Brad stevens was great for what the celtics were in the rebuilding phase. When he was coaching young players who needed development and undervalued vets like crowder/IT4 who had something to prove. they bought in to his scheme and played hard.
with Kemba, this is the second vet (kyrie being first) who had a problem with stevens. Its also the 3rd year hes lost control of the team and they lost.
now that guys are more established and have had success they aren't listening to him as they once did. At this point they dont need an x's and o's guy who can get the most out of okay talent. we need a Doc Rivers type who can handle egos and have command of the locker-room.
I do think its smart to go after the guys they are. Is someone like smart/tatum going to talk trash to a chauncy billups? who knew his role and played it and won a ring? probably not.
I feel like the final narrative on Brad is painting a different picture than what actually was the case. He just came off 3 ECFs in 4 years - that isn't being a failed coach (you aren't necessarily saying that here) and we'd probably be talking about multiple Titles - or at least multiple Finals appearances - if Lebron/Crowder didn't ruin Danny's amazing master plan 5 minutes into the most anticipated season since 07-08. I mean we went to game 7 of the ECF that year without Hayward and Kyrie.
I understand things didn't go wonderfully in the 2nd Kyrie year, but we were right back in the ECF in 2020 - this time w/o Hayward and with a hobbled Kemba, but MIA just couldn't lose. 2020-21 was a struggle, but the constant missed games due to injuries/Covid and the extremely short offseason proved to be too much to overcome - both mentally and physically.
I posit that Stevens often did get the most out of his talent and he stepped aside due to being mentally drained, not because he would never have been able to gain back the trust of the locker room...if that's even what happened.