Gentry has had his chances and has never proven to be anything more than average as a head coach. He's been a head coach for all or part of 17 seasons and led those teams to winning records just twice. His teams typically lead the league in pace or close to it and are near the bottom in most defensive metrics. That just sounds like more of the same to me.
I realize I'm a broken record on this and have been for 10 years now but what the heck, I'll say it again just in case someone hasn't heard it yet. Nate McMillan is the coach we need. He's led his teams to winning records in 10 out of 16 chances. He's coached 3 different teams and all of them have made the playoffs. All of them developed into above average defensive squads at their peak. His success in the playoffs has been mixed which led to his surprising departure from Indiana but injury issues had a lot to do with that. More importantly his coaching philosophy is the exact opposite of the high flying pace-and-space ball which has ossified this team into everyone's favorite squad to rack up points against.
Conventional wisdom says Fox needs a fast paced offense to thrive but maybe conventional wisdom is wrong. Wouldn't be the first time. We've seen Fox develop this season into a scorer who can get his shots in a half court offense not just barreling down the court on the break. Haliburton is a heady, opportunistic playmaker who moves the defense with his eyes then finds the open man. I think these guys could win at a snail's place if asked to and I know McMillan is a coach who will teach discipline and demand execution on the end of the floor where we need the most help. The poetic symmetry of hiring the very same coach who eliminated us from the playoffs way back in 2005 to kick off this run of futility so we can finally make it back under his watch is just a fun bonus.**
**Nobody fact check me on this please cause apparently my memory is a little spotty.