Probably. But your vague retort doesn't apply here.
When you start showing common sense that applies to baskeball, you will be a lot more convincing.
LOL. Putting starters back in doesn't necessarily reduce the risk.
They are the starters because they are the most talented group. Playing the most talented team is teh best form of risk reduction.
And so far this season, the most-used starting lineup (DW-RB-AK-PM-AJ) is a NEGATIVE 29 as of two days ago,
They are in the habit of starting games very badly. Since their performance at the close of games is considerably better, and we are dicussing using them at the close of a game, your cite is irrelevant, and given your penchant at other times for insisting on using lineups flexibly to match their strengths, betrays your fundamental preference for picking data conveniently rather than consistently.
I assure you that Phil Jackson knows how healthy Kobe is, and that Gregg Popovich knows how healthy TD is.
Am I supposed to think Sloan doesn't keep tabs on William's injuries, or just that you're foolish enough to think he might not?
Yes, it's absent because it is so obvious that it's assumed.
Given your penchant for your Coaching 0WIN strategies, it's much more likely you see wins as a byproduct of good coaching techniques.
Not all employment contracts say, "the #1 priority of an employee is to maximize the value of the owners", either.
To pick one of many different problems with that analogy, am I supposed to be so gullible that I equate vague generalities like "maximize the value" with objective, measurable entities like "win games", or am I supposed to believe that you don't know the difference?
I'm gonna take my recollection over your vagary.
Thank goodness you're not a human, so your recollection is not subject to confirmation bias.
IGS citations: 2. One Brow citations (minus his brow and his behind): 0.
Anecdotes are not data.
Well, given that the Suns went farther than the Jazz in the playoffs, you could find worse models of performance.
There you go. Getting to the western conference finals a grand total of once certainly cements, for you, his superiority over Sloan, who you probably think never took a team that far. I bet you're just drooling over the Sun's 7-7 record so far, wishing the Jazz could be that good.