[TimesPicayune] Bass' retirement is first move of a triple play
看板Pelicans (新奧爾良 鵜鶘)作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)時間20年前 (2004/05/07 05:10)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
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Bass' retirement is first move of a triple play
Thursday, May 06, 2004
Peter Finney
The Hornets' press conference to announce the retirement of Bob Bass
as general manager should be the first of three called by the team in
the coming weeks.
The next one will be to announce Bass' successor.
Soon after, they'll call a third to announce Tim Floyd's replacement
as coach of the city's NBA team.
At least, that's the way I see it.
I'll be shocked if owner George Shinn and the man he selects to run
the basketball operation do not come to a meeting of minds and make a
coaching change.
And if this is how it all comes to pass, let me repeat what I said a
month ago: If I were Tim Floyd, I'd almost want to be fired, freed to
coach a different sport -- college basketball.
Funny how things worked out. The Hornets, on balance, battled through
more injuries than they did a year ago under Paul Silas and still went
one game further -- the seventh game of a first-round playoff series --
than they did a year ago.
But this was overshadowed by events, in and out of Floyd's control,
beginning with the cancerous presence and extended absence of Jamal
Mashburn.
The manner in which Mashburn quit on his teammates, how he was coddled
by the general manager as he rehabbed from a minor injury in Miami,
created a poisonous atmosphere that festered until the All-Star forward
returned after missing the first 44 games.
When he did return, for all of 19 games of an 82-game season, Floyd
learned what Silas had faced through much of his stint as head coach of
the Hornets: Mashburn and Baron Davis, the Dynamic Duo of an otherwise
ordinary NBA team, could not coexist on the basketball court.
Of course, getting guys with fat wallets to coexist is the job of every
NBA head coach.
With Mashburn virtually a no-show, with Davis an offensive force who
marches to his own drummer, Floyd struck the pose of an overwhelmed
salesman, trying to put out one fire after another, searching for the
right matchups, looking to make the right substitutions.
It's this simple. When the head coach is selling and the players aren't
buying, it's always the head coach's fault. When David Wesley, who won a
playoff game with some deadly outside shooting, goes 1-for-13 in an 85-77
Game 7 loss to Miami, it's more the head coach's fault than Wesley's.
That's a fact of life in the NBA.
At the moment, Phil Jackson is facing a fact of life with his triangle
offense and guard Gary Payton. Payton doesn't like it, says it limits
what he can do. Lakers assistant Tex Winter, architect of the triangle,
insists the opportunities are there for Payton -- that is, provided
Payton does what he's supposed to do.
When Winter was told Payton didn't like the triangle as much as the
offense he ran during his long tour of duty in Seattle, Winter snapped:
"How many championships did Seattle win?"
For the Hornets, who are moving to the Western Conference next season,
it will only get tougher. Bob Bass allowed the team to age, and whoever
steps in as general manager will be facing some critical decisions.
This especially applies to the future of Mashburn. While it's difficult
to imagine him returning and sharing a basketball with Baron Davis,
Mashburn did nothing to help his trade value when he trashed Hornets
management, this after management did nothing but pamper an $8 million
player.
All Mashburn did was reveal himself as a selfish man with his own agenda.
If Tim Floyd walks the plank, as I expect, at least he'll exit as someone
who made his share of coaching mistakes while giving it his best shot.
He didn't quit.
. . . . . . .
Peter Finney can be reached at pfinney@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3802.
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