How the hell can you come on here and presume to know what it takes to develop young talent, or how to coach millionaires! Did you play in the NBA, did you make millions of dollars, and spend over twenty years with one organization, lead a team to two NBA Finals, coach two of the greatest players of all time, be inducted to the hall of fame as a coach, in over 20 seasons with the jazz Sloan missed the playoffs all of two or three times are you the one that got the scouts reportes about players, spend hours evaluating players, did you conduct practices every day did you go to team meetings!!!
1. This is a message board where fans can play armchair coach, GM, etc.--just like you did with your comments about when Millsap should play.
2. When you have two top-50 players for as long as Sloan did, going to the playoffs every year is the minimum standard.
3. My standing offer to be the Jazz coach for 1/10 of Sloan's salary and to show effective management of NBA millionaires and their playing time remains in effect (although a prerequisite would be for the NBA to be resuscitated first).
We are some of the most blessed fans in the NBA for over twenty years we saw basketball the way it was supposed to be played.
You mean preaching defense but not enforcing it?
You mean the illogical approach to defending the 3?
You mean unleashing anti-gay innuendo behind a player's back?
You mean relegating a 5x5-potential borderline all-star to 4th or 5th option with nary a discussion?
You mean not playing a future All-Star in his rookie year in favor of some minimum-level journeyman named Milt?
You mean the often outright puzzling substitution patterns and team combinations (not to mention the aforementioned ignorance of optimizing player development) that he repeatedly put out there, and then sometimes blaming the players when it didn't work?
You act as though players have a certain right to come in as a hot shot rookies and play 40 minutes a game.
Never advocated anything close to your hyperbole; quite the opposite, as I pointed out the 24 MPG for Hayward's late rookie season might have been too much. Furthermore, I have regularly stated that somewhere between 10 MPG and 15 MPG is the minimum for player development--a claim consistent of my clarification of your statements regarding Jelly Bean's boy and Elder Hayward. If a young player did well in that regular 10 to 15 MPG, then a sound coach and leader would provide more (as long as it did not impinge on the development or maintenance of other players within the rotation).
Sloan tought his players about hard work if a player wanted to play he needed to work hard in the off season, in practice, if a player didn't, he didn't play.
But if a player did so, he didn't necessarily play, either. See Kosta Koufos's rookie season--and Hayward's rookie season, for that matter, when Ty Corbin provided Hayward with substantially more consistent minutes (when it should have been obvious all along that he has the most room to improve at the 2/3 spot) than Sloan did.
Sloan always put the team before the individual.
Sloan put his whims before the individual; see the numerous examples of Sloan's inconsistencies above (and elsewhere).
Since you know nothing about what it takes to be successful as a coach in the NBA don't pretend to know what was better for the jazz.
Pot, meet kettle. It's a message board, dude.