TP for you, Bankshot. I agree. Doc isn't quite reflexive enough to suit my tastes. We should be playing the players who are playing well at that very minute on the floor, not the ones who played well yesterday, or last week. The past is the past, after all. Ray's leash needs to be quite a bit shorter. He obviously thinks he can miss shots and still play, so a hard lesson is in order. I'm not advocating anything drastic, like pulling him after one miss, but when it got to three, I’m sure we were all screaming in unison, “Get the bum out of there, Doc! What’s WRONG with you?” It’s important to point out that emotions shouldn’t be part of this. It should be a systematic approach, a formula. I advocate something along the following lines:
1) Each starter gets five FG attempts (we need a reasonable sample for this to work).
2) Upon the fifth, his shooting % should be no less than 40% (2 for 5), or he’s going to the bench.
3) He can stay in the game as long as he remains at 40% or above.
4) Caveat – any consecutive three misses and he’s benched (we need to remain vigilant against the slightest sign of a cold streak).
5) Once benched, he goes to the end of the queue and does not return, unless everyone after him has similarly run through their shot allotments and necessarily been benched. The cycle then repeats.
6) The next game’s starters are those who were able to remain in the game without being benched, or (if that number is less than five) the unbenched plus the those with the next highest FG % for the game.
7) Obviously, position must be taken into consideration, but only to the extent that we wouldn’t be starting five guards or five big men. The emphasis must remain on nightly results.
Sounds Darwinian, but this systematic approach will inspire a “sink or swim” mentality, rather than its opposite, the complacency and moral putrefaction that is the result of the coddling "I have faith in my players" Doc BS that’s running this ship onto the rocks. Who knows, perhaps Ray would work on his jumper between games if he felt the sword of Damocles perched above his career on a nightly basis, the righteous repercussion for his egregious lack of consideration for the fans paying his salary.