It is important to acknowledge what Sloan has done for the Utah Jazz organization. The team won more games in the 1990s than any other organization in the NBA, including the Chicago Bulls and San Antonio Spurs. Upon reflection, we feel that some day this feat will gain the appreciation it deserves. Sloan’s amazingly long tenure has been invaluable to the franchise. Consistency is a word that will forever be associated with the Jerry Sloan system of old school basketball which Karl Malone and John Stockton benefited from on their way to Hall of Fame and record-breaking careers.
Sloan's accomplishments are many, but his failures are also plentiful. Unfortunately, now it is clear the negatives now outweigh any positives. There is another side to the coach's consistency and that’s his predictability—including an inability to adapt dynamically to change as it occurs on the court. Sloan’s greatest strength is also his greatest weakness.
Sloan is often lionized for representing traditional values in American sports. While he is an endearing curmudgeon, he is also deceptively hypocritical. When predictably poor tactics and rotations bequeath losses from the jaws of victory, he throws up his hands and takes no responsibility, instead blaming his own players lack of effort. (Somehow, he even manages to undermine a players work ethic before they have ever even donned a uniform...watch the video.) Such behavior is traitorous to his own values—discipline, accepting responsibility, no excuses. The coach expects accountability and responsibility from everyone not named Jerry Sloan.
In three weeks, following a thrashing by the Houston Rockets, I fully expect to read this post-game response from Sloan, "Look, I can't teach Brown how to be tall, okay? It wouldn't have mattered who was guarding Yao, I figured I might as well give Dee a shot. There is really nothing you can do in those kind of situations. The guy was just on a roll."
A coach absolving himself of responsibility is like Ken Lay saying he had no idea Enron’s accounting practices were faulty.
Oddly, the Utah sports press embraces Sloan’s rebuffs. Jerry must know what he’s doing, they say. This has led to a culture where fans also give Sloan the benefit of the doubt. However, that culture of trust is receding and for good reason. The rotten core of the apple is coming to the surface and browning the skin. Please, Jerry, give somebody else a chance to make this farm grow.
Van Gundy has a proven record of success in Miami. He might be a very good coach to develop Andrei Kirilenko’s unique distributor potential. The style of play he initiated in Miami utilized multiple ball-handlers and free-flowing ball movement that confused opposing teams.
• Carlos Boozer is not Karl Malone. He does not, and probably cannot, play defense with the same ability. Boozer is very useful, but simply because he is a sieve on defense means he cannot be the franchise player Sloan wishes him to be.
• Andrei Kirilenko is one of the most unique talents in the NBA, many coaches would die to have the chance to work with someone of his ability. Rather than design a system to accommodate AK’s unusual abilities, Sloan has decided to blame most everything on Kirilenko.
• Lastly, Ronnie Brewer. This has been addressed in our previous incarnation Benoitfor3 (below see: "Sloan's deep dark secret...") in such detail to this point, we will not rehash.
1 comment:
I'm working on shirts for the next game right now!
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