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Sacramento Kings @ Utah Jazz: November 22nd, 2010 7:00 MST

When Sloan took CJ out and put Bell in I wondered the same thing. But it does make sense. We need Bell on track, we were in control, and...2) It was another chance to get the whole starting unit minutes. At the end of the half, we were up and Jerry got 4 more minutes of them playing together.

In other words, he wouldn't do the same thing in the 2nd half of the season.

Now don't ask me why Deron set foot on the floor in the 4th. Dumbest move ever.

So reward the guy that has played like crap and punish the guy that is playing better. That makes no sense to me. I get what your saying but that goes against everything Sloan claims to be about.
 
Up fifteen with seven to go is not game in hand.
You're post is nearly irrelevant because
(1) only a small fraction of teams come back from a 15-point deficit with 7 minutes left;
(2) it wasn't a 15-point lead with 7 minutes left. Deron came in with a 19-point lead, down only three from the beginning of the quarter, and
(3) there was not sign that the existing lineup's ability to hold a 19-point lead was deteriorating.
 
So reward the guy that has played like crap and punish the guy that is playing better. That makes no sense to me. I get what your saying but that goes against everything Sloan claims to be about.

If I was a coach in November, I'd do the same thing. Sloan needs to get Bell going. He also needs to get his 1st unit going. Miles is killing. So give Bell more minutes tonight, in November, and give the starting unit more minutes since they're sucking.

It was the right move TONIGHT. But I'm not saying it's not debatable either. CJ was so hot. If he did it in a close game or later in the season I'd be really pissed.
 
If I was a coach in November, I'd do the same thing. Sloan needs to get Bell going. He also needs to get his 1st unit going.
The way to motivate a lineup when they are so-so is not to give them more minutes. Letting Hayward have an extra five minutes is FAR more valuable than letting Bell have an extra 5 minutes, especially when the game wasn't in danger. Same goes for Evans over Millsap or Jefferson, who didn't even muster 10 rebounds each in 35 minutes, which has very little to do with playing the entire lineup together. Bell should be commended for helping to slow down Tyreke Evans vs. TE's going off last year, but Evans wasn't even on the court when Bell came back into the game unnecessarily in Q4.

Such thinking of rewarding poor performance with more PT (or "going with my guys") played a big role in Utah losing against Phoenix, Golden State, Denver, and maybe other games. A far more effective and objective form of coaching is to identify what lineup is working on a given night and stick with that lineup, also taking into account the motivation, development, health (i.e., Deron barely being able to jump, yet being thrown back in the game in the 4Q when it wasn't necessary, especially with Watson and Price doing so well) and chemistry of all players, without putting victories at significant risk.
 
If I was a coach in November, I'd do the same thing. Sloan needs to get Bell going. He also needs to get his 1st unit going. Miles is killing. So give Bell more minutes tonight, in November, and give the starting unit more minutes since they're sucking.

It was the right move TONIGHT. But I'm not saying it's not debatable either. CJ was so hot. If he did it in a close game or later in the season I'd be really pissed.

Oh I agree it is a reasonable thing to do. But it goes against the way Sloan has coached and preached his entire career. He claims to play the lineups that give him the best chance to win each game. If he seriously thinks that this starting lineup in to finish games gives him the best chance to win then I can't figure out what he is seeing. This starting lineup is playing terrible as a unit. I hope they improve. We need to stop getting in a hole so often.

But I still don't like the precedence it sets with your team especially with a young player like CJ. He's been told his whole time here that if he works hard and plays well he'll get minutes. Now that he is and is the 2nd best wing we have right now he is still not getting more minutes than a player he is definitely out performing.
 
Some of you dumbasses complaining about Bell's minutes did'nt watch the game I guess. But anyways for your benefit, more on why Bell played those mins tonight:
https://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/jazz/50730678-87/jazz-kings-points-sacramento.html.csp
But the most important piece was Raja Bell, who completely shut down Sacramento star Tyreke Evans. Known for his big games against Utah, Evans went 3-for-12 from the field, had three turnovers and finished with just 11 points.

Bell hounded Evans over screens, fought with him for position, never let him post up, and denied him penetration. Essentially, Bell cut the head off of the Kings’ offense and the rest of the body died.

“Guys like that, you don’t know what you’re going to get,” Bell said. “Evans is a volume shooter, and sometimes you can’t turn a guy like that off because he gets off too many shots. But tonight, I was able to stay with him and stay in front of him. I got a lot of help from my teammates, and we were able to keep him off the free-throw line. I never try to take too much credit for something like that, because you never know what’s going on in the other locker room.”
 
Some of you dumbasses complaining about Bell's minutes did'nt watch the game I guess. But anyways for your benefit, more on why Bell played those mins tonight:
Yes, and that was valuable in the 2+ quarters in which Tyreke Evans and Bell played together. In the first eight minutes of the second quarter with Bell on the bench, however, Evans scored all of two free throws. So TE actually scored at a higher rate (albeit a successfully modest rate) with Bell defending him than without Bell defending him.

