Glenn
Hall of Famer
Damn LD. Your posts reign supreme!
He's on a roll.
Damn LD. Your posts reign supreme!
He's on a roll.
There wasn't anything in the article that particularly alarmed me any more than I was already re: Vivek.
However, his insistence at continual lies is becoming grating.
Anyone who has followed this team highly suspects he is intimately involved in the basketball side. As has been astutely pointed out in this very article, Vivek is contradicting himself in his statements.
Let's talk personalities for a second:
* We have Vivek, who is an alpha-nerd who thinks he is a genius and god's gift to The People. He's a big-idea guy who's business approach is predicated on being a meddling influence. The Kings purchase was the highest-profile move he's done in his life - you can be damn sure he wants his name all over this legacy, so he's going to be involved. Yet, he's definitively stating now that he's not involved with the coaching decisions on the floor?
REALLY? This guy has taken obscene pride at taking over his daughter's team and "coaching outside of the box" and forcing his approach on the other teams. You don't think he got off on being perceived as "smarter" than these experienced ex-players who he beat?
From a psychological profile, this guy is SCREAMINGLY obvious that he would be meddling in the coaching decisions. He has directly refuted the statements reported in the landmark Yahoo article after Malone was fired which has proven to be on-point: http://sports.yahoo.com/news/the-do...kings-and-coach-michael-malone-175201188.html
IMO, when someone refutes believable, consistent, reasonable reports from multiple sources that match what everyone can see, he is a LIAR.
* Now let's look at Pete.
The guy is a toady.
He wouldn't come up with an aggressive gameplan if his family was being held hostage. It's just not in his lawyer, agent makeup. There is simply no way (from a psychological analysis standpoint) that he would have made that big play of firing Malone when there was zero basketball justification to do so.
Pete's a talker, not a do-er. He manipulates the message for his impact. He's not a decision-maker.
IMO, the chances that Pete is making the basketball decisions the FO is guilty of (vs. Vivek/Mullin) is close to 10%.
Pete's a paper-pusher - an accountant and salary cap/stats guy.
He's not the visionary who would change an entire team because of style/vision/pace.
That's quite clearly Vivek's personality, and something he would (and has!) done before.
So we get to our most-likely reality:
Vivek is an out-of-control, unrepentant liar and destroyer of this team's season.
Pete fell on the sword with that cockamamie story about flying down to Vegas and convincing Vivek to fire Malone. The fact that Mullin was also included in that lie means he doesn't have much influence here, either.
Vivek is the guy pulling all the strings here, and he was responsible for the delay with Karl - quite likely a personality clash issue. Vivek wanted to wait to get a toady coach - someone that would implement his "out of the box" ideas. The only reason why he hired Karl is because the entire fanbase (most importantly the season-ticket-holders) revolted and he got pressure from the minority owners.
Vivek had better watch it, because he's only one leaked damaging story away from being removed from ownership. He's on that thin of ice, I predict.
The Guardian said:The problem with human experiments is that they intrude on real lives. What might be a data quest by the Sacramento Kings is a player’s only hope at a lifelong dream. Diminished to numbers on a spreadsheet the Bighorns players might be disposable but inside the locker room they are men on the brink unsure what being a basketball lab rat means for their futures.
“You can sit there and complain that you are part of an experiment and that this is your D-League year but it’s also no different than what you have to do if you get called up to the NBA and learn a team’s system right away,” Stockton says.
But many of the players fret abut the high scores of their games. Whenever an opponent scores 150 points against Reno, they get texts from friends who have seen the score asking – not always in jest – just how bad are they? Some wonder if the NBA teams are watching and wondering the same thing. Scoring a lot of points is nice but not if it means they will be stuck in the D-League forever.
“That was everybody’s big question about me [in the NBA],” Hamilton says. “They said: ‘we question your defense.’ I don’t know if that’s a polite way of saying they don’t think I can’t play defense or not.”
Either way, he hates any idea of the thought lingering in the NBA’s personnel offices.
“In the NBA everyone wants to know if you can defend your position,” Wear says.
