Isn't it the coach's job to work with players so that they come to work with great attitude?
Very narrow POV of how the world works, particularly in an industry FILLED with entitlement and employees with guaranteed $$$.
Like Brad Stevens, for example? The team is paying him to coach, not to have it easy.
You immediately assume this is about Stevens trying to make the job easier for himself. What if he thinks these types actually make the team worse?
I assume that players with more talent make the team better. The ones that don't have "great attitude" might be harder to extract the maximum from, but that's really why you have a coach to begin with. Is this really a controversial statement?
Yes. Just because you dont think so doesnt mean you are right.
You are so effin arrogant you think that you, with 0 NBA coaching experience, let alone playing experience, knows more than players and coaches who believes being a locker room problem is detrimental to the team.
You people have been to caught up with the vagueness of the term "great attitude" and use it to bolster your own agendas.
Brad Stevens wants players who are not negative presence in the locker, how about that?! He wants players who wants to win rather than just earn his paycheck. He wants players who will leave it all on the court. Great attitude is not tied down to a single trait you possess. Now you could shut up with lumping guys like Cousins and Morris together.
There isnt a single way to build a proper team, unlike Kozdolev the so-called expert here would like you to believe. If Stevens believes he wants a team built with these players then so be it. Like I said before I wouldve taken a gamble on Cousins, but that's me. Its not my team, I wouldnt be the one handling them, its not my style that is going to be implemented. Let him coach his way, and let Kozdolev grit his teeth at his seething hatred for Stevens.