I can't imagine anyone watching the Celts and thinking that they are well coached. No adjustments and a look of "dear in the head lights" on both ends of the floor.
Woodson is owning Doc. Pierce posting up 18 feet out looks pretty easy to defend to me. When they went on the post Rondo run, they moved the ball. It was very simple and hard to cover. In the playoffs, they are very predictable. I like Doc, but he is not a good coach.
You could pretty much divide the board into two groups after Rondo's injury, the group that was gushing over our offense and the group that told them to wait until the playoffs when teams try harder on defense and the pace of the game is much slower.I'm guessing you were in the first group.
I would agree with your premise of the two groups, but it is only valid if the same line up and rotation were being judged. The group that played immediately post Rondo did well. It is not the same line up or rotations that is in the playoffs. You can't compare them. My premise is, Doc should have immediately went the the older line up and rotation. It worked very well. The "wait til the playoffs" opinion doesn't apply because it's not the same team. Right now, Doc has a bunch of players that are not use to playing with each other.
When the playoffs roll around the opponents generally try and take better care of the ball and hustle back on defense. Those two changes negate the main thing we were successful at after Rondo left. The team struggling on offense was very predictable. Doc talked about it, Danny talked about it, even Wyc talked about it during one of the games. It's not rocket science. And there's no way you can say that Doc's playing a bunch of players that aren't used to playing with each other. The bulk of the playoff minutes are going to players (KG, Bass, Green, PP, Bradley, Jet) who were 2nd through 7th in mpg behind Rondo this year.
That's not true. My point is the original post Rondo rotation played great. The beat Miami, Indiana,Denver, Chicago. How do you know they would have the same trouble? Doc changed what was working.
No he didn't he had the same rotation and they regressed to roughly a .500 basketball team after a very good initial stretch of ball. (which coincided with a home heavy schedule and a number of weak defenses)
Only after Jeff Green began to put up bigger numbers as KG sat and the team struggled overall did he change the rotation up.
That's not true.
After Rondo got hurt. The starting line up was Lee, AB, Bass, Pierce, KG. The Bench was Green, Wilcox, Jet and Barbosa. They went on a 15-6 run(+/-). KG and Lee got hurt. Which change the line up to AB, Pierce, Green, Bass, and whoever in the middle. That's what made them go sub 500. When Lee came back he got demoted. When KG came back, Doc changed to AB, Pierce at the 2, Green, KG and Bass.(They had 2 games together(Maybe). I admit, at first I liked the potential, but I feel Doc should have gone back to the original post Rondo rotation. As I said, they went on a run in which they beat Miami, Indiana, Chicago, Denver.