And this one has larger implications to me ( going into the playoffs). Yes it's about Doc's rotations (Doc's rotations > is that an oxymoron?).
Anyway...here is/are the questions:
1. If you bring in Nate Robinson, the first capable point Rondo has had behind him in 3 seasons, wouldn't your only goal be to use that PG combo to inflict complete and utter chaos on the opposing team's defense for 48 straight minutes, every night? All out attack mode for 48 minutes.
Instead, I see Rondo doing double time at the OFF GUARD SPOT. Can someone explain that for me? Why is Rondo at off guard, when you have Ray, Tony, Marquis and Pierce, for that matter?
2. Same for Shelden. I've always been a Big Baby fan, though I really wish he'd learn how to clear himself out of the lane after getting a board and just reset the offense rather than getting it blocked down there so much...).
But, C'mon Doc, Shelden Williams had done nothing but fairly good things this season and for a while I thought he was out of the NBA. Shelden has a nice night after Doc remembered he was actually on our team and then Doc buries him again.
I'm pretty confident that if this team can stay healthy, string together a few more wins, start gelling because they're all in tact and get some swagger back that they can win another ring. I'm pretty confident of that.
I see the biggest obstacle being Doc and his inability to manage the players he has. It's like he forgets the players are on the team.
Tony and Shelden are pretty good physical brawlers with young legs that bring the best toughness and aggression we have off the bench and when it seems we're getting outworked, Doc forgets he even has these assets to at least "try out".
I don't see how any coach would be playing Rondo at off guard, ever. E-V-E-R. That's like playing Karl Malone at SF.
It suggests somewhere the elevator isn't going all the way up somehow in some aspect of coaching the game, and it's a fundamental aspect.
I'd rather it was on something more complicated that Doc was terrible at rather than game time adjustments or rotations.
Because if you have the talent and can adjust on the fly and manage your rotations well, you're going to win most nights. Basketball isn't too complicated.
It seesm like Doc tries to make it