Arseneault and Schroeder have asked NBA scouts and general managers how Reno’s players will be perceived defensively and have been assured that teams generally understand what the Bighorns are doing by gambling on steals. But that doesn’t stop the gnawing feeling among the Reno players that each opponent’s dunk after a missed steal is only destroying their own reputations.
interesting piece on david arsenault jr, the reno bighorns, and vivek ranadive's "lab experiment":
140 points a game – but are the Reno Bighorns a basketball experiment too far?
interesting piece on david arsenault jr, the reno bighorns, and vivek ranadive's "lab experiment":
140 points a game – but are the Reno Bighorns a basketball experiment too far?
The problem with human experiments is that they intrude on real lives. What might be a data quest by the Sacramento Kings is a player’s only hope at a lifelong dream. Diminished to numbers on a spreadsheet the Bighorns players might be disposable but inside the locker room they are men on the brink unsure what being a basketball lab rat means for their futures.
This is the part that really bothers me:
Those guys deserve better than what they're getting as being part of the Reno Bighorns right now. The skills they're "learning" have little to no chance of transitioning into a success in the NBA.
This is the part that really bothers me:
Those guys deserve better than what they're getting as being part of the Reno Bighorns right now. The skills they're "learning" have little to no chance of transitioning into a success in the NBA.
"Boyish capricious meddler?!"It's up to him to determine who exactly he wants to be as owner - the brilliant adult businessman, or the boyish capricious meddler.
interesting piece on david arsenault jr, the reno bighorns, and vivek ranadive's "lab experiment":
140 points a game – but are the Reno Bighorns a basketball experiment too far?
Vivek didn’t revolutionize basketball with his 7th grade girls. He exploited the ignorant. Most 7th grade girls teams don’t work on a press break much, if at all. So when Vivek broke out his press, his team prevailed because they were applying a longstanding basketball play against a team that didn’t know what they were doing.
If the rest of the league spent their entire practice on press breaks, the games would boil down to some mix of talent and execution like every other game. I’m guessing that didn’t happen because most of the other coaches were non-a**holes or had some perspective.
The sweet irony of all this is that, because Vivek is either oblivious or indifferent to his ignorance, he’s now standing in the shoes of the 7th grade team that doesn’t know how to break a press and most of the teams in the league know what they are doing. And yet, he’s acting like he’s the smartest guy in the room and stands to reinvent the game he doesn’t even understand well.
Sometimes I read these threads and am convinced a large percentage of the posters just like to complain. Clearly the Malone firing was poorly executed, however I'm taking the long view. I'll give Vivek and Karl a season before I turn the channel.
Spot on.Vivek didn’t revolutionize basketball with his 7th grade girls. He exploited the ignorant. Most 7th grade girls teams don’t work on a press break much, if at all. So when Vivek broke out his press, his team prevailed because they were applying a longstanding basketball play against a team that didn’t know what they were doing.
If the rest of the league spent their entire practice on press breaks, the games would boil down to some mix of talent and execution like every other game. I’m guessing that didn’t happen because most of the other coaches were non-a**holes or had some perspective.
The sweet irony of all this is that, because Vivek is either oblivious or indifferent to his ignorance, he’s now standing in the shoes of the 7th grade team that doesn’t know how to break a press and most of the teams in the league know what they are doing. And yet, he’s acting like he’s the smartest guy in the room and stands to reinvent the game he doesn’t even understand well.
Vivek didn’t revolutionize basketball with his 7th grade girls...
The sweet irony of all this is that, because Vivek is either oblivious or indifferent to his ignorance, he’s now standing in the shoes of the 7th grade team that doesn’t know how to break a press and most of the teams in the league know what they are doing. And yet, he’s acting like he’s the smartest guy in the room and stands to reinvent the game he doesn’t even understand well.
There's got to be a Greek myth about that scenario.
Vivek didn’t revolutionize basketball with his 7th grade girls. He exploited the ignorant. Most 7th grade girls teams don’t work on a press break much, if at all. So when Vivek broke out his press, his team prevailed because they were applying a longstanding basketball play against a team that didn’t know what they were doing.
If the rest of the league spent their entire practice on press breaks, the games would boil down to some mix of talent and execution like every other game. I’m guessing that didn’t happen because most of the other coaches were non-a**holes or had some perspective.
The sweet irony of all this is that, because Vivek is either oblivious or indifferent to his ignorance, he’s now standing in the shoes of the 7th grade team that doesn’t know how to break a press and most of the teams in the league know what they are doing. And yet, he’s acting like he’s the smartest guy in the room and stands to reinvent the game he doesn’t even understand well.