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http://www.sacbee.com/content/sports/basketball/kings/story/11953714p-12837970c.html
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Adelman bases decisions on situation, feel
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By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Friday, January 7, 2005
ATLANTA - Even the most casual NBA fan recognizes the basic decisions a coach must make in the fourth quarter - substitutions, clock management and offensive and defensive play calls.
Many other factors, such as statistics and educated opinions from his assistants, also weigh heavily on the coach's ultimate decision.
Given all that, the best and most logical head-coaching decision can turn out unproductive. Conversely, what seems to many to be a questionable decision can work out perfectly.
It's the dilemmas-turned-decisions-turned-dilemmas Kings coach Rick Adelman faced Wednesday night in Toronto and will face again tonight when his team meets the Atlanta Hawks in the third game of its four-game road trip.
With Toronto starting bruising, immobile rookie center Rafael Araujo, it would have seemed a good night to get Greg Ostertag - who Adelman said, just last week, needed to play every night - onto the floor.
Ostertag, however, did not play.
Adelman went with Darius Songaila, Kevin Martin and Maurice Evans - primarily with Brad Miller and Mike Bibby - for large chunks of the second and fourth quarters. That unit is his most productive.
After that group pulled the Kings from 17 points down to within 89-83 with 4:09 left, Adelman returned to Chris Webber and Peja Stojakovic, neither of whom had made shots consistently. With 3:55 left, Adelman subbed Doug Christie for Evans, whose energy, athleticism and aggression played a big role in the comeback.
Webber promptly hit a jumper to close within 89-85 with 3:44 left. Go figure.
But Webber quickly picked up his fifth and final fouls, and Stojakovic never took another shot.
Adelman said returning to his All-Star forwards wasn't a difficult decision.
"Sometimes people think you make decisions (solely) on that particular game, and that's not always true and not always what goes right," Adelman said.
"When do you bring back Peja and Webb? Those guys have been through a lot of games and a lot of games down the stretch. And some of those guys (who were) out there haven't been through it.
"Either you put (Stojakovic and Webber) in there, or you don't put them back at all because then they have been sitting a long time. You've got to make decisions based on what you feel comfortable with. People can second-guess all they want. I don't know if it would have been any different."
That's the rub. No one knows until the game concludes. And Adelman must also deal with the mentalities of his players, especially those he knows will likely - and eventually - determine the team's success.
"Webb missed a lot of shots, a lot of open shots," Adelman said of Webber, who finished 6 of 21 from the field. "And he comes right in (in the fourth) and makes his first jumper. I don't know. What do you say?
"Do I think Peja is going to miss his next shot if it's open? No, I don't think that. I've got trust in those guys.
"Sometimes you like to roll the dice, and I thought about it. In the second quarter, I left those guys out a long time while the young guys were making a nice run. You've just got to make a decision you think is best at the time."
And even the most complex coaching decision seems clear - when it works.
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=============================
Adelman bases decisions on situation, feel
[font=verdana,geneva,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]
By Martin McNeal -- Bee Staff Writer
Published 2:15 am PST Friday, January 7, 2005
ATLANTA - Even the most casual NBA fan recognizes the basic decisions a coach must make in the fourth quarter - substitutions, clock management and offensive and defensive play calls.
Many other factors, such as statistics and educated opinions from his assistants, also weigh heavily on the coach's ultimate decision.
Given all that, the best and most logical head-coaching decision can turn out unproductive. Conversely, what seems to many to be a questionable decision can work out perfectly.
It's the dilemmas-turned-decisions-turned-dilemmas Kings coach Rick Adelman faced Wednesday night in Toronto and will face again tonight when his team meets the Atlanta Hawks in the third game of its four-game road trip.
With Toronto starting bruising, immobile rookie center Rafael Araujo, it would have seemed a good night to get Greg Ostertag - who Adelman said, just last week, needed to play every night - onto the floor.
Ostertag, however, did not play.
Adelman went with Darius Songaila, Kevin Martin and Maurice Evans - primarily with Brad Miller and Mike Bibby - for large chunks of the second and fourth quarters. That unit is his most productive.
After that group pulled the Kings from 17 points down to within 89-83 with 4:09 left, Adelman returned to Chris Webber and Peja Stojakovic, neither of whom had made shots consistently. With 3:55 left, Adelman subbed Doug Christie for Evans, whose energy, athleticism and aggression played a big role in the comeback.
Webber promptly hit a jumper to close within 89-85 with 3:44 left. Go figure.
But Webber quickly picked up his fifth and final fouls, and Stojakovic never took another shot.
Adelman said returning to his All-Star forwards wasn't a difficult decision.
"Sometimes people think you make decisions (solely) on that particular game, and that's not always true and not always what goes right," Adelman said.
"When do you bring back Peja and Webb? Those guys have been through a lot of games and a lot of games down the stretch. And some of those guys (who were) out there haven't been through it.
"Either you put (Stojakovic and Webber) in there, or you don't put them back at all because then they have been sitting a long time. You've got to make decisions based on what you feel comfortable with. People can second-guess all they want. I don't know if it would have been any different."
That's the rub. No one knows until the game concludes. And Adelman must also deal with the mentalities of his players, especially those he knows will likely - and eventually - determine the team's success.
"Webb missed a lot of shots, a lot of open shots," Adelman said of Webber, who finished 6 of 21 from the field. "And he comes right in (in the fourth) and makes his first jumper. I don't know. What do you say?
"Do I think Peja is going to miss his next shot if it's open? No, I don't think that. I've got trust in those guys.
"Sometimes you like to roll the dice, and I thought about it. In the second quarter, I left those guys out a long time while the young guys were making a nice run. You've just got to make a decision you think is best at the time."
And even the most complex coaching decision seems clear - when it works.
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