long time guy wrote:
I knew you would find a way to tie all of their success to Thibs that is why I purposely didn't extrapolate his years. At no point during his years with the Bulls did he ever have the sort of injuries that Hoiberg endured.
The Bulls lost 188 games due to injury in 2012-2013 and Thibs led them to 45 wins, more than Hoiberg ever did. And before you come back with the Rose excuse, he was a far better player missing for far longer than any of the players Hoiberg was missing for an extended period of time (and 106 of those missed games that seasn were stil from non-Rose players). So once again, your claims that Hoiberg was in some kind of impossible situation are complete crap as usual.
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Can you explain how The Minnesta Timberwolves had a worse record than Sacramento? Before I continue that had to be explained.
Can you also explain how they were 10 games worse than the Hoiberg coached Bulls despite having better talent? That has to be addressed.
The Wolves clearly played in a tougher conference and the Bulls top player was far better than anyone on the Wolves. I'd expect their records to come close to flipping if the conferences themselves were swapped.
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The Bulls were 23-15 When Noah was injured. That's with Rose missing the beginning of the season and playing with a damn mask on when he returned.
Noah was benched and "player's coach" Hoiberg blatantly lied to the media about it to boot. Spare me the crocodile tears about how poor Fred would have definitely done better if he had access to a player he clearly didn't value highly.
As for Rose, I think Thibs knows a thing or two about winning games without a healthy Rose. It's pretty interesting that you spend all this time complaining about the mask when the Rose down the stretch was the healthiest he'd been for years. Seems it didn't help "The Mayor" make the playoffs however.
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Also since you want to all of this parsing if you remove Paxson's first season the Bulls are 14 games over .500 without Thibs.
It's actually pretty logical to remove the games of the coach whose quality you've been desperately trying to downplay to big up the competence of the front office. Surely if Paxson was as great as you've been suggesting, he'd have amassed a notable record as an executive without that terrible no good coach.
It's also interesting that you focus on the "14 games over .500" rather than the actual winning percentage of .511. I'm sure that has nothing to do with the vagueness of the former stat sounding potentially impressive and the latter stat once again revealing the actual mediocrity of Paxson's tenure, especially given the conference the Bulls play in.