InGameStrategy
Well-Known Member
But when it's garbage time, there's no downside, "being ready" is irrelevant, because there's nothing to "be ready" for, and there is no better way to refine skills (and identify weaknesses) than being on center court. Practice, game film, individual workouts with assistant coaches, and college/NBDL/overseas can only do so much.I was watching. It was nice. But it was also in a game that was already over. In fact all of his stats have come in games that were over at the time.
His feeling should have less than no impact to his playing time right now. It's not an ancillary reason. It's no reason at all. I own a successful company and manage people (both employees and customers) every day. You do not give resposibility to sombody you don't feel is ready for it. It creates more problems than it is worth. The coaches obviously don't feel he is ready.
Meanwhile, leaving Raja in the game instead of bringing in Burks sends a bad message that veterans get guaranteed minutes independent of their performance. (Fortunately, that theory was disputed by Harris being benched briefly vs. Philly and then playing better.) Even a few minutes of time provides huge benefit for especially a motivated player for improvement, and is more valuable than Bell playing another 5 minutes or so after he's already played 15 or 20.
This is why I don't buy the "tighten the rotation" theory, especially in a compressed season like this one. Developing depth and keeping legs fresh are far more important than any mild boost in chemistry from a smaller rotation--and the chemistry can be maintained well if only one player is substituted at a time, most of the time.
Excellent--a glint of wisdom.As to whether he has earned the time or not, that is a different argument. One I would be inclined to agree with you on. I feel he should be playing over Bell. But his feelings have nothing to do with it. But that Bell is terrible and Burks can't be much worse.
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