This is not about Nowitzki vs Boozer. This is about how Boozer was to us, what Nowitzki is to the Mavs. Both teams need both of them in games for offense and scoring.
Not true; and you're missing the point. Nowitzki was far more essential than Boozer was; the 2011 NBA Finals (as well as Boozer's long injury hiatus when Millsap filled in valiantly) show that.
Furthermore, this isn't just about Fesenko; this is about enforcing performance and putting the best combination on the court. On repeated occasions--we're talking several games here, not to mention the 20-ish game run that Millsap had when Boozer was injured--a combination with less of Boozer and/or Okur was the superior choice (we're talking as little as 5 to 10 minutes less of Boozokur), and Sloan didn't notice the hemorrhage that was Booze +/- Okur, nor the sometimes huge favorable swings when that combination was not on the floor. It's about playing more of a real center with a real forward (be it Boozer, Millsap, or sometimes Okur), and--more importantly--analyzing matchups, combinations, and performance more astutely to put out the best lineup at all times.
You have agreed to my point here actually. There is hope for you yet. It also helps to remember that Boozer didnt miss a single playoffs game for us(despite his durability knock) and has also helped us win some big games like the Houston series in 2007.
You appear to be changing the subject there. My pounding the table for play-for-performance has little to do with injuries (except when injuries unfortunately hurt team performance, except possibly an allowance for a few minutes of playing time per game for a rehabbing player to get back into "game shape"); not sure why you're even bringing it up.
Well Boozer is still a bad defensive player and he is with the Bulls now. So why didnt the great defensive genius Thobodeau could'nt turn him onto a defensive player if Carlisle or Avery could turn Nowitzki into a pretty good defensive player(which is debatable, to begin with)? Your logic(or the lack of it) is funny.
Whether Thibodeau was successful in making Boozer a better defender doesn't matter; I'm not a Bulls fan, and it doesn't take away that for most of CB's stint on the Jazz, he was hurting the team defensively.
My mantra has been that when whatever player is being damaging on the court (despite, perhaps, significant scoring), he needs to sit down. Whether that player learns his lesson and starts to step up is irrelevant if his replacement does better. And on repeated occasions, a lineup with Fesenko or Elson (usually not both together) was superior (for a few minutes at a time at minimum) in dozens of games than the defensive disaster that has been the rotation of Jefferson, Boozer, and Okur. Not all the time, but often enough that it has cost the Jazz games--which is in stark opposition to the weak claim that some puzzling apologists have made that playing more of a true center (Fesenko, Elson, etc.) was going to cost games, too.
With the arrival of Kanter and the return of Okur, the Jazz's fallacious strategy can still repeat itself. If Okur is ineffective--out of lack of effort or lack of speed (conditioning), he must be benched, unlike the policy previously. As long as Kanter can produce at a level similar to K-Fes (not an insurmountable feat by any means; even I would acknowledge so), it is more valuable to the Jazz to put Kanter out there instead of Fesenko (in the remote chance that Fes returns) because the team has more to gain from Kanter's development. But principle remains: from the PG spot to the C spot, if players are being ineffective, they need to sit down, be it for a possession or two or longer.
Mllsap+Fesenko is an alternative only if you want to hit the lottery, not if you want to make a deep run in the playoffs. They are best played in limited mins.
Sorry; the data is simply against you. Even more laughable is the fact that the Jazz did NOT make a deep run in the playoffs under your plan (i.e., the status quo). And last season, with the status quo, the Jazz went far below .500 in the post-Sloan era and made no dent in the playoffs at all. Thank you, thank you, thank you for continuing to strengthen my argument with each of your passing statements.
But to be fair to Sloan, Millsap did see a lot of mins under Sloan. And, once again, Like I pointed out earlier, despite Bulls having better options than Utah at the 4/5 defensively(noah, Gibson), Thibodeau still played Booz 32 mins a game during the regular season, as against the 33+ that Booz averaged in Utah. So, just a difference of 1 minute. Looks like Thibodeau didnt bench Booz a lot more than Sloan did, despite having more options. Yet he is the rotations genius, while Sloan is the idiot, according to you
You're still on the tangential issue of Boozer-in-Chicago, but if you insist on continuing to address it, I will indulge you here, also. All I need to do is prove that Thibodeau did it more than Sloan. Here you go: Boozer being benched for the entire Q4 for being ineffective on both O and D; it can even be argued that TT sacrificed a W by doing so, and that it paid off later in the season with better team D (if not better CB D).
https://www.chicagonow.com/chicago-...d-boozer-and-it-had-nothing-to-do-with-zones/
But wait--there's more! Thibodeau apparently benched Booze more than once.
https://bleacherreport.com/articles...bodeau-could-sit-the-chicago-bulls-star-again
Whether Thibodeau did it
enough or
every time is of no consequence, and probably explains your somewhat irrelevant claim that Boozer didn't substantially improve his defense since leaving Utah. Proving so is not necessary for my argument, which is that if ANY player is dogging it, he needs to be benched. At least until the next whistle. Expecially earlly in games. Maybe not religiously followed toward the end of the game. But a player exhibiting porous defense might not be the best choice down the stretch, either.