In any case, it still doesn't explain why Bell was compelled to come back in the game in Q4 when Utah was up by deep double digits, Watson & Price were doing just fine, Tyreke Evans was done for the night, and Hayward hadn't even seen the court yet. When your second string is doing better than your first string, and when your starting PG is tired & hobbling, you're better off giving the bench more experience and resting the starters. Fundamental coaching concepts.
 
This game was mega yawn.

Never worried at any point. Refs really let them play though, lots of contact on both ends for most of the night. Really different than officiating before this season, I've seen it a few times this season already... but it's a more like "back in the day" when players could actually bump into each other and there wouldn't instantly be freethrows.

Cousins and some of the other bigs for Sactown looked out of shape. A few players on the Kings barely looked like NBA players.

Lol at the Kings. Also Hayward is a joke. He needs serious time to develop. D League?
 
Yes, and that was valuable in the 2+ quarters in which Tyreke Evans and Bell played together. In the first eight minutes of the second quarter with Bell on the bench, however, Evans scored all of two free throws. So TE actually scored at a higher rate (albeit a successfully modest rate) with Bell defending him than without Bell defending him.

In any case, it still doesn't explain why Bell was compelled to come back in the game in Q4 when Utah was up by deep double digits, Watson & Price were doing just fine, Tyreke Evans was done for the night, and Hayward hadn't even seen the court yet. When your second string is doing better than your first string, and when your starting PG is tired & hobbling, you're better off giving the bench more experience and resting the starters. Fundamental coaching concepts.

Ah there you go with your coaching 101 again.

Being up by 20 with 7 mins to go is'nt that big a margin in the NBA.You saw Millsap score 11 pts in 30 secs against Miami. Sloan has always been erring on the side of caution w.r.t protecting leads. And he wont change it just to please stat-obsessed armchair coaches.
 
Ah there you go with your coaching 101 again.

Being up by 20 with 7 mins to go is'nt that big a margin in the NBA.You saw Millsap score 11 pts in 30 secs against Miami. Sloan has always been erring on the side of caution w.r.t protecting leads. And he wont change it just to please stat-obsessed armchair coaches.

Well said VJ...

And I would like to add, Sloan understands the history of when these two teams play against one another too... In the last 3 years, me and my wife have gone to 2 Jazz games together... Both were against the Kings... And in both games, we got a huge lead only to let them back into the game and win...

So give Sloan a little credit huh guys?? He understood the history of these two teams (And those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it) and coached the game as if it were just a 3 point lead... Big deal, we won the game... Would you rather have had the Kings come back to win?? Then what would you Johnny come latelys be saying about Sloan??
 
Big deal, we won the game... Would you rather have had the Kings come back to win?? Then what would you Johnny come latelys be saying about Sloan??

and we also have a day off to boot. Deron is not going to mind too much about playing just 34 mins as long as he gets the W and a day off. This was actually one of those games where the bench got to see some good action. Even Fesenko the 11th man got to play 15 mins.
 
Ah there you go with your coaching 101 again.

Being up by 20 with 7 mins to go is'nt that big a margin in the NBA.You saw Millsap score 11 pts in 30 secs against Miami. Sloan has always been erring on the side of caution w.r.t protecting leads. And he wont change it just to please stat-obsessed armchair coaches.
Yes, I am going with coaching 101 because my mantra is about common sense that extends to not only the NBA, to not just basketball, and to not merely most team sports, but also to leadership and management in general.

Among the jobs of a coach--and leader-are the following:
(1) To establish a system (which Sloan does pretty well, and which I rarely dispute);
(2) To motivate (which Sloan does pretty well, except when he rewards poor effort/performance with more playing time and good effort/performance with less);
(3) To make adjustments while things are happening (a failure of which has cost at least two or three games this year, largely associated with incomplete satsifaction of #2);
(4) To develop new personnel (which Sloan failed to take advantage of doing last night, as well as other nights).

Your example of Millsap isn't particularly relevant here because Sacramento was already playing only half of a starting lineup (with the on-court combination not really suggestive of making up of 20-point deficit). Toward the end of the game, Utah was playing more starters than Sacto was, which is ridiculous, especially with the risk of injury and with Deron clearly fatigued (which is when injury happens most).

Your claim of "erring on the side of caution" would be less weak if Sloan had kept the bench in because they had proven in the previous two quarters to be superior to what the starting lineup was producing (and this isn't the first night that this is the case btw).

I continue to wait for you and anyone else to cite the probability that a team down 15 points (really 16 to 20 points) at 7 minutes left comes back to win. Conservatively, I peg it at 20%, give or take 15%.

It seems that Phil Jackson, who has about as many rings as Sloan has fingers, normally subs in the starters when the lead evaporates to 12, 10, or even 8 points. Sloan's decision was especially damning with Deron clearly stating in the postgame that he was slow and had no lift.

Here's a citation of Alvin Gentry leaving the bench players in the game -- coincidentally at the 7-minute mark also -- because they were doing better than the starters. That's good leadership. That's good decisionmaking. That's good motivation and development. That's good coaching.
https://www.nba.com/suns/playoffs/playoffs2010_r3g4.html
 
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