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What About This Guy as a Head Coach

homeytennis

Well-Known Member
Everywhere the guy has been they seem to win. He's the No. 1 assistant to Lionel Hollins.
David Joerger enters his third season on the Grizzlies’ bench after recently coaching the Grizzlies summer league squad to a perfect 5-0 record in the 2009 NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. Before earning his first NBA assistant coaching job with the Grizzlies, Joerger gained fame as one of the most successful minor league basketball coaches in history, serving as head coach of the 2006-07 NBA D-League Champion Dakota Wizards. Afterwards, he became just the sixth head coach (15th coach overall) in D-League history to join the NBA coaching ranks. The title was the fifth he has won as a head coach, as he also has one International Basketball Association (IBA) title and three Continental Basketball Association (CBA) championships, along with two CBA Coach of the Year honors and a 232-117 (.665) head coaching record. After finishing his playing career at Moorhead State, Joerger got his start as the Dakota Wizards’ general manager when they were members of the IBA. He received his first opportunity on the sidelines as an assistant coach during the 1997-98 season. After three years as an assistant, Joerger replaced head coach Duane Ticknor and led the Wizards to their first championship during the 2000-01 season. Prior to the 2001-02 season, the Wizards moved into the CBA where Joerger led the team to another title. Continuing his success, Joerger captured his third title in four years after the Wizards defeated the Idaho Stampede to win the 2003-04 CBA Championship. During the summer of 2004, Joerger moved to Sioux Falls to become the head coach of the Skyforce and proceeded to win his fourth CBA Championship, giving him more minor league championships than minor league-turned-NBA head coaches Phil Jackson, Flip Saunders, George Karl and Eric Musselman combined. An excellent teacher of the game, Joerger had 18 of his players called up to the NBA from 2003-07. Joerger and his wife, Kara, are the parents of two daughters, Alli, 6, and Kiana, 3.
 
I like this guy too he would be added to my short list of Jeff Hornacek, Brian Shaw, or Mike Budenholzer. Not in any specific order but I would just interview Shaw just to interview a non white coach.
 
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The thing that is intriquing about this guy is that he was championships in all the scrub leagues he coached in and he shows up in Memphis and they suddenly are in the WCF, It seems like he has "it" for getting teams prepared to play and usually win.
 
The thing that is intriquing about this guy is that he was championships in all the scrub leagues he coached in and he shows up in Memphis and they suddenly are in the WCF, It seems like he has "it" for getting teams prepared to play and usually win.

This guy?

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Too long I didn't read!!

Kind sir,

I regret to inform you that I was entirely unable to read your www.jazzfanz.com general discussion forum post in the thread "What About This Guy as Head Coach" becaues it appeard to be far far too long.

Have a good day and best wishes to you!

Sincerely,
Forum poster,
Gameface
 
According to some here, if he's never been a head coach, he's destined to fail. Not sure if Thibodeau, Jazzfanz' darling, was a head coach before the Bulls, but THAT'S immaterial.
 
I thought this once but Ty Corbin suxs

Perhaps Ty is just a distraction? Brad Jones is the real replacement. The pieces just had to fall in place. Hornacek leaving for Phoenix opens the door. ;)

Seriously, Ty needs assistants that help make him look good. Coaches with great insight and can prepare the players well. Based on David Joerger's record, he has proven that he can get young players and now older players to be ready to compete. After all, wins and losses are pretty much all you can judge from, except for interviews and what the players say.

P.S. Type 59 is my favorite tank. T-54 is better but has to play against Tier Xs. :)
 
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