Nate McMillan, Motivation and Making the Playoffs
Written by Sophia Brugato   
Sunday, 10 January 2010 23:46

In my never ending search to make our website better for our readers and more intellectually diverse, we have added someone you may or may not already know: Sophia Brugato, aka BlazerFan1, aka Sophia will be guest posting for Bust a Bucket going forward. Her passion for the Blazers, unique opinion on sports and overall style as a writer is perfect for us and I am happy to have her on board.

-Sheed

To kick things off, she's got a little gripe with coach Nate, here's her first piece as a member of Bust a Bucket:

After the Portland Trail Blazers beat the Lakers for the 9th consecutive time at the Rose Garden Friday night, Coach Nate McMillan addressed the media in his usual solemn and professional style. He reiterated the need to play hard, switch up his defense and continue passing the ball. He praised the efforts of improbable role players such as Dante Cunningham and Jerryd Bayless. Although his post game comments seemed fairly run of the mill for Nate, they were anything but when McMillan said:

"We have a rough schedule ahead... It's my job to motivate these guys"

After a tumultuous season that has seen both of his centers go down, several starters out for considerable amounts of time, and lacking play from more than one contract players, McMillan's comment is a stark reminder of what exactly it will take from him for his team to make the playoffs.

In objective terms, after 28 games, the Blazers are 23 and 15(Make that 16 losses following tonight's game). At this exact point last season, the Blazers had this same record, and ended the season 4th seed in the West, with home court advantage in the playoffs. One could argue the fact the Blazers have maintained this level of winning, without at times 7 rotation players, is due to the steady leadership from McMillan and his coaching staff. However, many key issues have arisen during the last two months, which directly call into question Nate's continued ability to motivate and coach this team.

 

Jerryd Bayless

The bandwagon was empty last season. People thought Bayless wouldn't help this team, wasn't a passer, not a shooter; his drives to the basket redundant because of All-Star Brandon Roy. Fast forward to this season and see Bayless' bandwagon sag under the weight of thousands of new fans. After two years on the bench, Bayless has proved himself to be very effective in a number of situations, especially when given more consistent and meaningful minutes. I refuse to accept that Bayless had some unexpected and unpredictable development that suddenly convinced Nate McMillan to play him. I have no doubt that if more players were healthy, Bayless would be among those getting the least minutes. Even with a decidedly less effective Steve Blake, Bayless was not seeing considerable burn until the team simply needed his body on the floor.

Whether Nate is able to manage effectively Bayless' playing time and the point guard position is going to be a major factor to his success this season. Bayless' incredible play raises questions about McMillan's personnel management and willingness to reward sheer talent, if not an outright indictment of coaching ability.


Offense

If the Blazers want to continue winning, several things have to happen: get players healthy, utilize active players to highest potential, and institute a more diverse offense. For the first point, there is nothing Nate McMillan can do but wait. I am in the "don't rush players back" camp, so it should go without saying, Nate needs to encourage injured players to take their time to recover. It then goes without saying that McMillan must develop a more diverse offense.

After both centers go down, the Blazers suddenly became strapped for big men. Nate had already tried the controversial "3 guard lineup", so all signs pointed to the team playing a more small-ball style. The offense could potentially become the fun, up-tempo, get out on the break, run and gun offense with guys like Bayless, Cunningham and Aldridge. As of now however, the pace has not sped up. McMillan is still relying upon his All-Star (understandably so), high pick and rolls or pick and pops, and the drive and kick-it plays that requires dagger outside shooting in order to be effective. This leads to stagnant offensive sets that deflate team enthusiasm if the jumpers aren't falling and decreased efficiency, as the team scores much less when using more of the shot clock. Furthermore, it is increasingly evident that this style is depressing the skills of several important members of the team. Although Brandon Roy may get his shots (pure shooters do this), LaMarcus Aldridge has seen a drop in offensive rebounds and blocks, Andre Miller is forced to play off the ball too much, suppressing his unique skill set; and guys like Dante Cunningham and Jeff Pendergraph are required to shoot too much, too far away from the basket. Furthermore, without the abundance of outside shooting the Blazers enjoyed last season, spreading the floor on offense is more difficult to substantiate. I think McMillan has to loosen the reigns a bit, let his guys play, even if it means they make mistakes.

