Coming
into this season, things were going to be different for the Memphis Grizzlies.
Gone were three very important players in Tony Allen, Zach Randolph, and Vince
Carter, who left in free agency for the New Orleans Pelicans, and Sacramento
Kings respectably. The team led by All-Star center Marc Gasol, and lead guard
Mike Conley got off to a solid start this season at 5-1. Since that time
however, things have gone very south with just two wins in their last 13 games.
After that eighth consecutive loss versus the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday night
98-88, the team felt something needed to change.
That
change was the firing of head coach David Fizdale on Monday, who led the
Grizzlies (7-12) to the postseason in his first year as head coach. The team
was the No. 7 Seed last season, and battled the Western Conference runner-up
San Antonio Spurs tooth and nail before falling 4-2. He was 50-51 in his
one-year plus with the Grizzlies. Associate head coach J.B. Bickerstaff was
announced as the team interim head coach for the rest of the season in a press
conference on Tuesday.
Things
have gotten much tougher after that previously mentioned 5-1 beginning for the
Grizzlies, who are currently mired in an eight-game losing streak. They are
without Conley, who has been shelved the past seven games because of a left
Achilles injury, and is not expected back any time soon.
Besides
being without their star guard, the team’s other star in Gasol, who also had a
career-year last season under Fizdale, was not happy about being on the bench
while his team made a dent in the Nets’ (7-13) 19-point lead in the fourth
period with a 12-3 run to start the quarter.
“I
don’t like it one bit, and I’m more [angry] that I can ever show. But, for the
benefit of the team, I have to show leadership, and continue to do my job,”
Gasol said after the game.
He
also said, “I’m just as competitive as anybody. I hate not playing. That’s what
I value the most. If I’m not on the floor, I’m not valued. I’m sure (the
coaching staff) knew that would hurt me the most.”
Fizdale
said after the game that he made his decision based on the reserves were
playing well, and that they cut into the Nets’ lead.
When
asked about Gasol’s reaction about being on the pine down the stretch, Fizdale
said, “Nothing against Gasol.”
“We’ll
address if it needs to be addressed, but it was a pretty simple decision what I
did. It’s nothing against him. I’m trying to win a game. I’m desperate.”
That
is what can be said about what the front office of the Grizzlies made the
decision they did in firing Fizdale, as the team is in its longest losing
streak since a similar skid from Feb. 11-Mar. 3, 2009.
General
Manager Chris Wallace stated as much on Tuesday, when he said that the overall
product, and not just the decision to sit Gasol is why the move was made.
Wallace also came to the defense of the team’s starting center of him being
labeled a “coach killer.”
“There
were bigger trends than just the relationship between the two of them,” Wallace
said of Gasol and Fizdale. “It just hasn’t been going well for us after a good
start. And there was no indication that it was going to change magically any
time soon. Unfortunately, we are underperforming, [by] even the lowest of
preseason expectations. We are an organization of high expectations for our
team, so a change had to be made.”
Not
having you starting lead guard recently, and the fact that the guy you signed
to a big- time deal in forward Chandler Parsons has spent most of his time on
the sideline because of injury will put you behind the eight ball in the tough
Western Conference.
It
also does not help matters that the rest of the roster of youngsters like
Dillion Brooks, Deyonta Davis, JaMychal Green, Wayne Selden, James Ennis III,
and Jarell Martin are trying to earn their stripes in the NBA, and that
veterans like Tyreke Evans, Ben McLemore, Chandler Parsons, and Mario Chalmers have injury
histories, or inconsistency in their play on the floor that made them
unattractive for other teams to take a risk on signing.
To
bring this into clearer context, McLemore had just begun getting back into the
playing rotation after being shelved the first 11 games as he rehabbed from
injury. Green, the starting power forward a season ago, just returned after a
sprained ankle in the team’s 103-91 season opener versus the New Orleans
Pelicans (11-9).
On
top of that, the identity of this team has changed from years past. For years
the Grizzlies’ mantra was “Grit and Grind,” which was led by Gasol, Conley,
Allen, and Randolph. It was the description of their ability to score inside
led by Gasol, and Randolph, and their ability to lock people down defensively
led by Allen’s ability to take on the best perimeter wings in the game.
To
point how much has changed from the start of this season to recently, the
Grizzlies were averaging 101.5 points the first 11 games of this season, while
holding the opposition to just 98.0 points, on just 42.4 percent from the
field, and 32.2 percent from three-point range. Over the last eight games, the Grizzlies are averaging just 95.1 points,
while giving up 104.9 points to their opponents, on 45.8 percent shooting from
the floor overall, and 39.9 percent from three-point range.
Here
is the other reality of where the Grizzlies find themselves, Gasol, and Conley
under Fizdale had career seasons as mentioned earlier. Gasol had expanded his
game to where he was shooting three-pointers, and making them. Conley became a
guy who along with being a solid playmaker developed into a go-to-scorer, which
he put on full display in the postseason against the Spurs last spring.
Along
with a great coach, Fizdale going back to his time as a longtime assistant with
the Miami Heat, he fostered great relationships, especially with the likes of
future Hall of Famers, and perennial All-Stars in four-time MVP of the
Cleveland Cavaliers LeBron James, and Dwyane Wade, who led the Heat to four
straight trips to the NBA Finals from 2010-14, and two straight championships
in 2012, and 2013.
