somethingshesaid
Veteran
I have always found it very difficult to judge a coach, due to the extreme difficulty of distinguishing their role in their team's success from the players' role; and the best anyone can fairly do is make an educated guess. So...I have suspected that based on how long Jerry Colangelo kept him, and the fact that he managed to lead his Suns to a Finals, the best Suns coach overall is...probably John MacLeod.
It's much easier to judge the individual coaches by specialty, because many of them tended to be the best at one thing in particular.
Paul Westphal: Best tactician. He was not clearly a great coach in any other way, but I found him very good at designing clever plays to win games and also manipulating the rules. It's not just the 1976 time-out; it's things like drawing up an offbeat play early in 1992-93 that involved inbounding a ball to someone after bouncing it off the backboard (because the rule stated that the clock didn't start until the ball hit the board).
Cotton Fitzsimmons: Best teacher; also most open-minded and willing to try new strategies.
Mike D'Antoni: Best offensive strategist, obviously.
Alvin Gentry: Best manager of people. Was fired as blatant case of scapegoating.
Worst coaches:
-Earl Watson: Empty suit who didn't clearly know what he was doing.
-Terry Porter: Said to have been inappropriately strict and tactless with players.
-Mike D'Antoni: Good offensive strategist; lousy at all other aspects of coaching. Also known to be stubborn and even insulting in response to requests that he do things differently.
Coaches who are hard to draw a conclusion on: Jeff Hornacek. Except that Hornacek was obviously old-school and had little skill in handling today's man-child players. Hornacek was quiet and didn't say much that could help figure him out.
It's much easier to judge the individual coaches by specialty, because many of them tended to be the best at one thing in particular.
Paul Westphal: Best tactician. He was not clearly a great coach in any other way, but I found him very good at designing clever plays to win games and also manipulating the rules. It's not just the 1976 time-out; it's things like drawing up an offbeat play early in 1992-93 that involved inbounding a ball to someone after bouncing it off the backboard (because the rule stated that the clock didn't start until the ball hit the board).
Cotton Fitzsimmons: Best teacher; also most open-minded and willing to try new strategies.
Mike D'Antoni: Best offensive strategist, obviously.
Alvin Gentry: Best manager of people. Was fired as blatant case of scapegoating.
Worst coaches:
-Earl Watson: Empty suit who didn't clearly know what he was doing.
-Terry Porter: Said to have been inappropriately strict and tactless with players.
-Mike D'Antoni: Good offensive strategist; lousy at all other aspects of coaching. Also known to be stubborn and even insulting in response to requests that he do things differently.
Coaches who are hard to draw a conclusion on: Jeff Hornacek. Except that Hornacek was obviously old-school and had little skill in handling today's man-child players. Hornacek was quiet and didn't say much that could help figure him out.
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