b_line
Well-Known Member
Ok I'm bored of being bored. Gonna go take a suspiciously long shower.
Dat lag rod been lookin up German porn.
Ok I'm bored of being bored. Gonna go take a suspiciously long shower.
Kendrick Perkins would be starting (Tyco would have insisted the Jazz not buy him out)...Gobert goes back to getting 15 minutes a game off the bench.lol, can you imagine Ty coaching this years team? He's thinking "I don't want to play any more damn rookies" then he looks at the bench and realizes he can only play like 5 non rookies. "Trey, Gordon, Derrick, you guys ready for 48 minutes?"
Frank has said he likes Quin better.
frank says right in this post we would be better off this year with Corbin over Quin.
But he also says things likePeople often say that franklin is saying things he's not saying and completely ignoring what he's actually saying.
I didn't like Corbin. I gave him a long long leash because there were a lot of external factors that contributed to his lack of success. Ultimately I decided he wasn't a good coach (because I'm like qualified to assess such things). But franklin has pointed out things he did do well. It doesn't have to be all or nothing. Corbin could have been the wrong guy for the job and still have a few things he did well. People don't want to hear that, though. They want to crucify Corbin and condemn every last thing he ever did. Pretty simple way to look at things, but oh well.
1. I disagree. I think there's always a place for contrary opinions.Group-think is stupid, but to suggest that there's somehow a laurel to be granted for contrarianism strictly because it's contrarianism is half-baked and equally stupid.
1. So what if he is wrong? In the past, he's engaged in plenty of (reasonably) respectful, intelligent basketball discussions. As far as I'm concerned, those discussions are far more valuable than bumped threads that serve no other purpose than to deride people for making bad predictions, idiotic memes, and the (other) ad hominem junk that has become the norm on JF.That's fine. And in this case he was wrong. Dead wrong. As wrong as one can possibly be wrong. And the idea that he was done sort of innocent guy who didn't dish out his fair share of antagonism is comical.
What purpose would that serve?Then gets proven wrong and changes his argument and never admits he was wrong about anything.
Some reason? Franklin is a pretty analytical/critical dude. Some of us prefer good discussion to dick jokes.Yet has alot of apologists for some reason.
You couldn't choose a counterfactual in a more self-serving way. Congrats.Perfect Example. For those defending this troll...Please tell me how. He says right in this post we would be better off this year with Corbin over Quin. Completely ignoring that half the players on this team quit on him last year. Claims we would be better off because of continuity but fails to accept that the team quit on Corbin. Hayward is having a banner year because Corbin no longer here. Favors if having his best year on both ends of the floor because Corbin is no longer here. Exum would be rotting away on the bench behind both Burke and Clark if Corbin was here. Because Corbin did not value defensive talent and Exum does not look good on offense.
And yes I am bored, German TV sucks, and so I decided to just go through this thread and respond to (nearly) random posts.
Ok I'm bored of being bored. Gonna go take a suspiciously long shower.
There are other external factors worth considering:Does it matter if it's the X's and O's or if it's just an environment that the players have bought into? Either way, it's Quin that has brought it to the team.
Some reason? Franklin is a pretty analytical/critical dude. Some of us prefer good discussion to dick jokes.
For me, it's tough to disentangle the effect Snyder has had from the different situations and the year-over-year individual growth of the players on the roster:Corbin never had a fair shake here or in Sactown (especially there) but imo Snyder is clearly better simply by the improvement he has been able to generate that Corbin has not. And Corbin's team quit and Snyders is full of fight.
********:Quin was given a far more daunting task this year that Corbin ever was.
For me, it's tough to disentangle the effect Snyder has had from the different situations and the year-over-year individual growth of the players on the roster:
1. How much did Corbin's near certain impending departure affect the players' confidence last season? How did it affect their willingness to buy into what Ty was trying to do?
2. How much of Hayward's and Favors' growth was due to having a year of experience and failure in lead roles, as opposed to Snyder's coaching/teaching? If Snyder's the one driving development, what's wrong with Trey and Enes?
The veterans on the team all filled complementary roles. Enes and Alec had larger roles than either RJ or Marvin last season. Having all the young guys starting together last season would have limited the amount of time each had on-ball.Corbin was not on board with what needed to happen here. We had veterans here that should have been helping and coming off the bench (in most cases). Instead of making the development of our young guys the priority, he took every opportunity to lean on the veterans to try to squeak out a few wins.
I'd argue the role, responsibilities and situations a player is put in matter. That is, you want to put players in appropriate situations/roles to apply what they've learned in situations where they aren't totally overwhelmed. Development is a gradual process IMO.IMO development is a factor of PT, coaching, and of course skill-set, talent, physical ability, maturity, drive, etc. Say individual ability. You will develop to whatever level of the first 2 you receive combined with the 3rd. So let's assume the 3rd one is solid, like most rookies taken in the first say 10 picks. If you are getting little PT but great coaching you will develop some, but you can only learn so much without time to put it into practice. If you are getting tons of PT and no coaching maybe the same, although then the worry of bad habits sets in. If you are getting plenty of PT to put learned skills into practice combined with solid coaching both in practice sessions and in-game, then it stands to reason you will enjoy the greatest development as a player, up to your personal threshold. There comes a point of course when coaching starts to mean less and personal will to improve is what drives the improvements. But in the first couple of years for a high pick it is hard to argue that PT does not matter as much as coaching. Look at Kobe for example. Had the physical ability and talent, was given PT and good coaching. Didn't turn out too bad when his personal drive started defining his play. Would he have been the same player if he had spent most of his time on the bench his first 2 seasons, or in the D-league? Tough to say.
For me, it's tough to disentangle the effect Snyder has had from the different situations and the year-over-year individual growth of the players on the roster:
1. How much did Corbin's near certain impending departure affect the players' confidence last season? How did it affect their willingness to buy into what Ty was trying to do?
2. How much of Hayward's and Favors' growth was due to having a year of experience and failure in lead roles, as opposed to Snyder's coaching/teaching? If Snyder's the one driving development, what's wrong with Trey and Enes?
I'd argue the role, responsibilities and situations a player is put in matter. That is, you want to put players in appropriate situations/roles to apply what they've learned in situations where they aren't totally overwhelmed. Development is a gradual process IMO.
My point was that you can have too much playing time, or playing time in detrimental situations/roles. But yeah, having opportunities to apply what you've learned in situations that matter is incredibly important.To me that is called coaching. And yes development doesn't happen overnight. But it can't happen in a vacuum either. You could be the most knowledgeable person on the planet about deep sea diving. You could be a renowned expert who is asked constantly to lecture on the subject. You could have read every book, written most of them yourself and talked to and learned from the best in the business. But if you never get in the water you both stand a good chance of drowning once you finally do, and also wasted the knowledge you gained.
But he also says things like
The jazz defense didn't improve until kanter was traded.
Then gets proven wrong and changes his argument and never admits he was wrong about anything.
He says Corbin would do better this year with this team, yet says he prefers quin?
He is a dick on this forum plain and simple.
Yet has alot of apologists for some reason.
Interesting exchange here. I forgot to multiquote so here is the one this is a response to:
It took Gobert what, about 1/3 of a season to really get going. Could he have done that last year with a solid chunk of starters minutes to get him going? Good question. I think there is a decent chance that it would have helped him a lot. What if he were at current, or close to current, form at the start of this season due to extra PT last year to work out the kinks?
It's the change of offensive system that is helping Favors/Hayward the most. That same system doesn't fit Kanter and Burke, who are use to dominating the ball too much.