[外電] Hiring Adelman would be a coup for Timberwolves
看板Timberwolves (明尼蘇達 灰狼)作者jinshenn (Don't panic)時間14年前 (2011/09/13 23:00)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串1/1
http://0rz.tw/n7j21
The Timberwolves have begun negotiating with Rick Adelman and appear to have
settled on him as their favored coaching candidate, provided the price is
right, according to Jerry Zgoda of the Minneapolis Star Tribune. Adelman
reportedly wants about $25 million guaranteed over five seasons, a deal that
would put him in the top tier of coaches. It’s an expensive price for a team
that still owes money to former coach Kurt Rambis.
Still, hiring Adelman would be a coup for David Kahn and the Wolves, and not
only because the 65-year-old coach has shown a preference, during non-Yao Ming
seasons, for playing at a fast pace — something Kahn says he wants his Ricky
Rubio-led squad to do. Adelman’s delightful Sacramento teams did rank at or
near the top of the league in possessions per game during their best seasons,
but pigeon-holing Adelman as an up-tempo maniac is obviously too simple. He’s
a great all-around coach, adaptable to different personnel, and some strengths
his teams have shared over the least decade dovetail nicely with Minnesota’s
most glaring (and fixable) weaknesses.
There are two principles that sustained throughout Adelman’s tenures in
Sacramento and Houston: His teams take care of the ball on offense and avoid
fouls on defense.
Other trends came and went depending on rosters and health, but these two
things are Adelman bedrocks. The Wolves turned the ball over more often last
season, per possession, than any other team, and only two clubs (Golden State
and Utah) fouled more often, according to Basketball-Reference. There won’t be
a quick fix for this stuff — not with a rookie point guard leading young
forwards Michael Beasley and Anthony Randolph on fast breaks. But Adelman’s
style is fast without being reckless, and his teams play very sound ball on
both ends.
People forget — or never realized — how good those Sacramento teams were
defensively. Starting in 1999-2000, Sacramento ranked in the top 10 in points
allowed per possession for four straight seasons, peaking at No. 2 in 2002-03.
They were never elite on the glass and didn’t force tons of turnovers, but
they always defended the three-pointer well and made opponents earn their
points from the floor instead of the foul line.
Houston’s defense fell off without Yao, but it never fell into the bottom 10
under Adelman, even with the Rockets’fatal size issues and a core that last
season included some pretty poor defenders. Even the Yao-less Rockets managed
to avoid fouls and squeeze the three-point line, though the absence of any
paint protector likely encouraged opponents to pass up threes in favor of
attacking the rim. Nevertheless, the underlying structure was solid in
Houston.
The Wolves yielded 37.4 percent shooting from deep last season on a league-high
1,707 attempts. Even factoring in pace, opponents had a field day from deep.
Adelman can only help.
And as Kevin Love has mentioned, Adelman’s passing- and motion-heavy corner
offense should be a decent fit. He would have a big man in Love who is
perfectly tailored to play the Luis Scola/Chris Webber role — a power guy with
a developing back-to-the-basket game, an elite outside shot and a willingness
to pass and cut from the high post. Rubio is a project, but he can see funky
passing angles and already has great timing on his dishes. Adelman doesn’t run
a traditional system heavy on high pick-and-rolls, and he thus requires point
guards to shoot and cut more than some other guys. Still: Adelman can tweak to
fit his personnel–he adjusted for Yao, after all–and Rubio should be able to
work more aggressively off the ball than he does in Spain’s offense.
The questions come on the wing, where the Wolves badly need someone to emerge
as a dependable outside shooter who can roam around the court, space the floor
and catch-and-shoot with a quick release. Wesley Johnson might be that guy, but
he was mostly a spot-up option last year who didn’t show much dynamism to his
game, with or without the ball. A healthy Martell Webster should help, but the
options at shooting guard beyond Johnson are pretty limited.
Sorting out the crowd of tweener forwards — Randolph, Beasley and No. 2 pick
Derrick Williams — will be tricky, as will deciding how often the team should
play “small,” with Love at center and these other guys sliding to power
forward. That was not something Rambis preferred, but it’s fair to ask whether
the Darko Milicic/Nikola Pekovic center combination should really be combining
for nearly 40 minutes per game.
We know the Wolves won’t be very good next season, regardless of who coaches
them. But there is no question that Adelman would be a tremendous hire in the
short- and long-term, and for reasons well beyond his devotion to pushing the
pace and his friendly relationship with Love. (Love and Adelman’s son,
Patrick, were teammates in high school, and Love knows Adelman well.) Adelman
has proved for two decades that he can build sound basketball teams. That’s
good enough for now.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 1.169.182.151
Timberwolves 近期熱門文章
44
149
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章