Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Can Steve Nash Resist the Curse?

 

Steve Nash, Will He Beat the Odds?

The phrase “those who can, do; those that can’t, teach” is often used to point fun at teachers. With some minor word twisting, it can be applicable to some coaches, too, in that “those who can do, often can’t teach.”

Three out of the four NBA teams that have reached this year’s respective Conference Finals (LA Lakers, Boston Celtics and Miami Heat) and possibly all four teams (if the Denver Nuggets are able to win their series against the LA Clippers) are governed by head coaches who had zero NBA playing experience. Yet, the Brooklyn Nets, a team that is looking to have an inspiring 2021 campaign with the likes of Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving, decided to hire Steve Nash, an NBA Hall of Fame point guard.

Nash is a highly intelligent and skilled player. He created the “run and gun” Phoenix Suns which helped them reach the Western Conference Finals, named a seven-time NBA All-Star, and even led the Canadian National Team to earning silver and bronze medals in several international tournaments. Nash also was hired by the Golden State Warriors as a part-time consultant during two of their NBA Championship runs. Despite all these accolades, Nash has yet to serve in any meaningful coaching capacity.  So, placing him as the promising Brooklyn Nets’ head coach is analogous to throwing a child in the twelve-foot end of a swimming pool before teaching him how to swim in the three foot end.

History is not on Nash’s side either. Sixteen people have become NBA head coaches without any prior coaching experience.

Year

Team

Coach

Seasons

W

L

PCT

Playoff appearances

Series won

2020

BRK

Steve Nash

?

?

?

?

?

?

2014

NYK

Derek Fisher

2

40

96

29%

0

0

2014

GSW

Steve Kerr

6

337

138

71%

5

18

2013

BRK

Jason Kidd

1

44

38

54%

1

1

2011

GSW

Mark Jackson

3

121

109

53%

2

1

2008

CHI

Vinny Del Negro

2

82

82

50%

2

0

2005

MIN

Kevin McHale

1

19

12

61%

0

0

2000

IND

Isiah Thomas

3

131

115

53%

3

0

1999

ORL

Doc Rivers

5

171

168

50%

3

0

1997

IND

Larry Bird

3

147

67

69%

3

7

1995

BOS

M.L. Carr

2

48

116

29%

0

0

1994

LAL

Magic Johnson

1

5

11

31%

0

0

1993

DAL

Quinn Buckner

1

13

69

16%

0

0

1992

DEN

Dan Issel

3

96

102

48%

1

1

1987

PHO

Dick Van Arsdale

1

14

12

54%

0

0

1980

SDC

Paul Silas

3

78

168

32%

0

0

 

The average winning percentage for these sixteen coaches is a subpar 43.75%. And though it is hard to fathom that Nash will have the paltry coaching records that his  colleagues Fisher and Buckner experienced, it’s even harder to suppress the expectations, especially in a city like New York who irrationally considers all their teams to be championship contenders, that Nash will reach heights similar to Bird or Kerr. The CornerCube believes that Nash will reach Bird’s average, but not reach the winning percentage of Steve Kerr.

Derek Fisher, Possibly Puzzled on Why He Took The Knicks Job

The reason for this is because of the psychological theory called, “the curse of expertise.” In L. Jon Wertheim’s and Sam Sommers’ book called, This is Your Brain on Sports, they summarize this psychological theory (in sports terms) as, “the better we get at a task, the worse we often become at articulating what we’re doing. So it is that the Great Ones often . . . struggle to communicate what has always come naturally to them.” People forget that “being an expert at doing something doesn’t always translate into being an expert at explaining how to do it.” Experts, in this case great players, see and mentally organize the world differently than others – they have greater visual skills/anticipatory skills/motor skills – but have difficulty realizing that they are actually experiencing these skills. In other words, experts can’t share with others these skills because the expert themselves don’t realize fully these skills.

The Nets have several positives on their side. The first is that they have two all-stars, in Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant, to help alleviate any of Nash’s growing pains. Luke Walton, an interim head coach for the Golden State Warriors, could directly credit Steph Curry, Kevin Durant, and Klay Thompson with making him look like a Hall of Fame NBA coach (it wouldn’t be until Walton was hired the subsequent season by the Lakers to realize his true coaching value). The second positive is that Nash is a willing participant and willing to overcome the curse of expertise. First, Nash can use data to help determine which coaching concepts provide the best results and, second, is that Nash has had time to reflect and (possibly) take notes on what he struggled with in basketball prior to becoming great. This way of thinking forces the expert to have to think about what they did to overcome their past difficulties. Unfortunately, the best method for an expert to overcome the curse is to shadow a coach or in laymen’s terms – have prior coaching experience.

