You have to take the game for what it was. Much better to play well and blow out a depleted team than to not play well. But still all you can really claim from this is that we took care of business. The team should not let this go to there head too much.
Smart really seems to be making a difference. He is playing well individually, efficiently, and it seems to have an impact on the rest of the team. I saw Smart's quote's the other day about how he is a bit miffed that no one thinks he is a PG. I have said all along that I am fine with Smart as the PG. Never saw it as a problem or weakness.
I think the main thing though is that we finally are having a period where the entire starting unit is playing. Last night was only game 17 that the starters were on the court together. The coaching schemes are starting to take hold as well.
I don't see this team as turning it around 180 degrees and suddenly being a top team this season but it is good to see some of what this team can be.
Well, sort of. He's got the players playing much better defense. However, he still mainly used an 8-man rotation. With a 26-point lead deep in the 4th quarter the lineup was Players 4 through 8. He doesn't trust the kids (PP, Nesmith, Langford). That may be justified, maybe not.
I was not referring to the player rotations/substitutions as much as how well the team moves without the ball, cuts to the basket, works as a unit. The team also responded well to the zone defense and some other things like that. I am sensing improvement in these areas and I think it is due to both the coaching starting to take hold and also having some continuity so that the first unit in particular is getting to play with some rhythm or cadence.
As to playing just 8 as the core unit, I think this is likely related to the same issue. The more players involved, the more combinations that get put on the court, the harder it is to get the coaching schemes ingrained. I would say they are trying to simplify things. Their core rotation seems to be the starting 5 plus GWill, Schroder, and JRich. Langford sometimes. That is 8 or 9. Then Pritchard, Nesmith, and Freedom are the deep bench 10-12. I don't see a coaching issue with this. 8 or 9 should be the core rotation. The "9th" man can be Langford, Pritchard, Nesmith, or Freedom, depending on the match ups. Or maybe they go 10 some nights.