it is, is also poorly executed.
Those who work in business and corporate leadership environments will naturally struggle to point to anything but dysfunction in this organization, running top-down. In a company with a clear vision and follow-up accountability, the crap we've seen from Sac just does not fly. Heads roll.
So while accountability would be welcome, in my eyes the real problem is Vivek is an atrocious leader. Whatever vision he has has been half-assed in execution, and that's being kind. The experts he's hired around him to enact his vision have been failures. There's a clear history of division and discord underneath him. His strategic planning appears to change on a whim. That all points to the top.
I hired a GM for my company to make key decisions a couple years ago. I trust him to do his thing. If he ends up making an abhorrent decision which changes the trajectory and ceiling of my company for years to come, who's most at fault, him for making that decision or me for hiring that person and giving him that responsibility?
It's me of course. Firing him wouldn't be transferring accountability. Rather, it would be admitting to and correcting a mistake I made.
And that's what's largely lost in the current talk about the team. People can blame Vlade all they like. But he didn't hire himself. Keeping him might be a mistake. Firing him is admitting a mistake.
It all goes back to Vivek where its been one mistake after another since he took over.