Monday, September 7, 2020

CAN HE BE STOPPED?

MOVE OVER DC POLITICIANS, DAN SNYDER IS DC'S TOP CREEP

By: Kris Mead


"King" Daniel Marc Snyder

Despite its ability to subvert the NFL Draft to an online forum, revert team meetings to Zoom meetings, limit the number of fans, if any, into stadiums and prevent NFL preseason games from being played, the Coronavirus lacked the power to prevent Daniel Snyder, the Washington Football Team’s owner, from notching one more hole in his pervert belt.

Snyder has come under scrutiny after the Washington Post reported that Snyder requested  a private video be produced for him  containing the “good bits” of the Washington Football Team’s 2008 cheerleader video, chronicling their swim suit calendar photo shoot. The “good bits” were moments when cheerleaders’ nipples were inadvertently exposed “as the women shifted positions or adjusted props.” It should go without saying that none of the cheerleaders gave their consent nor did any of the cheerleaders know that a “good bits” video was being made for Snyder and his upper crust henchmen to drool over. It’s not too farfetched to imagine that Snyder would hit “pause” the moment a cheerleader’s sand covered breast slipped out from under the beads covering her nipple, while a grin creeped over his smudgy, pompous face, as he slowly exhaled, eased back in his leather office chair and placed his feet up on his oak desk, knowing that he, Daniel Snyder, was king. How could anyone stop him?

Past history has shown that unless Daniel Snyder is found guilty or admits to any crime, the NFL will refuse to do anything. Only twice in recent history has the NFL come down on an owner. The last time was in 2014 when Colts’ owner, Jim Irsay, pleaded guilty to driving impaired and received a “six game” suspension and $500,000 fine. In 1999 49ers owner, Edward J. DeBartolo Jr., was suspended from the team for a year and fined after pleading guilty for failing to report a felony.

Daniel Snyder’s likelihood of pleading or being found guilty of a crime of voyeurism is extremely low. This is because the crime is typically hard to prove and very few statistics exist to help rectify the rate of prosecutions, which lends to the idea that voyeurism is hardly prosecuted.  

Former Washington Football Club Employees 
Who Have Alleged Sexual Harassment During 
Their Employment Under Daniel Snyder and His
Team

In turn, Roger Goodell, and the other thirty-one owners have decided that the best course of action is to wait for the results of an internal investigation, initiated and funded by the Washington Football Team. It’s an understatement to say that Roger Goodell has again done too little against one of the “lords” of his realm. Roger Goodell, without any consent from the other owners, can suspend Daniel Snyder and/or fine Snyder up to $500,000. It would seem only right to temporarily suspend Daniel Snyder as an independent internal investigation, hired by the league, not hired by the very actors who are to be investigated, thoroughly produces an accurate report of what actually occurred in the upper echelon of FedExField.

If common sense isn’t enough for Roger Goodell to act prudently, it may be the fact that his league is vastly behind the times. As more police murders are captured on video and more citizens are demanding change, the NFL sits there in an awkward position of supporting the Black Lives Matter movement, yet also being on the side of the suppressor when the league unilaterally black balled Colin Kaepernick out of the NFL. The league now has the opportunity to take a stance against sexual harassment and promote female empowerment by uniting as one against an owner who has repeatedly shown total disregard for women, minorities and proper decency to fellow humans.

The NBA united to dispense of the racist Los Angeles Clippers owner, Donald Sterling. Just recently Dell Roy Hansen, the owner of the Major League Soccer club, Real Salt Lake, has agreed to sell the team after Major League Soccer stated it would begin an investigation (note, it isn’t Hansen or his team conducting their own investigation into themselves) into Hansen’s alleged arrogant statements concerning his team’s postponement of a game, in protest against police brutality.

Why is it so hard for Roger Goodell to do the same?

The NFL will claim that after extensively reviewing the Washington Football Team’s internal investigation there was some behavior found to be unacceptable in the workplace, and that the team has assured the league that it will take steps to remedy these issues. No follow-up will happen, no punishment directed at Snyder – the figure who has reigned over the team’s “unacceptable workplace behavior”- and the NFL won’t have to worry about Snyder for sixty days when another lewd action ekes itself out of Snyder’s castle.

The NFL, its owners, and Goodell preside over the most aggressive sport in America, yet quiver when they are tasked with having to issue discipline against one of their own.  The NFL takes great pride in supporting breast cancer awareness. They should invest that same energy and platform  into an equally just cause - ending sexual harassment.


Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Mississippi's Mistake


Image result for the egg bowl
The Magnolia State also known as The Hospitality State is known for what? According to the Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit healthcare foundation, Mississippi is ranked last among all states for health care. With that said, Mississippi does rank first in obesity with 35.2% of its citizens able to make that claim. If you aren’t sold on Mississippi after those two little factoids, here are two more – it has the second highest unemployment rate (5.6%) and the lowest per capita personal income ($35,444). What else does Mississippi have? Well, it has this little college football rivalry called, The Egg Bowl.

The Egg Bowl, or its more formal name, “The Battle for the Golden Egg”, is a college football rivalry between the Mississippi State Bulldogs and Ole Miss (The University of Mississippi) Rebels (yes, Ole Miss’ team is named after the traitorous, racist, and losing, side of the American Civil War). The game is the tenth longest uninterrupted college football rivalry, dating back to their first meeting in 1901. Although neither team has ever been anything close to remarkable, the third world country that is Mississippi has provided America with entertainment.

In just the last three meetings there has been either a full out brawl or some sort of unsportsmanlike conduct penalty due to a player finding his inner “Old Yeller” and acting as though he is pissing on the field. The most recent meeting, 2019, has been given the beautiful title of “The Piss, the Miss and the Double Dismiss.” Ole Miss was behind Mississippi State 21-14 and only nine seconds remained in the game. Ole Miss receiver, Elijah Moore, caught a touchdown pass, but after the score he was assessed a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for pretending to act like a dog urinating in the endzone. In turn, the Ole Miss kicker was forced to kick a 35-yard extra point, rather than a typical 20-yard extra point. The kicker missed the extra point and Mississippi State won 21-20. The “double dismiss” part comes into play because both head coaches would be fired at the end of the season. Ole Miss’ head coach was fired due to his lack of a heartfelt apology about his player inexplicitly pretending to urinate on the field and also the fact that he went 15-21 in three seasons with the Rebels. Mississippi State fired its coach after they lost their bowl game because of “off-field issues.” Ironically the Old Yeller urinating reenactment was not the first time that either Ole Miss’ head coach or the Egg Bowl had witnessed.

Image result for the egg bowl brawl
 In 2017 Ole Miss’ wide receiver and now Seattle Seahawk wide receiver, D.J. Metcalf, mimicked the Mississippi’s State’s mascot, a bulldog, by pretending to urinate like a dog on the field. In that latter case, the Ole Miss head coach didn’t give a lackluster apology because he didn’t give any apology. Finally, though the 2018 Egg Bowl lacked canine urinations, it made up with the fact that there was an entire bench clearing brawl between the two teams. The referees ejected three Mississippi State players and one Ole Miss player and were so confused that every other player was given an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty (if a player receives two in one game, that player is ejected from the contest). This brawl would go down as “The Egg Brawl.”

The vacancies at these two wilting Magnolian institutions of higher learning and dubious historic pride should’ve been a moment in which each university could hire a head coach who would instill discipline, a sense of respect, and ingrain the  ideals of good sportsmanship. However, the two biggest schools in Mississippi continued their state’s trend and made the wrong choices.

Ole Miss elected to hire the ever elusive and highly scandalous, Lane Kiffin, as its newest head coach. Kiffin has the unenviable knack for picking fights with the people who have hired him. Kiffin’s first head coaching job, one year with the Oakland Raiders, ended disastrously. Not only was his team uninspiring on the field with a record of 4-12, but when Oakland’s owner asked Kiffin to resign, Kiffin refused. Raiders owner, Al Davis, would then fire Kiffin over the phone for cause.  After an ugly arbitration it was discovered that Kiffin could be fired for cause (i.e. Kiffin would not receive the $2.6 million left on his Oakland contract) due to making excuses and outright lies while with the Raiders. Ironically, being fired over the phone would be Kiffin’s least embarrassing method of dischargement. In Kiffin’s last year as the head coach of USC (2010-2013) he was fired basically on the tarmac of LAX, after his team returned from a dismal loss at the hands of the sclerotic Arizona State Sun Devils. The level of audacity required for a university’s athletic director and president to ask their head football coach, in front of his entire team, to exit the team bus at 3am and go to a remote office at the airport where he was told he was no longer employed, is afforded to only the lowest of the low scumbags. It appears Kiffin is the lowest of the low. It’s not too far removed to argue that a coach who was fired over the phone and then, in a separate coaching job, in front of his entire team, must have an arsenal of repugnant personality traits.

