I'm a big fan of Brad and have been vocal about that in my posting (which isn't as frequent as it used to be). He is a very good coach and I hope he has a Jerry Sloan like tenure here -- with some championships sprinkled in.
I just always assumed Brad was good at developing talent (because he turned a really bad roster into a playoff team) and that Doc was really bad (because of the stated points about his rep for never playing the youngins).
But it does appear that Doc did a pretty good job when he was here when you reflect back on the players. And to someone who mentioned he never turned a 2nd round pick into an NBA player, Glen Davis is that player, and that is a really hard thing to do.
I do think that two years is too short of a time to fully evaluate Brad on this, as it is by definition a task that takes time. But two years ago when Brad took over (and one year ago in the case of Marcus), I absolutely expected that today I would be looking at a Sullinger, Olynyk, and Marcus, and AB that were farther along than they are today. Does anybody feel similarly?
Somebody pointed out that perhaps Brad's system simply focuses more on developing the whole rather than developing the parts. I think there is some serious truth to that. That is a great thing for basketball. While it may hurt our ability to lure the superstars who want to play with other superstars, maybe it will enhance our ability to lure players who want to play good basketball.