A few things:
1) Malone may become many things in the NBA in the future, and I'm loathe to be agreeing with Prince_XY on anything, but when Malone was here, his limitations were certainly discovered before The End came.
His offensive ineptitude, playcalling, and sub patterns were screamed about every game thread.
I was calling for him to get offensive help, instead of all the decisions having to come from Malone. Instead he was fired, and much of the team was lost. Talk about cutting off your head to spite your face.
So let's not retcon things and say he was this shining example of coaching here. He showed a lot of promise, and he shouldn't have been fired, but the gist of what sactownfan is saying is effectively correct.
That said, Brick and others are also correct that Karl may well prove to be worse for the Kings very soon.
2) Denver is the one place where playing with pace means something.
Denver's mile-high elevation means if they don't push the pace and try to tire out the opposition who hasn't acclimated to the oxygen levels at that elevation, then they are giving up their one unique competitive advantage in the NBA.
3) Malone may be sensing the cosmic irony of the situation that he was fired for pace, and is now going to be forced by circumstances to specialize in it.
4) Is anyone else baffled at this Denver move?
How much of this entire situation looks EXACTLY like Sacramento 2 years ago?
Did Denver watch Sac at all the past 2 years?
This Denver situation has the earmarks of being one of the most collosal f-ups in NBA history, if they watched Sacramento's f-ups and said - na, let's repeat what made Vivek the most mocked owner in the NBA.