Image result for tenessee rioting after lane kiffin leftAnother unique “Kiffin trait” is his talent at jumping ship. Kiffin abruptly left after one year coaching the University of Tennessee (2009) to take the job at USC (most likely because of money but he did coach as an assistant when USC was in their prime in the early to mid-2000’s). Although Kiffin’s tenure at Tennessee was uninspiring, going 7-6, he created such an uproar due to his sudden abandonment that students started setting fire to the campus. Two attributes should be discerned from this event. The first is that Lane resembles “The Titanic” movie’s Cal Hockley, Rose’s fiancĂ© and complete douche, when Cal quickly finds a lost child in order to get himself on board one of the few remaining lifeboats. The other is the realization of how low Tennessee Volunteers’ football has tumbled to be willing to burn the campus because an average coach left. Arson is only viable in certain situations (1) executing the Russian’s scorched earth policy in their war against Napoleon and (2) if a college’s hall of fame head coach takes the head coaching job of said universities’ arch rival. Neither of those events happened here and, with all due respect, Tennessee dodged a bullet by losing Lane.

Kiffin’s last, but not least, irreputable talent is his knack for running his mouth. His “talented” rhetoric came in his short time with the Volunteers. In the first instance, Kiffin made a statement in which he claimed that then Florida head coach, Urban Meyer, was breaking NCAA recruiting rules by calling a recruit while that recruit was visiting another campus. Kiffin went even further and stated the recruit’s name – Nu’Keese Richardson. Kiffin, by naming the recruit, broke SEC recruiting rules by which recruits could not be mentioned by name by coaches. Further, the SEC publicly reprimanded Kiffin, and Kiffin was forced to give a public apology to the Florida athletic director and Urban Meyer. Later Kiffin would put his foot in his mouth when, in an attempt to cause wide receiver recruit Alshon Jeffrey not to choose to play for the University of South Carolina, he stated that all the players who go to the University of South Carolina end up pumping gas the rest of their lives. Alshon Jeffreys would go on to be an NFL Pro Bowl wide receiver and a Super Bowl champion.

 

Mike Leach, Mississippi State’s new head coach, doesn’t have the brash controversies or senseless departures like Kiffin, but what he doesn’t lack is the need to be noticed. Leach should be credited with inventing the “air-raid” offense which spawned popularity of the “spread offense” throughout college football. As head coach he was also able to turnaround two lackluster programs – Texas Tech and Washington State.

For all Leach’s wizardry regarding offensive efficiency and scoring ability, he seems to go braindead when it comes to defense.  His Washington State teams (2012 thru 2018) only twice finished in the top half of the PAC-12 conference in terms of overall defense. In 2019, Leach’s last year as WSU’s head coach, the team finished third to last in overall defense. It is no surprise that Leach was unable to ever win the PAC-12.

Image result for mike leach president trumpIn some respects, it appears Leach’s offensive ingenuity and being one of the few college football coaches to possess a JD, gives Leach a warrant to be outspoken. Some of these comments are quite funny, like when Leach was asked by a reporter for wedding advice. On the other hand, and in the climate of fake-news, led by President Trump himself, the media’s relishing of Leach’s outspokenness has inspired him to believe whatever he says is holy. For instance, upon President Trump’s acquittal, Leach tweeted at 3a.m. (similar to the typical time that Trump goes on Twitter rants), “As an a American, does ANYONE, REALLY want Mitt Romney on their side?!” Leach is referencing to how Romney was the sole Republican senator to vote for Trump’s removal.  Leach would continue a litany of grammatically incorrect tweets about his dislike for Romney. In a December interview Leach stated, “I haven’t followed it [Trump’s impeachment] too closely, but it’s clearly political. That doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure that out.” Leach should also understand that it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to question whether his 3 a.m. incoherent political twitter rant was alcohol fueled.

It is no secret that Leach is a friend and fan of Donald Trump. It is also no secret that Leach has only coached in conservative portions of the United States – Lubbock (TX), Spokane (WA), and now, Starksville (MS) – so Leach may be trying to drum up support from the local population (a “when in Rome” mentality).

Image result for lane kiffin
The Cornercube is excited for the 2020 Egg Bowl. Not because it will be meaningful to the nation, but because it will be filled with idiotic, unspeakable, and seamlessly reckless football.  Both schools needed coaches who would instill discipline, but instead chose coaches who love themselves more than the schools that they coach. Both coaches, Kiffin and Leach, have made themselves famous not because of their college dynasties (they don’t have any), nor their inspiring conference championships (they have not won any Power 5 conference championships) but because they know how to make headlines, albeit the wrong way. At best they will coach their teams from being the dumpster fires of the SEC to becoming the mediocre, unpredictable, teams both coaches tend to inspire. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and LSU will continue to reign the SEC. Mississippi State and Ole Miss will be like the state they represent – out of shape, underperforming, misguided and purposelessly existing.  

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