Doc is a good coach when he he is coaching players who need very little coaching
You mean like Red Auerbach and Phil Jackson and Pat Riley and Joe Torre and Bill Belichick?
Please?!?!
Why would that be difficult to believe? of your list of examples I'd certainly put Torre in that bucket. All coaches look better with great players.
Look at KC Jones in the 80's with the big 3. That's the example that came to my mind. KC was no coaching genius by any stretch -- just knew enough to get out of his starters' way and let them do what they do best.
Some coaches are better with experienced players, some are better at developmental aspects of the game. I think Doc's strenths lie with vets and dealing with players' personalities.
Having said that, the only plausible reason for putting Walker in a game is to see if he can deliver more than Scal. Scal hasn't produced worth a [dang] this year. Walker can't deliver much less and could possibly deliver more. It's not that people expect Walker to be a major contributor at this point, but many people have seen enough of Scal.
If Rondo's and Pierce's post game interviews last night discussing how the only reason they executed that play with 0:06 left on the clock was because of Doc's great play calling and his constant work on late game situational plays doesn't show people that Doc is an exceptional coach, I don't know what will.
Doc, much to the dismay of Doc detractors, does not just roll a ball onto the court, tell the vets to go play and get out of the way. The amount of misinformation and down right falsehoods that people make up to discredit Doc as a coach on this site astounds me. Want to criticize his rotations, decision making in certain situations, use of timeouts, mental preparation of his players, lack of a control over hotheaded players, etc. I agree with all that.
But some of the stuff I read is absurd.
tell the vets to go play and get out of the way.
This is not what I said about Doc. Please reread my post. I said that about KC Jones.
My comments about Doc were that he's better working with vets and that he's good at handling player personalities. My opinions of his actual coaching are mixed. I don't agree with his time management (both player minutes and time outs). I will give him credit for calling up plays out of timeouts that have a high percentage rate of effectiveness. I'll also give him credit for bringing in very good asst coaches and knowing when to defer to them.
He's not the worst coach in the game nor is he the best. The fact he totally outcoached Phil Jackson in the finals was a surprise at that time and a great one at that.
Sorry, slam. I didn't mean to infer that you said that it's just I have heard that exact line thrown out there about Doc for years here and it's patently untrue. TP for forgiveness?? Hopefully?
I think you have some definite fair criticisms regarding his use of time outs and game management. It's definitely his less than best aspect of the job he does. I think he's one of the best managers in the game and best handlers of players and egos. His in game coaching is probably the worst part of the job he does.
But that's also only about 5% of the work a head coach does to get his team to be a winner.
I think Roy brings up a fair criticism too. His use of players nursing injuries. Case in point is Pierce the other night. Now, what was released to the public was Pierce would be restricted in his number of minutes. But he played 43 minutes. Was his limit 50? Or was he reassessed at halftime and the medical staff gave him an okay for long minutes? Or did Doc overuse him against medical advice? based on released info and actual actions the latter conclusion is easy to come to but we really don't know.
And this isn't the first time for this.
As for the Billy Walker thing, as we have learned from the Lester Hudson situation and Gabe Pruitt last year and others before, if a young player is not playing ahead of a vet that fans feel aren't getting the job done, there's probably a very good reason for it other than, "Doc won't play the young guys". It probably has more to do with needing to do what is right, understanding what is needed and expected, repeatedly doing those things over and over again in practice and earning the time in games. I seriously doubt it has to do with some love of veterans. Doc has played and developed way, way too many young players here and in Orlando for that to be true.