addictionary
Well-Known Member
but most of Americans (especially the rich ones) would just curl their lips and say "dumb".
Like this...
Only the ignorant ones bud. Only those ones.
but most of Americans (especially the rich ones) would just curl their lips and say "dumb".
Like this...
Don't know if he had spent anytime with NBA coaches but he's no doubt one of the best coaches ever, and he's a highly intellectual person who has lived a tough life through wars, being an ex-Yugoslav/Bosnian. I doubt he would give this kind of speech without good extent. And I doubt that those were his exact words, you know how reporters and newspapers work.
Ok, as for the 'misunderstanding' concerning Ty's 'stupidness'. Tangentvic knows Kanter as a good shooter and that is also the euro style: shooting. However, 'we' know Kanter as an inexperienced player who needs to learn the game of basketball. From what I understand, Ty is developing him from the middle out. Start with his post game which will truly be his best strength due to his size and strength. Then after this, he will add his shooting game (as he already is starting to).
Here's a critical question for everyone to ponder: Do we want Kanter to play like Okur? He has the soft touch to do it, just like 'T' said. He could hang out at the three point line like Memo and take those long range shots. I've seen his stroke in limited bits and it looks good.
Hmmmm?
Did Memo play for Tangentvic? I don't know the answer myself and I don't want to research it, but if he did, and he became a shooting guard instead of a center, then I want Kanter to stay as far away from him as possible.
Only the ignorant ones bud. Only those ones.
Tangentvic is right and oh so wrong. He correctly points out that Kanter was not used as a euro, face-up shooter. But he was wrong to single out Ty as being stupid when Ty is coaching and using guys to match the nba style.
'3 or 4 coaches out of 100 years......'
He still believes the coach matters, and maybe the coach matters in Turkey, but not the NBA. The NBA is a star league, stars get the ball, the calls, the TV time and sell merchandise. The coach just needs to stay out of the way of the star and have witty quips to drop for media sound bites.
I agree with Tangentvic that the NBA style is stupid, er uh weak. But until they pry the control panel away from the cold dead hands of David Stern the style won't change, and probably still won't as long as 20 of the 30 owners are making money.
D'antoni was a euro coach, he's made it to one conference finals with the league MVP and got fired twice?
Mr. Tangentvic, Ty Corbin is not stupid, the NBA is stupid.
Maybe Kanter didn't want to play for Turkey because he got tired of running the floor to see guards chuck up 3pts. I saw Turkey play a couple of times and they totally misused Kanter. The team was poorly coached and the bigs were an after thought on the offensive end. I know this guy wasn't the coach (I think that is right) but perhaps this had something to do with it. Is this the same guy who said Kanter wasn't ready for the NBA and also criticized him for going to America to play college ball? Maybe the guy has a problem with America.
I'll start off by saying I know absolutely nothing about Tanjevic. However, he said this either implied of not (if these are indeed his words):
"I know how to coach better than 26 to 27 of the thirty coaches in the NBA; these 26/27 are incompetent, and were they not, they would win championships like the top 3/4 because coaching wins championships irrespective of talent (incidentally, I would be one of the top 3/4, were I to grace an NBA team with my presence). I won't even talk to incompetent people, like Corbin, but I would have told him that I was going to do him a great service and actually provide some sort of real coaching to Enes. By playing in America, you will have to put up with inferior coaches and ultimately lose your head/brain. Kanter no longer knows how to play basketball, and he should shoot the ball all day long because a guy who shot 67% from the free-throw line in his first year in the NBA is (could be) the best shooter on the Turkish team, backcourt included."
Irrespective of this guy's reputation and accomplishments, he seems pompous and arrogant and out-of-touch with reality. To tell the truth, he sounds pissed off, so how serious should we take him? If Gregg Popovich had said something like this about the entire international coaching pool, I would have asked myself, "who is he pissed off at?" But NBA coaches never diss international coaches so blatantly since it would seem petty. I am by no means saying Corbin is perfect, but at least say something remotely supported by facts rather than just by strength of personality, which is all but unknown in the US.
I'd agree if you just said Tanjevic sounds disrespectful. But twisting every sentence like you did(which you did well btw) doesn't make much sense to me. You could do that to every conversation or phrase and that would produce ridiculous results from everything.
Nope, different guys. On the NT subject, we(I too) will continue to blame Enes as long as he doesn't tell why he suddenly ditched the team at the last moment.
That's an acceptable position to take IMO. If you have a good reason for bailing on the NT, then say it. If not, then you shouldn't have committed in the first place.
Actually, linguists and literary critics do this all the time particularly with pragmatics. If your wife or girlfriend/boyfriend is sitting in a room with the window open and does not want to stand up to shut it, he/she can say, "it's cold in here." What was actually said was, "can you shut the window". This is a huge part of language, and it was relatively clear what Tanjevic was saying on one level, and my interpretation above is supported by quote after quote (through inference about the linguistic counter part). If Tanjevic says, "America is the perfect place to lose your head. Firstly, because the coaches [there] do not understand." He is also saying "I understand and am not an American coach; American coaches do not understand (except for 3 or 4)." On another level, he was saying "go to hell, NBA, Utah Jazz, Tyrone Corbin."
I'd cut him some slack regarding the rotations. It was clear last season the Jazz were trying to showcase Braille, Chucker and "The Other" Howard for trades. Of course, it all fell apart when Dwight went "all in" with Orlando and NJ no longer had to clear space to make a trade for him. Not to mention other teams were all waiting for the Dwight trade to happen before deciding if/what their reactive moves needed to be.From what I saw last season, I can tell about Ty Corbin that he:
- doesn't have balls;
- doesn't have a feel for the game (including: rotations, game decisions)
That may change though.