He
even had that effect on star players who have seen him from a far like All-Star
guard for the Portland Trail Blazers Damian Lillard.
Which
is why when the news came out of Fizdale’s ousting, they all took to twitter to
express their feelings. James, @KingJames said, “I need some answers. Feels
like my man was a fall guy. Carter, now with the Sacramento Kings,
@mrvincecarter15 said, “Wow smh [shaking my head] just wow!!!” Lillard had the
same reaction, @Dame_Lillard, saying simply, “Smh.”
Fizdale even has respect from other NBA head coaches likes Warriors head man Steve Kerr who said he was schocked when he heard the news.
"I think David Fizdale is one of the best coaches in the league. He's a brilliant guy. He's got an edge to him. He's tough. He's smart."
"Tough time raping my mind around it. Tough time even sleeping last night thinking about it," Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra said of his former assistant before his team's Tuesday night tilt at the Cavaliers. "It just shows you how challenging this league is. He's a brilliant coach. He'll get another opportunity, but why does it even have to get to that?."
Fizdale even has respect from other NBA head coaches likes Warriors head man Steve Kerr who said he was schocked when he heard the news.
"I think David Fizdale is one of the best coaches in the league. He's a brilliant guy. He's got an edge to him. He's tough. He's smart."
"Tough time raping my mind around it. Tough time even sleeping last night thinking about it," Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra said of his former assistant before his team's Tuesday night tilt at the Cavaliers. "It just shows you how challenging this league is. He's a brilliant coach. He'll get another opportunity, but why does it even have to get to that?."
It
is that kind of reaction that does not make the optics look good for Gasol, who
said of the coaching change on Tuesday, “Nobody likes to see a coach change
during the season because you don’t have enough time to work on stuff. I was a
little bit shocked by it.”
The
person in charge of getting the team, who has gone 14-26 dating back to Mar. 1
of last season is Bickerstaff, who also has a close relationship with Fizdale,
who he has known since he was 17 years old.
Fizdale
was in Bickerstaff’s wedding, and Bickerstaff came to Memphis last season to
help the longtime Heat assistant succeed.
If
there is anything that can be made positive of this whole situation is that
this will not be Bickerstaff’s first rodeo. He took over on an interim basis
for the Houston Rockets back in the 2015-16 season when now NBATV analyst, and
Hall of Famer Kevin McHale was fired 11 games in. The team went 37-34 to make
the playoffs, where they lost to eventual Western Conference Champion Golden
State Warriors 4-1.
“Through
the emotions, you have to come up with a plan, and hopefully that plan right
the ship a little bit,” Bickerstaff said Tuesday.
"In order for us to be the team that we want to be, especially with Mike out, a tone of that responsibility is going to fall on Marc's shoulders, We've seen how good Marc can be, and we need to do things to help Marc. Put him in positions to be successful. Support him. Those types of things, but we need him to be Marc Gasol."
"In order for us to be the team that we want to be, especially with Mike out, a tone of that responsibility is going to fall on Marc's shoulders, We've seen how good Marc can be, and we need to do things to help Marc. Put him in positions to be successful. Support him. Those types of things, but we need him to be Marc Gasol."
He
also said jokingly that he does not have magical pixy dust on hand to turn the
Grizzlies around.
On
Monday, the Memphis Grizzlies gave the axe to a head coach who again got career
seasons out of his two stars last season in Mike Conley, and Marc Gasol. Who
coached them up to bring an out of this world effort against the mighty Spurs
in the First Round this past postseason. Who represented the franchise with
such grace, and class on major social issues the country has had to grapple with
over the past few months. That is guy the Grizzlies gave the axe too, and while
a new head coach is in place on an interim basis in Bickerstaff, the question
is are they in a better place than where they were over the weekend?
That
is the question Bickerstaff, and the team are going to have to answer for the
rest of this season, and that will not be easy, even if Conley does comeback.
An even bigger question for the organization past this season is can they build around Gasol, and Conley on max deals they signed over the past couple of summers, especially with the fact that the Grizzlies have not been a team that attracts big time free agents?
The only major signing they have had in recent memory is Parsons, who so far in the second year of a four-year, $94 million deal has as mentioned been more known for being injured, and making up 23 percent of the Grizzlies salary cap space for this season.
An even bigger question for the organization past this season is can they build around Gasol, and Conley on max deals they signed over the past couple of summers, especially with the fact that the Grizzlies have not been a team that attracts big time free agents?
The only major signing they have had in recent memory is Parsons, who so far in the second year of a four-year, $94 million deal has as mentioned been more known for being injured, and making up 23 percent of the Grizzlies salary cap space for this season.
Information,
statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 11/27/17 news from www.nba.com;
11/27/17 6:30 p.m., and 11/28/17 5:30 p.m. editions of NBATV’s “10 Before Tip,” with Jared Greenberg; www.nba.com/games/20171126/BKNMEM#/recap; www.espn.com/nba/team/schedule/_/name/mem/memphis-grizzlies;
www.google.com;
11/27/17 www.espn.com
story, “Grizzlies GM on firing: ‘No Indication That It Was Going to Change
Magically;’” and 11/28/17 43 p.m. edition of “NBA: The Jump,” on ESPN with
Rachel Nichols, Zach Lowe, and Paul Pierce.