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David Blatt is a former NBA coach

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I really don't get why people take Windhorst seriously, he doesn't know squat anymore, he never knew anything that is basketball related really, he was more of a gossip guy than a basketball analyst.
At this point of his career, he is more of a storyteller and writer of made up fictions, not someone we should read or listen to if we want to get content of any value.

Yeah, no...

Windy certainly doesn't seem to be as dialed in as he once was (A falling out with both the Cavs and LeBron's camp?) but claiming he "never knew anything that is basketball related" is WAY overstating the claim. This guy was one of the best NBA journalists in the country for the past decade, and managed to provide great insight into the innerworkings of the NBA machine for years.
 
Yeah, no...

Windy certainly doesn't seem to be as dialed in as he once was (A falling out with both the Cavs and LeBron's camp?) but claiming he "never knew anything that is basketball related" is WAY overstating the claim. This guy was one of the best NBA journalists in the country for the past decade, and managed to provide great insight into the innerworkings of the NBA machine for years.

I think what Dribble is trying to say is, that what made Windy so spectacular back then was his writing coupled with some very good contacts and a knack for breaking stories. as far as actually coming up with in-game analysis and the more "technical" side of the game if you will was never his forté, and now that he seems to have lost a good deal of his sources, especially in Cleveland, what he's really left with is some good writing chops and, some would argue, an axe to grind.
 
I think what Dribble is trying to say is, that what made Windy so spectacular back then was his writing coupled with some very good contacts and a knack for breaking stories. as far as actually coming up with in-game analysis and the more "technical" side of the game if you will was never his forté, and now that he seems to have lost a good deal of his sources, especially in Cleveland, what he's really left with is some good writing chops and, some would argue, an axe to grind.
Exactly.
 
I always assumed that the guy with the ball called the play. NBA is too fast paced to wait on the coach to call a play every possession. the whole premise was ridiculous. What surprised me was that kyrie wasnt referenced at all for how often he calls plays.

regardless the base offense is a read and react offense Having your highest basketball iq player setting the plays only makes sense.
 
http://thesagonline.com/2015/04/sag...-blatt/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

The Sagamore had an exclusive interview with the head coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers, David Blatt. Blatt is in his first year of coaching one of the NBA’s top teams, who currently stand in 2nd place in the Eastern conference with a 50-27 record. Before joining the Cavaliers this past summer, Blatt both played and coached professionally in Europe for over three decades. He is often deemed one of the greatest American coaches in European basketball history.

On his favorite aspect of coaching:

“My favorite thing about coaching in the NBA is the challenge of coaching at the highest level in the world and the fact that there are so many great teams and so many good players to compete with on a daily basis.”

On what surprised him the most:

“The lack of practice time. In Europe, we have a much longer preparation period before the beginning of the season and also during the season because, in the highest level, you generally play two games a week compared to four of five games a week in the NBA, so you really have very little time to practice.”

On the transition from Europe to America:

“The transition was difficult. It’s very different culturally, and also different professionally. At the end of the day, basketball is basketball and it’s been a very, very enjoyable experience.”

On his biggest goal:

“I want to build an NBA championship team. That’s the ultimate goal.”

On Lebron James:

“Coaching Lebron James is very different and very special because we’re talking about one of the best players in the world and in the history of the game. It’s a great experience, and he’s a fun guy to coach and watch every day. He’s unquestionably our team leader.”

On NBA travel:

“An NBA road trip is fast and furious. It really depends on the nature of the trip, because sometimes we have home games and then a flight that same night to a completely different city where we have a game the very next day, and others can be three or four games on the road in a week outside of your home city. They vary, but they are fast and furious. We play so many games in a six month period.”

On scouting and preparation:

“Everyone is tough to prepare for. They honestly really are all tough. Teams each have different styles, and different stars are in each and every city that you go. You fall into a routine of really trying to be good in the things that you do, and you make small adjustments according to the opponents you have upon you. The playoffs are different though, when you have a lot more time to prepare.”

On Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love:

“They are both really great talents that are relatively inexperienced at the highest level of basketball in terms of playoff basketball, but more importantly, they are both hungry and anxious to win.”

