I understand this is probably going to go over like a ton of bricks, but here goes.
I have seen on this site some extremely definitive statements regarding Brad Stevens, his demeanor, his passion, his coaching strategy and his management of players. Most seem to go like the following:
- Stevens is a terrible coach
- Stevens is too passive and that passivity gets passed down to his players and is a symptom of what is wrong this year with the Celtics
- Stevens doesn't have a passion for the game
- Stevens' offensive system is egalitarian and is based only on getting the ball to the open guy to shoot regardless of if that guy is a good shooter
- Stevens isn't good at developing players
- Stevens can't motivate his players...he has lost the locker room
And there are others, too many to list here without making the list very, very long. I think these beliefs/opinions of Brad Stevens to possibly be misinformed or just plain wrong.
First, let's make this clear, Brad Stevens is an amazing basketball coach. He probably has forgotten more about the game of basketball and how to coach it than any of us even know about those subjects. In a survey of NBA GMs before the 2020-21 season, Brad was voted as the 4th best coach in the NBA after Eric Spoelstra, Nick Nurse and Gregg Popovich. He was also voted as the third best coach to make in game adjustments, tied with Nurse but behind Spoelstra and Rick Carlisle. Fact is, if Ainge decided to fire Brad after this season, and I know many here would be delighted with that, Stevens would most likely be hired by another team within a day or so, having his choice of multiple open positions.
And this idea that Brad is too passive on the job or that he lacks passion is baseless. Someone can be passionate about something and still keep an even keel on their emotions and actions while doing that something. The old saying of "don't judge a book by its cover" comes to mind. Just because Brad approaches stuff like press conferences and pre-game speeches shown on TV in a calm, professional manner doesn't mean he doesn't have a passion for what he is doing and a passion for winning. I truly believe that to become one of the best at anything in the world at what you do, especially in sports, you have to be passionate about it, otherwise you wouldn't have the drive to become that good at it.
This then follows straight into the complaints about how Stevens acts on the sidelines, how he treats his players and what he "allows" his players to do. Some NBA coaches get very loud and very animated on the sidelines, get loud and scream at refs all game and during timeouts reams his players a new one. But, during a game, the cameras don't focus exclusively on Brad. During games, fans don't exclusively watch the coach. I've sat not too far behind the Boston bench during home games, and Brad admonishes his players and he works the refs. He simply doesn't do it in a ridiculously loud, obnoxious, condescending and animated manner. Brad gets loud a bunch during games, but you simply don't see and hear it because the cameras aren't drawn to him because isn't getting loud while also looking like he is a crazy old man going nuts, pulling his hair out and turning red in anger because you are on his lawn.
Simply put, Stevens isn't some over the top high school or college drill sargeant coach that draws attention to himself. He is a consummate business pro that manages people in a mature, professional manner like they are men, not boys you can intimidate into a better on court performance. Most high school and college coaches use intimidation and fear to handle their players, as the coach has the power to kick players off teams, revoke their scholarships and bench them unceremoniously for games on end. NBA coaches don't have that power because NBA players have guaranteed contracts. In many ways, NBA players have more power than their coaches. The only power coaches have if they have an issue they can't get past with a player, is to request management to trade said player. And management won't do that for many, many players and if a lot of players are problems, it's sometimes easier to fire the coach because you can't fire your players.
Let's face it, at your job, or at a job you once had, would you rather have a manager that emasculates you over every mistake you made and do it so all your co-workers can see and hear, or would you rather that manager bring you aside, tell you what you did wrong calmly and teach you how not to do it again? These players are men working in a professional business. They don't want to be treated like children any more than you would at your job.
And let's not confuse Brad's calm demeanor when the cameras are in front of him for a lack of holding players accountable. This team has played with fire, passion, energy, effort and aggression for years under Stevens. For most years this team played quite unlike the way Brad handles himself on the sideline. But, for half a season in 2018-19 and for most of this year, the team played listless and with minimal effort. Stevens didn't suddenly change to cause that. That's on the players. In 2018-19 it was due to a cancer in the locker room. And in this crazy Covid year, I think in many games, a lot of us have mistaken the aftereffects of injury, being sick with Covid or extremely fatigued both mentally and physically due to a short off-season, a condensed schedule and Covid protocols that demand testing at 9:00AM, whether you didn't get into your house or hotel room until very early in the morning, disturbing sleep patterns that help with recuperation, for a lack of effort and passion.
