Doc Rivers out in LAC

serdi

All-Conference
Mar 22, 2009
2,672
3,934
0
Imagine having to go from living in Boston and LA to possibly moving to OKC...

After hearing his liberal spews lately, he won’t find much company in OKC with their optimistic population of ALL races and a devotion to Energy Independence, Optimism, and Capitalism.
 

revcort

Heisman
Feb 20, 2003
32,522
30,904
113
Sure, but I believe he is now the only coach in NBA history to be up 3-1 and lose 3 times. I also assume he had something to do with the makeup of the team, which now looks to be more expensive and less effective than promised. Any single win or loss? Fine. A history of under-performance across multiple teams with different sets of players? Either crazy coincidence or you blame him. There is no other connection.
Well, I won't disagree with your point. There is no question, losing a series after being up 3-1 on 3 different occasions is bad- really bad. I was just referring to this particular series. It just seemed to me to be a player problem more than a coaching problem in this instance. And I don't think the Clippers are thinking of his other losses at other places when they gave him the pink slip. But there is no denying, a history of choking away series leads is a problem for Doc Rivers.
 
Jan 29, 2003
18,120
12,185
0
Just read this. Honestly, I've never thought Doc was a great coach:

"Two philosophical points of contention between Rivers and the organization were, more recently, his insistence on playing backup center Montrezl Harrell over starting center Ivica Zubac and, at large, his reluctance to develop or empower the team’s younger talent throughout his tenure.

After a Sixth Man of the Year regular-season campaign, Harrell missed a month in the bubble due to the sickness and eventual passing of his grandmother. Upon returning, he was visibly not himself, offensively or defensively.

Yet Harrell’s postseason role was that of an effective rotation player (18.7 minutes per game), despite the Clippers posting a team-worst minus-11.6 net rating with him on the floor in the playoffs, including a mind-blowing minus-30.1 net rating while sharing the floor with Leonard and George.

In comparison, the Clippers had a plus-17.7 net rating with Zubac on the floor in the playoffs and a plus-11.1 net rating with Zubac alongside Leonard and George, with both marks ranked No. 1 among the team’s rotation players.

It was clear to many that Zubac was the better matchup on both ends versus Dallas and Denver. There was an internal thought process of “How does Rivers not see that Zubac is the more productive player and the better postseason matchup?”

A common criticism from some within the team — inside and outside the locker room — was that Harrell’s energy and effort was only consistent on the offensive end of the floor, multiple league sources said.

Meanwhile, Rivers maintained, publicly to the media and privately to his staff and the organization, that Harrell was the better player, in spite of all of the evidence to the contrary."