On what makes a great NBA coach:

“Really understanding the schedule, being able to deal with the different players and egos on your own team and holding the group accountable and responsible on a daily basis. It’s also important that, in the midst of so many games in such a short period of time, you manage the minutes on stress on individual players.”

On his playing days:

“I absolutely loved the camaraderie of being with the guys on a daily basis. That was my favorite thing in those twelve years.”

On his journey from coaching in Europe to Cleveland:

“Mine was a very different and a very long one. I’ve been overseas for the last thirty three seasons, twelve as a professional player and another twenty one as a professional coach. I lived in five different countries, coaching in three different languages, and all of that contributed to helping me deal with the rigors of NBA life. And then I simply interviewed for the job and got it.”
 
Whatever Windy once was he's -- well I won't say a shell of his former self for obvious aesthetic reasons -- but it's not a good look whatever it is.

But honestly he doesn't rate the attention he gets and I hate adding to the problem.

I did want to come in here and let you know that I talked to a couple former Maccabi players. I don't know why nobody has done that yet this season, but I'm embarrassed that I didn't do it sooner. they weren't that hard to find.

I don't want to give to much away but he's not a fiery guy but does what each guy needs, but will pull a guy aside in practice if that's what's needed. Never throws anyone under the bus, and gives a lot of leeway to do their own thing so long as they are pulling in team-direction. First guy in gym many mornings.

Look for it Friday.
 
Whatever Windy once was he's -- well I won't say a shell of his former self for obvious aesthetic reasons -- but it's not a good look whatever it is.

But honestly he doesn't rate the attention he gets and I hate adding to the problem.

I did want to come in here and let you know that I talked to a couple former Maccabi players. I don't know why nobody has done that yet this season, but I'm embarrassed that I didn't do it sooner. they weren't that hard to find.

I don't want to give to much away but he's not a fiery guy but does what each guy needs, but will pull a guy aside in practice if that's what's needed. Never throws anyone under the bus, and gives a lot of leeway to do their own thing so long as they are pulling in team-direction. First guy in gym many mornings.

Look for it Friday.

I don't think you could find a player coached by Blatt that has something bad to say about him.
 
I do think Windy has crossed the line and has allowed his comments that might not construe a whole lot on their own feed a bigger narrative, and it doesn't help that there are people waiting to quote him out of context to enforce that narrative.

That being said, his comments in context didn't seem quite as bad as how they've been repeated out of context.
 
I don't think you could find a player coached by Blatt that has something bad to say about him.
Malcolm Thomas
Omri Casspi
Lior Eliyahu
Yotam Halperin
Alex Maric

Most will say that they didn't get their fair share of PT. They will all fail to acknowledge their defensive deficiencies.
Blatt did coach some defensive liability players (Vujcic, Saras, Love..) but if their offense is gifted, which it was.. is.. he'll play them anyway, and try to ''hide'' them on D.
 
Malcolm Thomas
Omri Casspi
Lior Eliyahu
Yotam Halperin
Alex Maric

Most will say that they didn't get their fair share of PT. They will all fail to acknowledge their defensive deficiencies.
Blatt did coach some defensive liability players (Vujcic, Saras, Love..) but if their offense is gifted, which it was.. is.. he'll play them anyway, and try to ''hide'' them on D.

Halperin was coached by Blatt like 12 years ago... Casspi was coached by Blatt? Don't think so. Blatt was in Maccabi since 2010 when Omri was already in the NBA.

Anyway, I'm talking about players who played for him in the long run and not for half a season.
 
Post game:
http://www.nba.com/cavaliers/video/teams/cavaliers/2015/04/09/150408COACHPostGMmov-3567814

- We're playing teams who are fighting for PO spots and we knew it would be a battle. Fortunately we responded.

- We have high quality players, but this is a new team. It's a process and every goal you achieve, every milestone is meaningful. We're headed for great things.

- We need to continue to play hard and keep our rhythm. Although it would give us a change to rest some guys. But we're not gonna change the way we play. We want to continue to prepare for the playoffs.
 
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