I agree that it's pretty unbelievable that a coach would get fired over a quote - just a quote. But then again, from what you said following this, I don't think you believe that either.
Obviously we don't really know what happened here and you're trying to piece it together from some snippets. But if you're right, then it would clearly be the falling out, and not the quote, that was the proximate cause of the firing.
I can't really agree with the adjectives I bolded there - at least to the extent that one can be certain they're applicable. If my employer tells me it's my job to water the lawn every day, and instead of doing that I tear out the lawn and put in a rock garden, it's not petty or juvenile of my employer to fire me over that, not even if it IS a really nice rock garden. Again this is obviously speculation, but it's built on the same sort of speculation about a falling out that you had above so I do think we can find some common ground here. And as far as impulsive goes - one might easily consider immediately turning around after a falling out and fast-tracking a firing to be impulsive. I can see that. But Malone was on the chopping block at least as early as the summer. Not only do we have the later reports that the FO sought out Gentry as an heir to the throne in the offseason, but the buzz came through the back channels over the summer that Malone was on thin ice and they were strongly considering firing him then. I thought that was shockingly silly at the time, and I hoped they wouldn't go through with it, but eventually they did. However, that was 4-5 months later, which if anything seems to be the opposite of impulsive. They gave Malone a lot of time. It wasn't just one bad meeting and Boom! he's fired the next day.
So yes, the mid-season timing of it was terrible. It looks bad and the players dealt with it extremely poorly. If Malone had to go, best would have been to let him go after this season. Better than midseason would have been a last-offseason firing. Mid-season was about the worst possible timing. But perhaps he forced their hand. Perhaps his analytics quote (and the fact that he posted it) is indicative of a fundamentally soured relationship with the FO. While I wouldn't call it insubordination in and of itself it might be the evidence of deep-seated insubordination on Malone's part. Again, obviously it's all speculation, but it's along the same lines of what you're speculating, I just read the FO's actions in response differently than you do.
I don't disagree that this wasn't over a quote. But I'd be shocked if there wasn't a huge argument leading to that quote. As I said.
The same day the quote comes out they run to daddy to fire the mean old coach who didn't buy their heaping pile of crap. The coach was right, btw. If anyone cares anymore. It was a battle to see who'd be fired first. The coach who likely told them the roster they gave him is utter crap. Wouldn't shock me if Malone dared them to find a coach who could win with this team without cousins. Corbin hasn't done it. Not once. Heck, Corbin can't win WITH cousins.
Speculation of course, but something happened between the front office and Malone in early December that led to Malone himself being near certain he'd be fired. And truthfully, It sounds like there were many arguments up till that point.
Both Vivek and Voison gave the impression something terrible happened (in the minds of PDA/Mullin/Bratz) and the firing had to happen immediately. I am basing this particular pet theory on that article with the talk of the emergency trip to Vegas.
This team is talented enough for a near .500 record. 38-42 wins. No playoffs, but progress. That's looking extremely unlikely. I'm wondering at this point if they can drop all the way to a bottom 3 record. Continuing the 0.250 winning percentage that has occurred since 9-6, this team is on pace for 25-26 wins.
I'm just not buying any given reason for the firing. With the lack of a reasonable reason being given, we are left to speculate. I'm sure insubordination is at the root. I've been saying that since the day he got fired. And that quote and whatever led to it was the last straw.
What they did is impulsive in NBA time scale terms. Just cause they were thinking of firing him months earlier doesn't mean they weren't completely wrong (we agree on that I think). Thinking about doing something incredibly stupid for 4-5 months doesn't make it less stupid when it finally happens. Perhaps less impulsive, but still stupid. I disagree strongly that one season plus 24 games is a lot of time.
I know I made some questionable conclusions, but I think at the core we all agree. Whatever terms we apply to it can be debated.
I hadn't done the math, but wow. 25 wins. And it feels like this could bottom out even worse than that, doesn't it? A top 3 pick might in fact be possible. Just a couple injuries to Rudy or boogie and we'd slide even more quickly in the standings. It'll be hard to finish below minny, Philly, or NY, but we can totally catch the lakers.
Irrelevant fact, but if you add up the current losing streaks of sac, la, Orlando, minny and philly, it stands at 31 losses in a row. Those last place teams aren't messing around.