To answer your question, Rich, I do sometimes make posts that do not "complain" about Jerry Sloan, but only when Jerry Sloan isn't a key part of the problem.
I don't aspire to hate on ol' Jer; the chicken (observing poor in-game decisions and poor player development) came before the egg (looking for ways to criticize Sloan). I would love to say that the coaches, FO, and players have done everything they can to maximize Utah's success, but it seems to me that being a little more astute on substitution patterns, on-court combinations, and consistency in rewarding players (e.g., play a player more if he's doing well, bench him briefly if he's not) is a lot easier to do than land a team-transforming trade or signing an x-factor free agent.
As for the FO's role, drafting is partially a guessing game, and trades and signings depend on other entities outside the organization (players, teams, agents, or any or all of the above). The Jazz organization could be smarter in that department, but those events number a handful of per year. Effective in-game coaching, on the other hand, is tested 82 to 100+ times in every season. While the impact of FO decisions (i.e., signing AK to a max 7-year deal instead of waiting a year and signing him to a max 5-year deal or less) can be far-ranging, coaching decisions can tweak the outcome of a given game more directly.
to offer the contrasting view -
There are a handlful of STRATEGIES to Jerry's model and one is playing time consistency. There is a value to this that anyone who has played in organized sports can attest to. Another is that proper work-ethic before the game and behind the scenes is valueable and is a vital part of contributing. Jerry has said - if you work hard you get better and if you work hard you have a chance to play. A third value of Jerry's is rotating team defense. In this, the team needs to be orchestrated and well practiced to execute this.
Fes has struggled with his work ethic. Jerry thinks it is in the best interest of ALL players to stay true to his theory
As a result, Fes has a hard time seeing court time - hence he misses important practice time - the crux of INGAMESTRAT's message)
(The regular season is a combination of practice and playing for play-off positioning)
And thus Fes did not have the requesite time to practice to be a smooth cog in the team defense - thus he didn't make the 8ish man play off rotation
so with this you could conclude (and INGAMESTRAT tells us) "So then Jerry made a mistake not getting fes the required court time to practice to be part of the team system"
I think Jerry sticks with this plan becuase:
The defensive play of the team just before AK was injured near the end of the season was at top 3 - it WAS working. WE saw it. And for those of you who value his opinion, David Locke (SLC/Jazz radio guy) noted this for about 2 weeks straight, statistically pointing out the Jazz defensive play was at serious-contender level. So Jerry's IN SEASON STRATEGY worked. The Jazz was playing very well and in my perfectly omnicient opinion (becuase on the message board each of us know all) was that the Jazz were playing well enough to 'challenge' the Lakers (not beat them but maybe with some fortunate breaks or something.)
So it was a valid, defensible strategy by ole Jer. And, it did not crush or even threaten the team chemistry by allowing a jackpotter to play...
We don't know if INGAMESTRAT's model would be better. And i will add that it COULD be. Jerry for certain isn't blind, dumb, senile, he has a method. And he's made wrong choices before - and will continue to do so. (Just glad we don't have a HarcherFanzz site where all of my work day is scrutinzed andn replayed iwth hindsight.) But his choice in this case to stay with his strategy did work in my opinion.