Two of the top players Tom Thibodeau ever coached — and the two players probably most responsible for his NBA championship — believe he’s being “stubborn” with his minutes distribution and it’s going to cost the Knicks in the playoffs.
“At some point, you got staff, you got ᴀssistants, you got a GM, you got presidents [that should tell Thibodeau to stop playing the starters so much],” Kevin Garnett said on his podcast, “Ticket & The Truth,” co-hosted by Paul Pierce. “And, it’s a data league, bro. Data is probably telling you, ‘Hey, the starting 5 is playing way more minutes than the average starting 5 in the league.’ So I’m sure he’s heard this. It goes back to what Paul just said — [Thibodeau] is so stuck in his ways and he knows how to win one way, man.”
The conversation about Thibodeau turned into a story from their time together in Boston, when the current Knicks coach was a Celtics ᴀssistant helping guide the franchise to the 2008 championship.
Garnett got into an argument with Thibodeau, who the power forward believed was pushing the players too hard in a drill.
Garnett went for the deep cut by telling Thibodeau, “You’re never going to be a head coach,” and, according to Pierce, “It was like two alphas standing up right there and I was like, ‘Thibs ain’t backing down, I know Ticket ain’t backing down.’ But he’s stubborn though sometimes. I think he gets stubborn.”
Pierce added: “He’s a great coach, don’t put nothing in that way. But sometimes he gets stuck in his ways and is stubborn.”
The Knicks have been largely healthy this season and haven’t missed as many games as the rest of the NBA.
They’re also predictably thin on the bench after splurging on their starters in the offseason, leaving few ᴀssets and no cap space to fill out the roster.
Tired legs are a possible consequence as the Knicks entered Friday at No. 22 in net rating in fourth quarters at -2.9 while being outscored by 28 points.
Conversely, for the first three quarters, they were ranked no lower than No. 8 in net rating and outscored the opposition by 244.