[外電] 'Coach-in-waiting' Wittman moves one spot over on bench
http://www.startribune.com/511/story/955860.html
Randy Wittman came back to the Timberwolves this season not to hover over
coach Dwane Casey as a replacement-in-waiting but to help him, in every way
possible, as a member of Casey's staff.
Skeptics were assured, repeatedly and earnestly, that it was so, by Vice
President of Basketball Operations Kevin McHale, by team owner Glen Taylor,
by Casey and by Wittman himself. The two men backed it up, too, working
together to push the right buttons, avoid the wrong ones, prepare the players
as best they could and search for solutions to a herky-jerky season of eureka
moments and dunce setbacks.
"In my heart, I felt everybody on our staff was together and working hard,"
Casey said Tuesday, while driving to his home in Seattle. Hours earlier, he
had been fired after 1? seasons as Wolves head coach. And replaced by
Wittman.
So the question now is: If Wittman was doing everything in his power on
Monday as an assistant to help the Wolves play better and win more, what
could he possibly have up his sleeve Tuesday as the boss?
"We'll find those answers in the next couple of weeks," Wittman said,
sounding as if he anticipated the question. "All of us coaches are different.
We all have a little different philosophy on how you would run certain
things. There will be subtle changes in some things that we do, but nothing
drastic."
Said Wolves forward Kevin Garnett, who has known Wittman since his rookie
season: "Within the pecking order, you have certain limits. Case, we all
understand, was the captain of the boat. Now he's moved on. Maybe Randy can
see some other things that he can include, not just on offense but in the
game, period, and he can now voice those opinions.
"He did that today. He let it be known right off the top, 'This is how it's
going to be.' He addressed things head-on."
Wittman will move one seat over tonight when the Wolves face the Portland
Trail Blazers at the Rose Garden. He met with the team before a practice at
the Blazers' facility in suburban Tualatin, and will get one more prep
session at today's morning shootaround. Then, showtime!
"I'm not going to do anything radical like taking three guys out of the
lineup," said Wittman, a 1983 graduate of Indiana who played nine seasons in
the NBA. "That's going to play itself out. The rotation, or if guys are going
to play differently or how long.
"Guys are going to react differently to me than to Dwane. Dwane and I are two
different people."
Said McHale: "Randy didn't overstep his bounds. He helped Case all he could.
But as Randy told me, 'I would do things differently from all the coaches I
ever worked for.' ... When you [are an assistant], you work with the head
coach's vision."
Unlike Casey, Wittman takes over the Wolves with prior NBA head coaching
experience. He was hired away from Minnesota after five seasons in 1999 by
the Cleveland Cavaliers, guided them for two full seasons and was fired after
compiling a 62-102 record. The short version of what went wrong there: The
Cavs' best player, All-Star center Zyrdunas Ilgauskas, was out because of
chronic foot injuries, missing Wittman's first season entirely and playing
only 616 minutes in his second.
Wittman returned to the Wolves for four more seasons, then served on coach
Brian Hill's staff with Orlando last season after Flip Saunders was fired
deep in the 2004-05 season.
Asked how he might have changed as a head coach since Cleveland, Wittman
said: "Until you go through it and experience the different personalities ...
the ones you've got to love and the ones you've got to kick in the butt, and
understanding which ones those are.
"There are a lot of things I'm going to incorporate from what I did in
Cleveland, and there are going to be a lot of things left in the suitcase in
the closet."
Saunders, now coach of the Detroit Pistons, praised Wittman on Tuesday, in a
telephone interview, for his basketball acumen.
"Any time you're in a situation like he was in Cleveland and things don't
work out, you learn from it," Saunders said. "Dealing with players. Reacting
to situations."
But then, Saunders thought Casey had grown a lot in his job since last season
in his rotations and game decisions. The Wolves played the Pistons twice last
week.
"They were 7-2 in January and he was looking like the NBA's coach of the
month, maybe," the former Wolves coach said. "Until five days ago."
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