As of now, the Blazers are still one of the slowest teams in the NBA. It is becoming more apparent that this style of offense is no longer as effective as it once was. Teams are defending the Blazers better this season and the Blazers are now barely above the league average in field goal %. Par for the course maybe, but not quite good enough if the Blazers want to win enough to get into the playoffs this season.


Conflict Management

Last week, Nate allowed perhaps a small tiff between himself and Andre Miller to be seen by the entire media. Whether the issue was serious or not, the fact that Nate allowed it to happen when everyone who matters was there to watch (albeit through a small glass window, I'm sure) is concerning. No doubt, McMillan was just caught up in the moment, but as the leader and control-master he is purported to be, allowing something "small" to blow up is cause for concern.

Even though the "argument", "cursing match", "blow up", or whatever it has been called is done, with Nate saying he and the team have put it behind them, I think It's important to note that player dissention can snowball, and fast. I have no idea how to fix communication problems, but I am pretty sure screaming matches during practice are at the bottom of the list.

Going forward, McMillan may turn out to be the coach that leads this team to a championship, although I believe this to be highly unlikely. If the Blazers make the playoffs this season, I will be surprised. If they make it out of the first round (probably means beating the Lakers in 7) I would cry tears of joy. Injuries, illnesses and front office decisions aside, McMillan will have to make difficult adjustments to keep the Blazers afloat the remainder of the season.




Digg! Facebook! Technorati! StumbleUpon! BallHype: hype it up!
Comments (18)Add Comment
...
written by DogPissJones, January 11, 2010
Good article. I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter...
...
written by TravisG.Allen, January 11, 2010
Great thoughts. Up The Tempo, Diversify the offense. What about the physical training staff? Isn't it evident that somebody has dropped the ball, or is this many injuries in one season just a fluke?
...
written by Blazers Blog, January 11, 2010
Solid debut and addition to BAB.

*The tiff was actually heard, not seen, by the media. I wish we would've seen it, rather than just heard.
...
written by anon, January 11, 2010
as far as i know, that shouting match was reported on people who did not see it, but listened from the media room through a door. that argument happened while practice was closed and when the media entered the open portion of practice, neither McMillan or Miller were there.

also, screaming matches are very often great ways to open the lines of communication. They get ill feelings or concerns out in the open rather than being kept in the dark and allow the involved parties to hear the concerns of the other and create (buzzphrase) open dialogue.
...
written by Billy Hoyle, January 11, 2010
I agree, this was a will written article, although I happen to disagree with the premise. Still, keep the ideas flowing. Now onto my points of contention smilies/smiley.gif

In my opinion, injuries are the story, not coach Nate. Nobody blames Doc Rivers for Boston not winning the title last year, or Popovich when the Spurs don't win. It comes down to key players not being able to play.

One could argue the fact the Blazers have maintained this level of winning, without at times 7 rotation players, is due to the steady leadership from McMillan and his coaching staff.


This.

You suggest that Nate's not the answer for our future title aspirations, I'd ask who would you suggest in his place? It's not like we can just go out and sign Phil Jackson or Greg Popovich.
...
written by Billy Hoyle, January 11, 2010
And although this isn't the main point of the article, I just wanted to convey my objections to the so-called "exciting" run-and-gun offense.

You suggest that the Blazers set offense is "no longer as effective as it once was" and I would agree in the sense that our talent level is way down due to injuries, and thus our offense is not as effective as it once was. But, since your point was that a slow paced offense in general is less effective these days, I have to disagree.

