It's so easy to blame the coach when the shots don't drop. If Ray shot a horrible 30% from the field tonight and a bad 25% from three by making 2 three pointers and 2 non three pointers and went 2 for 8 from three and 4 for 13 from the field, Doc is a genius and the Celtics win.
Just four baskets. Just four baskets by a guy who if he takes 13 shots usually makes 6.
That's the difference between Doc being an idiot and Doc being a genius.
Amazing how that happens!!
Exactly. Anyone who thought Doc blew the game last night either wasn't paying attention or doesn't know basketball.
I know basketball, I was paying attention, and yet I disagree with you. I personally think Doc blew it.
While it could be said that coaching doesn't determine if Ray's shots go in or not, good coaching makes adjustments based upon who is hot/cold and where the offense is.
Let me ask you guys this: If at a key junction in game 2 they went away from Ray and forced the ball to a struggling Pierce, would you think that's a good gameplan? No. And yet it was clear that Ray, 0 for 12 at that point and 0 for 7 from three-pointer, was dead cold. Pierce on the other hand was clutch, and 3 for 4 from downtown. Yet they ran a play for Ray out of the timeout. That's bad coaching.
There were many other mysterious moves that really cost the Celtics, and Doc is to blame for them. A few of those bad coaching moves:
-Removing KG early in the 1st quarter when he was clearly playing better than anyone on the court.
-Allowing a lineup to consist of 4 bench players early in the game, which led to LA's run.
-Pulling KG early in the 3rd quarter when he was once again the best player on the court.
-Not going to KG down the stretch.
-Playing Glen Davis WAY too long in the 4th quarter. He became a defensive liability, and for every finish around the hoop he'd either give up a basket on the other end, or get a turnover. Perkins would have been a slight upgrade over (and fresher), and Rasheed would have been a much bigger upgrade overall.
Bad coaching.