Yeah, kind of reinforces everything we’ve heard thus far.
While it was definitely a collective effort - and the Miami incident was certainly troubling - to me the two biggest guys at fault here are Kyrie and Brad, as neither of the showed effective leadership and management of the talent.
For Kyrie - it’s obvious his awkward ways and unconventional “leadership” tactics were a significant source of dysfunction in the locker room. When you’re the best player on a team, you have to take that responsibility of leadership and bring guys together not exacerbate the divide by publicly deriding the “young guys” when it’s a convenient crutch and excuse.
For Brad - it becomes more and more obvious by the day that his “hands off” management style allowed this issue to grow to a point where it couldn’t be managed anymore. He absolutely has to be more involved in managing the talent of these guys and defining these roles; that’s literally one of the main functions of his job and one of the challenges of having more talent on a team that needs to be pieced together right.
Just a frustrating season. Would like to know who the young guys were in the Miami scenario. Likely Brown is one.
Also find Al’s involvement frustrating. He should’ve been the vocal vet that Kyrie referenced, abd while he always has been a model of professionalism, he needed to be a more vocal leader in the locker room this year given the futility of both Brad and Kyrie.
Hopefully Brad has learned his lesson now, though, and this won’t be an issue with Kemba. Good luck, Atkinson! The Nets are going to end up being the 2018 - 2019 Celtics 2.0 next year after Kyrie is done with them, as he’s walking right back into the same type of situation as he had this year in Boston with the young guys lol