And as for how Stevens coaches on the court and his system, it's pretty obvious that early Brad Stevens and his system has evolved into a different coaching philosophy and system. Early in his Celtic career, Brad was vocal about how the team had to move the ball around and get it to the open guy to shoot, regardless of the quality of that player or that shot. But once Stevens started having true stars and superstars on his team, he has allowed his system to morph into a more pro/NBA iso system. Brad has allowed IT, Kyrie, Kemba, Tatum and Brown to dominate the ball during possessions and go iso heavy when they are in the game. He has had no problem doing the old Paul Pierce/Doc iso play to end close games. So I am not sure where this idea came from that Stevens system is still the same as it was back in 2013-14. It has definitely changed because come playoff time, superstar isos are what win NBA playoff games. It makes sense to allow your stars to do this during the season so they are prepared to be successful during the playoffs.
Regarding some other coaching responsibilities, Brad is an amazing developer of talent. That has not changed, even if the environment to do it successfully this year has due to the unique nature of this season. Smart, Rozier, Semi, Brown, Tatum and Timelord are worlds better now than they were when they entered the NBA. Many vets played much better under Stevens than they did under other coaches. Some garnering giant paydays because of it.
And just because some players keep making mistakes but keep getting playing time does not mean Stevens doesn't hold players accountable. We aren't in the locker room. We aren't in the coach/player one on one meetings that take place on the regular. Fact is, you can't bench your best players on the regular because of continued mistakes. You need to teach the players during practices and film sessions what they are doing wrong and live with the mistakes, while the players learn to implement that coaching into game performance. Some mistakes will take a lot of on court time and repetitions before they re minimalized. Jerking established players in and out of games to yell at them in front of team mates and fans for mistakes isn't going to speed up the learning process. Patience is needed while the player works things out on the court.
Crisis management of players doesn't work at the pro level of basketball. Moving players on and off court playing only in stuttered spurts doesn't work. This isn't high school ball. Coaches have substitution patterns and definitive roles players have to play within. Until the players earn the right or are ready to step into a new or different role, you don't thrust them into that different role. Injuries may change that, but otherwise you want to establish 5 man units, substitution patterns and minutes played for all your players so they can learn to maximize their efforts in those minutes played.
Now I know a bunch of you are going to call me a Stevens apologist. I am not. I have a bunch of criticism of him. I am a big believer of getting the hot hand the ball which Stevens doesn't appear to believe. I hate that he puts his stars in corners for long stretches of games while clearly inferior players dominate the ball up top playing a pick and roll/pop weave to create offense. I hate that he isn't running sets where his best players are interacting with the other best players on the team. I hate that at times he tries to let the players work things out on the court for way too long to the detriment of the team. I am befuddled by some of his on court 5 man units. I don't like that he seems to not be able to maximize true size during his time here. I hate that he seems to have no influence on getting his team prepared to come out strong and play great during matinee games. I think he wasn't prepared to handle a bad locker room a couple years ago and it lead to a terrible end of the season. And there are other things, but they are minor and not worth listing here.
In closing, I think a lot of people credit the players for wins and blame coaches for losses. I think that is wrong. Most losses can be attributed to bad performances by the players. I think a lot of fans have issues because Brad doesn't act like their loud obnoxious high school coach. I believe a lot of fans think they know what Stevens is thinking and how he feels based on interviews and what the TV allows them to see during games. I believe many project their thinking and perceptions onto the coach. I think many have preconceived determinations about Brad and get stuck in confirmation bias when the team loses. And I think a lot of fans don't get that on court coaching is one of the less important parts of being an NBA coach.
I think Brad Stevens might not be the coach you think he is.