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Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:34 am
by Ramroad
phil got kobe and pau
van gundy got superman and nelson
mike brown got lebron and mo
doc got paul and garnett
but my question to all basketball fans on this forum is who is the best coach leading a bad team.. and in my opinion it has to be mike woodson.. he has a team with no superstar solid guards only one real player who creates his shot jj .. one developing post presence in harford.. a few other key pieces josh smith.. marvin williams.. mike bibby but at the end of the day after they lost josh childress who was there 6th man i thought it was it for them there chances of playoffs were done but there record is 27-20 and for the most parts they have been fairly competitive ... the only other major one is greg pop.. spurs still stay competitive despite age..

thoughts anyone... ?

edit: for clarity in title

Re: Best Coach Leading A Bad Team

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:36 am
by CatNation
Did you just call the Spurs and Hawks bad teams? I'm lost... :-?

Re: Best Coach Leading A Bad Team

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:37 am
by kookie_819
Mike Woodson is now considered a good coach?

I thought many Hawks fans hated him.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Bad Team

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:39 am
by Ramroad
no no not bad team.. but i mean missing a super star or lacking in star power as opposed to others

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:46 am
by dockingsched
yeah, pop doesn't belong there with duncan/parker/manu

i'm going to go with mike d'antoni. they're battling for a playoff spot and they don't really have anything. david lee playing out of position, duhon a cast off from an inferior chicago team, wilson chandler...who?, 5'1" nate robinson, q "didn't he retire" rich....

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:53 am
by timdunkit
To be honest, the most underappreciated coach in the NBA has to Mike Brown ... just for managing Lebron for all these years, I mean he even has the guy convinced to play defense and when nobody gives you credit and you have the best player in the league and your team playing the best ball ever ... that says something ...

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:56 am
by Knicksfan1
Its Mike D. no doubt about it.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 4:57 am
by Knicksfan1
timdunkit wrote:To be honest, the most underappreciated coach in the NBA has to Mike Brown ... just for managing Lebron for all these years, I mean he even has the guy convinced to play defense and when nobody gives you credit and you have the best player in the league and your team playing the best ball ever ... that says something ...

No he didnt convince him, the Olympics did, btw Mike Brown is a good coach but isnt any coach that has Lebron :)

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 5:00 am
by SwiLL2432
timdunkit wrote:To be honest, the most underappreciated coach in the NBA has to Mike Brown ... just for managing Lebron for all these years, I mean he even has the guy convinced to play defense and when nobody gives you credit and you have the best player in the league and your team playing the best ball ever ... that says something ...


Not really. What is says is you have the second best player in the league with Mo and Z and are winning games that you are suppose to win. O and you got to one NBA finals and got the broom

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 5:14 am
by Triple M
Jim O'Brien always gets the most out of his talent.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 5:15 am
by Gutter92
SwiLL2432 wrote:
timdunkit wrote:To be honest, the most underappreciated coach in the NBA has to Mike Brown ... just for managing Lebron for all these years, I mean he even has the guy convinced to play defense and when nobody gives you credit and you have the best player in the league and your team playing the best ball ever ... that says something ...


Not really. What is says is you have the second best player in the league with Mo and Z and are winning games that you are suppose to win. O and you got to one NBA finals and got the broom


Wade is great, but he's not better than LeBron...

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 6:14 am
by Inc
Scott Skiles.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 6:24 am
by Magic All The Way
Rick Carlise I think makes the most of the talent. He kept the Pacers competitive even after the Detroit brawl, and the mass suspensions.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 6:32 am
by amcoolio
lol at all these answers.

You know who the best coach leading a team with no stars is, why even ask the question

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 6:53 am
by Kobe>Jordan>God
Knicksfan1 wrote:Its Mike D. no doubt about it.


D'Antoni was the first name to come to my mind

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 9:51 am
by jirojan
its mike "sit the f*** down" dantoni

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 10:07 am
by RutgersBJJ
there is no other coach in the league that would take the Knicks roster and have them even 10 games near .500. No one. He isn't the best coach in the league, but he certainly is the best at taking less talent and making them competitive. Now that he is gone in Phx people are seeing the real amare, and realizing that Steve Nash is the same exact player he was on Dallas. A pg with a good shot, but that is turnover prone when he has to actually run a proper half-court offense.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 11:08 am
by prekazi
timdunkit wrote:To be honest, the most underappreciated coach in the NBA has to Mike Brown ... just for managing Lebron for all these years, I mean he even has the guy convinced to play defense and when nobody gives you credit and you have the best player in the league and your team playing the best ball ever ... that says something ...


LeBron James is one of the most coachable superstars ever.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 11:30 am
by Clangus
Jerry Sloan.

He has injuries coming out of his ears and the Jazz are still a hard beat.

Re: Best Coach Leading A Team Lacking Star Power

Posted: Mon Feb 2, 2009 11:41 am
by Mahoney_jr
Larry Brown

Just like D'Antoni he needs a specific type of player. I just think that Brown's type of players are typically NOT stars. And as he's a good coach without question, he was the first to come to my mind.