Consider that the teams actually winning titles (LA, Boston, and San Antonio) all primarily run slower paced, set offenses designed for maximum efficiency, but more importantly to allow their defenses time to set up effectively and ultimately dictate the outcome of games.

Just to hammer home my point, here are the top 15 teams in the league in fast break points this year, go ahead and count all of the titles they or their coaches have had in the last decade. More importantly, which of these teams do you think has a legitimate shot at winning a title this year?

1 Golden State
2 Philadelphia
3 Memphis
4 Atlanta
5 Denver
6 Phoenix
7 Minnesota
8 Houston
9 Sacramento
10 Dallas
11 Charlotte
12 Toronto
13 LA Clippers
14 Okla City
15 New Orleans
...
written by Cablinasian, January 11, 2010
I really love your passion for the game.
...
written by CaseyH, January 11, 2010
I'm with Billy on this. Well-written, but misses the mark.
...
written by asdf, January 11, 2010
Good article. It's nice to read opinions on coach's performance, not just the players. Whoever guides Portland to the upcoming back-to-back-to-back championships will owe Nate a lot of credit. But you're right, Nate won't be there to see it.
...
written by CDub, January 11, 2010
Welcome Sophia.

It's great having you on board!
...
written by JMo, January 11, 2010
This article could use some tech editing in a major way.
...
written by Great Sergio's Ghost, January 11, 2010
Fantastic article Sophia and 100% dead on. I believe the end of Nate's reign will be in the coming months when he shows his lack of player and game management skills. And oddly enough while having MORE players to choose from.
...
written by broyposse, January 11, 2010
Excellent article. Sophia is an awesome addition to the team. It's like adding Lebron to the cast of the Knicks! j/k

Team Nate Miller
...
written by Sophia Brugato, January 11, 2010
I just wanted to say thank you everyone for your feedback . I am excited for this opportunity.

-Sophia
...
written by tssbro, January 11, 2010
I will continue to enjoy watching Nate win as people continue to lay out all the reasons why it can't continue. No coach is perfect and Nate is not above criticism, but I have been reading this kind of stuff for three years now and the team keeps getting better. It reminds me of The Princess Bride where Wallace Shawn's character keeps using the word "inconceivable" to describe incredible feats accomplished by his adversary. My response to the Nate doubters echos Inigo Montoya's response in the movie: You keep on using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means.
...
written by KneeJerkNBA, January 12, 2010
I agree with Sophia that Nate definitely needs to add some wrinkles to the offense. Even if the team was still fully healthy, every team in the league knows how to defend Portland. It's a testament to how good Brandon Roy is that they continue to win anyway.
...
written by DogPissJones, January 12, 2010
It's a lot easier to go from 30 to 40 to 50 wins when you have a ton of talent than taking that talent from 50 wins to 60 wins. I don't see Nate doing that. Even when we were healthy this team was on pace for 45-50 wins.
...
written by Sheedwasright, January 13, 2010
Is she the hot one?
smilies/wink.gif

Write comment

busy
 

About Bloguin

Bloguin is the revolutionary blog network specifically focused on helping bloggers get the most out of their websites. We're currently working on building a large network of online communities and hope to expand our blogging coverage to include a wide range of topics.

Advertisers

The Bloguin Network allows advertisers to promote their products and services to our ever-growing number of visitors. We offer both site-specific ad placements as well as the ability to run a network-wide campaign. If you're interested in working with Bloguin to meet your advertising needs, please contact us.

Bloggers Wanted

The Bloguin Network is always looking to expand. Here are some of our high-priority areas that we're specifically looking to grow. If you're a blogger and interested in joining our network, please fill out our application form.

  1. NBA/Basketball Blogs
  2. NFL Blogs
  3. Major League Baseball Blogs

The Bloguin Login

The Bloguin Login gives you full access to everything our network has to offer. Your name and password will work for each and every one of our sites. Signing up is simple, and will allow you to post in all our forums, create member blogs, and access other cool features! What are you waiting for? Create an Account!