Westphal isn't going to be fired. If he was to be fired it would have happened already. But if you can step outside the box, and truely be objective, you can only come to one conclusion, he's not doing a very good job.
Come on, there isn’t anything more objective about your opinion that he’s doing a poor job than there is an opinion that he’s doing a decent or good job given what he has to work with. Both opinions (as opinions are by nature) are wholly subjective.
And that won't get you very far, because when an entire team fails, its the coach that gets blamed.
That something is widely practiced or widely believed to be true does not make it correct. To suggest or imply it does is a form of argumentum ad populum.
Furthermore, the entire team isn’t failing. They’ve been playing better and even in their losses there’s always a few guys who had really good games. They’re a work in progress, and lately, they’ve been showing progress. To expect more than that from them at this point is unreasonable my opinion.
But I know basketball enough to know when someone is doing a bad job.
That sounds an awfully lot like an “I’m an expert so I’m right and you’re wrong" type of argument. The problem with those type of arguments is that there’s always an equal or greater expert that will have the opposite view. Grant Napear and Charles Barkley surely have as much, if not more knowledge about basketball as you do, yet neither one of them thinks Westphlal is the problem.
Westphal had nothing to do with Landry suddenly finding his mojo. It was more like Landry finding it on his own. He had game when he came here. If anything, Westphal helped him lose it with his crazy lineup changes. Thompson's improvement has nothing to do with Westphal, its more like Thompson overcoming all the obstacles put in his way by Westphal.
So when players suck, it’s Westphal’s fault but when they improve, it’s in spite of him? That seems incredibly biased and unfair to me.
You tell me. You go out an score 22pts and grab 7 boards, but your not good enough to go in at the end of the fourth quarter and guard Villanueva. No, Casspi gets that job. Your getting killed on the inside and you have Thompson with 1 foul, Cousins with 4 fouls, and Dalembert with 5 fouls sitting on the bench. Please tell me. Just what the hell are you saving them for? The last 20 seconds after the game is already out of reach. Please tell me. Just who the hell's fault is that?
The problem with those types of observations, is that they only look bad if they lose the game. It’s very easy to say, oh, they lost because the coach played this guy and not that guy. All fan bases do this and all fans bases have a sizable subsection that think it’s the coach’s fault when their team doesn’t do well. Just recently, I’ve seen it on the Phoenix and Memphis forums when those teams lost to the Kings. Many fans of both those teams blamed the losses on the coaches and had ideas about how they would have won had the coach just done this or that. Coaches make very convenient scapegoats. That’s why they’re so often fired from bad teams.
Most teams I watch aroung the NBA, its their starting five thats on the floor at the end of the game. The reason being, because your starting five are usually your best five players. And if not, then why are they your starting five? I mean you picked them! So here's a thought. Why not trust them? I'll tell you the reason. Westphal doesn't trust any player at any given moment. He rides by the seat of his pants hoping to get lucky and find a group that works. You can't coach a team like that. You have to make a decision and then stick with it.
I have played professional sports. There is nothing you can do that is worse than jerking players around to where they don't know what to expect. Where good play means nothing, or is forgotten rapidly by your coach. There is nothing worse for a player than to sit on the bench when he knows he can help his team win. A good coach picks his starters, and picks his rotation. And then he sticks with them. He trusts them. They're going to fail at times. They're going to struggle at times. But if the coach gives them his trust, they will start to reward that trust. I've been there. And I would play my butt off for a coach that stuck with me when I struggled. A coach that patted me on the butt and and told me don't worry about it. The next game will be different. A player can't play scared. He can't play with someone looking over his shoulder waiting for his first mistake.
Players have to earn a coach’s trust to become solidified starters. There isn’t 5 Kings players who’ve done that with any type of consistency yet. Part of that is due to young players who are wildly inconsistent and part of it is due to the team simply lacking starting caliber players. Westphal was basically given a team with 3 starting caliber players (2 of who play he same position) and about 9 or 10 bench caliber players, and people expect him to come up with a concrete starting 5 out of that. It’s not the coaches fault that he wasn’t given sufficient tools to work with. He’s given a roster that comprises the lowest payroll in the league, lacks veteran leadership, and that’s most consistent player is Bedo Udrih, and he’s expected to work miracles.
I have a question for you, and anyone else who think Westphal’s lineups are the main problem with this team.
If Westphal had started the season with one lineup and consistent rotation, and at this point, the record was the same as it is now, would you be saying why doesn’t he try a different lineup, why does he keep playing the same lineup when they don’t win?