He got the job four months ago. If they do fire him, they'll be on their fourth coach in two seasons.
The Kings ladies and gentleman.
The Kings ladies and gentleman.
quote:I had the same thought.
George Karl once had a roster with Carmelo, Allen Iverson, JR Smith, Kenyon Martin, Marcus Camby, and others. I think it speaks volumes if he is trying to get rid of cousins (if true).
quote:IF Cal ever goes to the NBA, he will sign with an elite team. Cavs if they get rid of Blatt or Spurs if Pop retires for example. He absolutely will not go to a messed up team like the Kings, 76ers, Lakers or Knicks. Lakers and Knicks would be ideal for Cal if they every get their **** together and sign some high-end stars...but that looks highly unlikely considering the recent trend.
Not to go all Germans, but this happened over a week ago and Cal said no
quote:Why?
Rondo and the Kings sign a one year deal.
No word on whether Karl has hung himself in the bathroom.
quote:Great point. Those Karl teams in Denver were good but not great. You had slightly past their primes Camby/Martin/Billups (or Iverson) matched with prime Melo and some intriguing bench pieces like J.R. Smith but they were no match for SA/LA. But people also forget that Karl got a Sonics team to the Finals and went up against Jordan's Bulls, and he got a Bucks team to the ECF where the 2nd/3rd best players were Sam Cassell and Glenn Robinson.
He didn't do much in the playoffs in Denver, but he had the misfortune of coaching in the West against Pop and Jackson, and going to war with Carmelo when Dallas had Dirk, SA had Duncan-Manu-Parker, and LA had Kobe-Shaq/Pau. That's 2 HOF coaches and a half dozen HOF players. Simply put, even in his best years, Karl never went to battle in the playoffs with a team that was as good as SA, Dallas, or LA, so it's hard to fault him too much for losing. He went up against HOF coaches and players and lost repeatedly. He can still be a good coach despite that.