I'm flattered you guys took me seriously! I may be onto something!
Mr Bankshot, if your point is Doc should have benched Ray based on short-term performance, I was merely attempting to take your reasoning to its logical conclusion (reduction ad absurdum). You think he should have been benched at some point in the second half because of three bad quarters of basketball. Not, mind you, because of a multi-game slump or a prolonged decline, because of one game (I'm assuming you had no problem with his performance in game 2). So at what point in a game does a player's in-game performance - a player, I might add, who is a starter, a proven prolific scorer, a great shooter by any and all standards, a player considered “clutch”, a future Hall of Famer, and a player who set several Finals long-distance shooting records THE PRIOR GAME - at what point and with what criteria does one go against all prior precedents regarding playing time, player roles and substituting patterns and bench such a player? If you don't like my system, please give me yours. It's easy to double-guess Doc after the fact, but if Ray cans that corner 3 and the Celtics come back and win, a lot of people on this site (not necessarily you, but possibly) would be back on the Ray train and praising Doc for sticking with him. Likewise, if Doc pulled him, like you argue he should, and the Celtics lose, Doc might have damaged Ray's confidence for the series and sent a message to the rest of the team that maybe they should start looking over their shoulders too. Stability, routine – these are crucial things to athletes. Doc did the exact right thing. It's not just sticking with the guys who got you there (loyalty); and it’s not just giving yourself the best chance to win the game (arguable, but I’ll take Ray 0-13 shooting 3s late in the game over TA); It’s also allowing a guy to get himself going that you are not winning the series without. It's strategy trumping tactics. Many fans are suffering from congenital myopia on this site. You don't react in a panicky way to every twist and turn of a game. Doc has possibly four more games consider in this series. Sometimes you lose the battle, but you give yourself a chance to win the war.