I think our players realized that Ty is actually a little bit dumb - do not pay attention on his occasional stupid decision, try to leave with that and take care of business on the court.
Corbin is a genius.
Now let's remember that he's human, and humans make mistakes as he has. (as has all coaches)
However, let's remember what his 'young talent' is:
Hayward: Pasty American white player (general opinion, not mine) that the entire arena booed when he was picked who was terrible for the majority of his time player under hall of fame coach Jerry Sloan.
Favors: Obviously talented poster boy for a power forward who despite all of this was crushed in his rookie year to the point where by the time he was traded he was a shadow of a man emotionally and had to gain his confidence back from the ground up.
Burks: Thin, slightly undersized, not strong enough, and played an offence in college that doesn't translate well into the NBA (research it, it's there) But obviously athletically superior to most other draft picks.
Kanter: Solid as a brick, but has only been playing basketball since he was fourteen years old, so he has a ton to learn about the game. On top of this he hasn't played competitively for a couple of years except for his national team and some exhibition games.
My point is that he didn't have Kobe, Jordan, Magic, and Malone on the team. They each had to overcome significant problems with their games, and somehow, magically, they are progressing in their games!
How? It's the whole carrot and the donkey thing. You hook a donkey up to a cart and give a carrot to him immediately they sit there and eat the carrot. However, if you put a carrot in front of them, they walk toards it, pulling the cart. If you give rookies time immediately, they think they are already stars and don't try to improve their game. If you hold the time until they prove they can improve, they will improve to get the time.
It's not rocket science.