green
Well-Known Member
Core4 called me out in another thread and asked me what I would do if I was Utah. So, here is what the Big 3 have done (market wise they are the big three), what Utah has done, and what I would have done.
Coaches:
Utah: Ty Corbin - Terrible coach, everyone knows it, has the Sloan mentality. The Jazz kept him on, in his final year, where he has to protect his resume (i.e., win) knowing he won't be here next year.
Philly: At the end of last season, Collins stepped down, as Philly prepared for the tank. Philly went out and hired a solid hire, Brown from San Antonio. Why is San Antonio important? If any coach understands the power of a well timed tank, it is a coach from San Antonio. Nothing like getting a Tim Duncan to make a coach look good. He understands the importance of improving players WHILE LOSING, unlike Corbin.
Boston: Goes out and get Brad Stevens. Again, a young, smart coach who understands that losing one year and getting a transformational player will help you look like a great coach more than 30 wins (vs 20 wins) in your first season.
LA: They joined the tank late. D'Antonio is still there, but he isn't a very good coach anyways.
Summary: Philly and Boston took tanking seriously. They made move with their coaches to solidify this.
What I would have done:
I would have fired Corbin last season after the All-Star break and promoted Hornacek to interm-HC. I would have made a push for the playoffs, made the playoffs, then sat down with Horny at the end of the season. I would have let him know that we were tanking and ask him if he was ok with that. If he was, I would have given him a three year deal that automatically renews if he hits certain goals AFTER HIS SECOND SEASON. The first season would be a complete mulligan. If Horny refused, I would have gone after Stevens or Brown.
Coaches:
Utah: Ty Corbin - Terrible coach, everyone knows it, has the Sloan mentality. The Jazz kept him on, in his final year, where he has to protect his resume (i.e., win) knowing he won't be here next year.
Philly: At the end of last season, Collins stepped down, as Philly prepared for the tank. Philly went out and hired a solid hire, Brown from San Antonio. Why is San Antonio important? If any coach understands the power of a well timed tank, it is a coach from San Antonio. Nothing like getting a Tim Duncan to make a coach look good. He understands the importance of improving players WHILE LOSING, unlike Corbin.
Boston: Goes out and get Brad Stevens. Again, a young, smart coach who understands that losing one year and getting a transformational player will help you look like a great coach more than 30 wins (vs 20 wins) in your first season.
LA: They joined the tank late. D'Antonio is still there, but he isn't a very good coach anyways.
Summary: Philly and Boston took tanking seriously. They made move with their coaches to solidify this.
What I would have done:
I would have fired Corbin last season after the All-Star break and promoted Hornacek to interm-HC. I would have made a push for the playoffs, made the playoffs, then sat down with Horny at the end of the season. I would have let him know that we were tanking and ask him if he was ok with that. If he was, I would have given him a three year deal that automatically renews if he hits certain goals AFTER HIS SECOND SEASON. The first season would be a complete mulligan. If Horny refused, I would have gone after Stevens or Brown.