Look, I'm not a fan of having both Rondo and Collison on the floor at the same time for extended periods of time, so anyone that's upset about that, I'm on board. I don't agree with every decision that Karl makes. I think WCS should play more, but last night with the Clips going small, I could understand why Karl stayed with the players on the floor, especially when they were retaining the lead. I don't agree that having Collison guard Crawford was by design. At least not Karl's design. Unfortunately, I had to listen to the Clippers announcers, and they commented on how the Clippers were doing a good job of creating a switch that put Collison on Crawford.
When you play a switching defense (closer to a zone than man to man) your going to get bad matchups from time to time (Dirk on Collison, I doubt Karl drew it up that way). Smart teams are going to take advantage of that. One of the advantages of having a tall PG is that it limits those bad matchup's. If your the coach, you pick your poison, and hope you don't die with it. If you have five great man to man defenders you can put out there, and you don't have to deal with this, but even then, your going to get switches in the pick and roll. Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on your point of view, the Kings roster has more offensive minded players than defensive players. Hard to find players that are capable of both. At least at the NBA level.
Someone once said, I think it was Mark Twain, that if your 18 years old, and your not an idealist, you have no heart, but if your 50 years old, and your not a realist (actual word was conservative) you have no brain. I'm well past 50, so I'm sure I'm a realist. As a result, I tend to see things as they are, and not what I want them to be. I remember my high school science teacher telling me, that if you go into any experiment with a preconceived agenda, your experiment fails before it starts. You must have an open mind to make objective decisions. I understand that passion trumps logic at times, but at the end of the day, if your the one making the decisions, logic must prevail.
That was my polite way of saying, that some of you are living in fairy tale land. You see things that aren't there, because you've already arrived at your decision before all the facts are in. Back in the day, a day long, long, ago, a new coach used to get two to three years to change the direction of a team. Today, we tend to make such decisions in 20 or 30 games, instead of years. If you take the time to step back and take a look at who succeeds in any form of competition, it's those that are patient. They take the time to build a solid foundation. Things are well thought out and snap/ kneejerk decisions are avoided. Yes, I know, only in politics does the new guy get a clean slate and four years to change things.
The irony of what I'm saying, is that people with the least amount of time to wait, are the those who preach patience. God's little joke on us. By the time we figure it out, time's up. No, there's no hidden message there. All I'm saying folks, is to keep an open mind, and stop thinking that Karl is some inept old dude that doesn't know what he's doing. It's OK to disagree with some of his decisions, but do it for the right reasons, not some fantasy land notion. New's flash, Lord of the Rings isn't real! Being objective means looking at both sides of the picture. If you can't do that, and I know it's hard at times, then your opinion is nothing but a biased opinion.