The search for a new coach seems to have stagnated. Perhaps we are waiting for the NBA Finals to be over so we can interview Carlissemo. He has been working with one of the great all time coaches in Popovich. What do you think?
Minor quibble BTW -- Pop is a very good coach. He has also always had Tim Duncan. I want to see him go somewhere and win without that giant saftey blanket before I annoint him all time great status. Unfortunately I think he understands this, and has often intimiated that when Tim retires, so does he.
I agree with your assessment and for the life of me I don't get why his name keeps coming up. Why does anyone care about this guy enough to keep bringing his name up?Oft discussed in several other threads -- I think Carlesimo is a proven nothing in the NBA.
Oft discussed in several other threads -- I think Carlesimo is a proven nothing in the NBA. And his screaming and berating style was far better suited for when he could bully 18 yr old kids at an out of the way little college than when he came to the NBA and tried the same trick on grown men who were better paid and better at what they do than he is at what he does.
Minor quibble BTW -- Pop is a very good coach. He has also always had Tim Duncan. I want to see him go somewhere and win without that giant saftey blanket before I annoint him all time great status. Unfortunately I think he understands this, and has often intimiated that when Tim retires, so does he.
Can we start the short list of coaches that have won multiple championships without a superstar.......the very short list.
You see, the problem is a very circular one. Yes, superstars win championships. However, winning championships also creates superstars. Therefore, if a coach wins several titles with a team, his lead players are going to called superstars because they have won several titles.
We will never know what Popp would be without Tim and we also wil never know what Tim would be without Popp.
PJ broke the impression that they were all MJs titles when he went to L.A..
The other thing that attests to Phil's greatness (and I believe to be more important) is that the MJ Bulls became a much better team when Phil became coach. In fact, I believe that Phil really helped MJ improve his game by getting more players involved. The same cannot be said of Doug Collins.
Hey, wait - Phil was an assistant coach to the struggling Doug! Where is Scottie Brooks' phone number? We may be on to something here!
Now of we can just find that MJ clone.
Pop is a very good coach. He has also always had Tim Duncan. I want to see him go somewhere and win without that giant saftey blanket before I annoint him all time great status. Unfortunately I think he understands this, and has often intimiated that when Tim retires, so does he.
I agree with this. I would be very interested in seeing what Pop could do coaching without Duncan and what RC Buford could do as a GM without Duncan.
Obviously. No GM will have as much success without some key guys and a good system to plug into, but Spurs have done a great job of making the most(more often than not) out of their picks. Very seldom do they make bad moves. They also manage the cap well.
As the saying goes, you win as a team you lose as a team. That includes the players, the coach, the front office, and the owners and of course luck (if one believes in it).
I agree with you to a point. I cannot fault RC for the job he had done. He has put good players around Duncan. However, Duncan has also made them look a lot better. Pretty much every big man put next to Duncan has been mediocre (Rasho, Mohammad, Elston, etc,). Even guys like Parker are probably overrated since they have a great defensive big man covering their mistakes and do not have to carry the offence consistently. Now can I fault RC for that? Absolutley not. However, I feel Buford will have the opportunity to either elevate his status as a top GM or devalue his legacy based on what he can do once Duncan retires. As I said, I am very interested in seeing how the Spurs fare post-Duncan.
Grego,
Look I understand your point and I do not think our opinions differ that much. My point is that RC has done a fine job, but I want to see what he does post-Duncan. You can make a similar argument that once Petrie did the great job of getting Webber and Vlade, some of the role players we lauded him for looked much better because of them. The difference is that Petrie acquired Webber and Vlade while RC became the SPurs GM after Duncan was already there.
I do feel that Parker is overrated. Right now he is the finals MVP. However, when Duncan retires, how good will Parker be leading a team. This does not take away from the hard work he put in to improve. However, TNT analysts called him one of the top 5 PGs in the league, over players like Billups and Baron Davis. Put either one of those players on the Spurs with Duncan drawing double and tripple teams and they would be even more dominant.
Now can I fault RC for being hired into a situation where a team had a top 10 all time player? No, he has done everything expected of him to keep his team on a pedestal. Contrast that with Mitch Kupchack completley ruining the Lakers and you can appreciate what he has done. However, getting role players and adding great veterans looking for a/more rings (e.g. Horry, Barry, Finley, etc.) is a very different skill than building a contender from scratch.
So far Buford has been a great championship "manager." However, his legacy as a brilliant GM will be defined by what he does once Duncan is gone. Can he make a small market team a winner without a superstar? I feel that this is a legitimate question. Do you disagree with that?