They've been fun to watch this last half of the season. Up to this point, Ime has done a good job getting them to buy in and I'll give him credit for that.
That said, respect in the NBA is earned from what you do in the playoffs. If we fizzle out and get owned by MKE or another, none of this success means anything. I'm not saying they have to win it all, but if they don't give the team that eliminates them a run, then a lot of what we're seeing right now is all smoke and mirrors.
Lots of moving the goalposts here.
Udoka sucks.
<Months later after team is playing like the best team in the league.>
Well, I might have been harsh but only the playoffs matter so if the team doesn't win it all, Udoka still sucks.
I might be paraphrasing....but not by much.
Eh. It’s fair to be skeptical of a rookie coach. The playoffs are a completely different set of circumstances. Even the 2008 Celts had some playoff hiccups on the road.
I suspect that we’ll be fine. Tatum, Brown and Marcus are battle-tested. But, it’s a question mark.
Except he isn't really being skeptical, now is he?
He is just pushing his opinion about Udoka's suckiness down the road. He's basically saying if they fail in the playoffs, nothing Udoka did to get the Celtics playing like world beaters counts and he is still not going to respect him and probably revert back to his original position
Udoka looks like he is going to have an amazing regular season of coaching in his 1st year as head coach. You shouldn't just flush that down the toilet if the Celtics don't win in the playoffs, which is pretty much what AG is advocating.
Skeptical is: Udoka had a great regular season, let's hope it carries of to the playoffs. The playoffs are a different animal so it could go poorly
Skeptical isn't: If they lose in the playoffs it renders the regular season meaningless, just smoke and mirrors, so Udoka should get no respect for the job he has done.
Well, he specifically said the team doesn’t have to win a title, it just needs to go down fighting.
I think that’s fair. Perhaps it’s a built-in excuse to blame the coach, but I know I’ll be disappointed if we roll over and lose a first or second round series easily. If we go down swinging in seven games against Philly, Milwaukee, Brooklyn or Miami, I think we chalk it up to a good year that went wrong.
So basically, don’t put on a Kyrie vs. Milwaukee showing.
But does that loss undo everything done up to that point? Because he is clearly saying that.
Yes, it will suck and I will hate seeing the team bow out like that. But that isn't going to change the fact Udoka had done an amazing job up to that point and doesn't mean he should only be judged on the playoff loss, which is what he is saying.
I'll step out here. I think Udoka has been amazing as a whole and a playoff loss isn't going to change that for me. Rookie, 1st time ever head coaches almost never win a title their rookie year. If Udoka doesn't, I'm not gonna throw him under the bus.
It’s hard to say what I’ll think. If Ime has a lousy first half of the season, an amazing second half, and an embarrassing playoffs? I’ll probably consider his first year to be a bit mixed, rather than uniformly positive.
I posed the question elsewhere, but it does seem to fit in this discussion. Does the fact that the C's have basically been playing a playoff style rotation against mostly non (or lesser) playoff competition over this 2 months make the team appear better than it actually is? And if that is the case, should Udoka really get as much credit for that as many are giving him? I think the playoffs will really give a real indication of both the coaching job and the talent on the team. That seems like a fair discussion to have.
So you're questioning if the guy in charge of the rotations, should get credit for the rotations that got us our success?
I get where you're coming from, honestly. Playoffs are different. But that's not the only way to judge a team. The tight rotations have very clearly seen us produce better and better over the season, to the point where we look several cuts above the rest. And our rotations really aren't tighter than at the start of the season, so you've got to assume it's helped.
People have been complaining about minutes for our starters all season long, whilst in reality, we've been playing our guys the same amount of minutes as league average-ish.
Especially seeing as Ime's current options are Hauser, Stauskas, Kornet and Fitt.
You can add Thomas and Nesmith to that list as well. That’s 6 guys on the bench that aren’t proven NBA players. I know it’s the deep bench, but I don’t have confidence in any of those players. Too many projects, IMO.
How many other teams are in the same situation as we are though? We're talking positions 10-15. Here's an example from a couple of teams in the East:
Boston Milwaukee Miami Sixers
Smart Jrue Lowry Harden
Horford Giannis PJ Tucker Harris
Tatum Matthews Buckets Thybulle
Timelord Lopez Bam Embiid
Brown Allen Robinson Maxey
White Connaughton Herro Niang
GWill Portis Martin Green
Theis Ibaka Strus Milton
Pritchard Carter Markieff Reed
Nesmith Hill Yurtseven DeAndre J.
Stauskas Thanasis Heismith Joe
Fitts Nwora Haslam Korkmaz
Kornet Smart Millsap
We're talking deep bench...I don't think there's many contending teams in the NBA that have players in the 9-15 spot that aren't either projects or washed up has beens. Maybe the rebuilding teams like OKC will have young, exciting rookies and sophomores that make people think "wow this kid might have a future here" - but because of the salary cap, most teams that have multiple max players and are trying to contend aren't going to be giving their 9-15 players tons of minutes to try and develop.
I could go and look at more teams but I stopped at those 3, anyone who wants to check for themselves the minutes distributions and quality of end of bench players with other teams can easily find that info at
www.basketball-reference.com.
One thing that is worth looking at, which I think Moranis is alluding to, is the minutes distribution by team to see if the 48 minutes is evenly distributed across the whole team, including deep bench, vs the top 7 or 8 players. It would be a considerable undertaking to pull all the data from basketball reference manually and put it on a spreadsheet for each team but it could definitely be done and we can get statistics on where the Cs sit when it comes to that. (I'm sure the Cs and every other team can easily access data of that granularity via Second Spectrum but the rest of us plebs have to do it manually

)
I did look at the overall minutes splits for our top 8 players just to get a sense for if they are "being overworked" which was a common narrative here, and they are not. The numbers end of Feb are below, and the minutes for the starters have only continued to decline going into March. The reduction in their minutes has been picked up by the other rotation players - GWill, White, Payton and Theis. Not by the deep bench. Note that those minutes numbers include White's Spurs minutes, I should probably take that out.

I will try and update this chart end of March to see where they are at.