“They have two Joe Mazzullas,” Perkins said (h/t MassLive). “They have the one that got the philosophy of we’re going to get up more 3s than you. When they hit them, he looks great. Then you have the other Joe Mazzulla, who just stands over there, and you wonder. If you take his brain out and you put it in a bird, the bird is going to start flying backwards. You got that Joe Mazzulla.
“You know why I say that? It’s because he doesn’t get his guys easy looks. Time and time again, we kept saying, attack the paint. You have so many guys that are great at cutting. They cannot continue to play AAU style basketball all the time. You gotta have sets.”
Keeping in mind that Kendrick '8 Step Travel' Perkins necessarily knows more about professional basketball than anyone posting on this forum, do we or should we hold the opinions of players beyond critique by nature of the fact that they used to be professionals? I'm not sure that's a position that holds up particularly well.

I’ve seen the argument made here that Brad can’t be criticized by us because he’s a professional and we all sit on the couch. I don’t agree, but if it that’s the standard then no one here has the credentials to call out Perk either. And Brad has to yield to Perk on championship commentary since he never won one. Gets complicated…
It's definitely very easy to slide into credentialism in any discussion, especially on an online forum where most of us are going by usernames. If none of us can say anything unless we've done anything at the NBA level - played/scouted/coached/whatever, it's going to be a very quiet room.
I think there's a difference, though, between acknowledging that we don't have the same scope of information as someone in the front office or on the coaching staff and pointing out when someone like Perk says something that's not particularly insightful or interesting (is there a head coach that doesn't look good when his team is hitting from deep, and doesn't look bad when the team can't get anything to fall from three?).
So:
The team, as of now, has a top-three offense and a top-two defense in the league. We're at the bottom of the league in turnovers and personal fouls committed. They're leading the league in 3PA, sure, but it's not a particularly massive outlier, especially when you consider the shape of our roster. ... things are pretty good - and that's reflected in the record.
In other words, could we play more like Minnesota, offensively? Sure, but our team could just as easily be much worse off, given the fact that we're winning a lot more games than we lose.
But, because the record is good, there's a tendency for people to use close losses as an opportunity to grandstand about things that, though they have the inevitable benefit of hindsight, tend to lack much in the way of compelling evidence
beyond the appeal to authority-style causality that comes from the fact that the game was a loss.
In other words, these suggested adjustments could just as likely to result in a worse record and worse performance. The presumption that these (often unspecified) adjustments
definitely won't result in worse play is due to unexplained reasons beyond it being 'something that real hoopers know' or some other unquantifiable feeling. Vibes, if you like.
As a result, it's very difficult to sort the wheat from the chaff when it comes to complaints like: 'the team just doesn't attack the paint enough' - is that playcalling or (just as reasonably) is the problem equal parts ball movement and an inability to get calls at the line when they do drive; or '(unspecified)bad lineup combinations', is that considering the paucity of talent on our bench? is that because the guy we usually rely on to be 'a stopper' had a bad night? Both? All of the above? - so on and so forth.
In other words, if you're not willing to explain your point about the problems with the coaching, it doesn't make much sense for people to do anything other than point and say 'scoreboard', no matter how obvious or accurate your point about the problems with the coaching may be.
-- like I said a page or so ago, though, this cuts both ways - if you're defending the coach, you can bring receipts, and relying
only on the record is just as problematic as ignoring it entirely. That's just not the focus of the conversation here, or the tenor of the thread more broadly. --
And people don't always have the time, energy, or effort to write a full length post, which is fine. We're all doing this for fun, after all.