No Bias, No Spin, Just Basketball

Showing posts with label George Karl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Karl. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Kings hire Karl

The Sacramento Kings have officially hired veteran head coach George Karl and an announcement is expected in the coming days.  Karl will coach his first game with the franchise February 20th against the Boston Celtics.  Karl’s record as an NBA coach is 1,131-756 in the regular season and 80-105 in the playoffs. Karl led the Denver Nuggets to a 57-25 record in his last season before being fired in 2013.




Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/sports/nba/sacramento-kings/article9744521.html#storylink=cpy

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Cousins addresses potential hiring of George Karl

"I don't fire coaches or hire them. Everyone knows I liked and respected Coach Malone.  I didn't want that to happen. I'm not involved in any coaching decisions. I've heard that George Karl is a great coach.....If that is the direction the organization chooses, I'll support it. Out of respect for Coach Corbin, I hadn't planned on making any comments about what is out there. But at this point I felt some things needed to be clarified"

Monday, February 9, 2015

George Karl to return soon?....Updated

Veteran NBA coach George Karl could be returning to the sidelines very soon.  Karl used Twitter recently to indirectly express interest in the recently open Orlando Magic coaching position but reports now indicate that Karl and the Sacramento Kings are engaged in intense conversations regarding their coaching position.

Update:  Reports indicate that the Kings have made a contract proposal to Karl.



Sunday, June 22, 2014

Q&A: George Karl

Courtesy of Jerry Zgoda

1. What are you doing here in Eden Prairie, of all places?
I kind of like trying to do out-of-the-box things. I’ll go to Australia and India, just to get the pulse of basketball in different places. I’ve always enjoyed doing stuff like that. I’ve always thought the high school coach and the Division III and the junior-college coach don’t get a lot of love and social reward. They’re good coaches. There are good coaches everywhere. Just because they’re not in the NBA doesn’t mean they don’t know basketball. The coaches here, I was impressed with their passion, their drive and knowledge. My impression after interviewing them is they were very soulful, you could feel their commitment, their desire.

2. What do you think the NBA’s latest trend, hiring rookie coaches?
If I was coaching, I’d be happy right now with all the guys who are going to need some time to learn how to do it. That was always my feeling when you’re established with your team. Like Golden State is a good team, but you’re probably happy they’re hiring an inexperienced coach rather than a guy you know is credible. Steve Kerr could become a great coach, but I think it’s going to take time. Same with Derek [Fisher]. Derek has a great demeanor, a great personality, but he’s going to make mistakes.

3. You proved in Denver that a team can trade away a star and keep winning after Carmelo Anthony left. What do you think of the offers you’ve heard rumored for Kevin Love, such as three guys you’ve coached in Denver: Kenneth Faried, Wilson Chandler and Arron Afflalo?
They’re all good basketball players. I don’t know if any of them are All-Stars. I think Faried probably has a chance. But they’re not a star-quality player.

4. Do you think Golden State’s Klay Thompson can be?
I think Klay and David Lee are. I think they can be, yeah. I think Klay can become the best shooter in basketball. I think Flip likes that kind of player, too, a guy who’s a shooter off screens. And I thought Klay was very good defensively.

5. How do you like your new career, doing television commentary for ESPN?
I don’t know if I like it. I enjoy it. I don’t think I’m going to get excited going to Bristol [Connecticut, home to ESPN] now. But when I get there … you stay in the game. I’ve been blessed by this game. I can’t complain. If I don’t ever get another job again, I’ve had a great career. I want one more chance. I want one more opportunity but if the game doesn’t give it to me, I can go home knowing the game has been a blessing in my life. I’ll always have something to do with the game. I’m sixth now on the [all-time win] list. The only drive I have left now is Phil’s next. I want to get ahead of Phil.


Friday, November 29, 2013

NBA Q&A: George Karl

Courtesy of Dave Krieger

Q: So how have you been?

A: Well, you know, the summer was normal. My son plays summer league and we do family things in the summer time. Everything was normal. I think the emptiness, the shallowness of ‘What the hell’s going on?’ probably didn’t start until mid-September, when the guys are back in town. You know they’re working out and everybody’s in the gym. September’s a fun time because you’re starting to get excited but you don’t have any pressure. The pressure doesn’t start until you actually start practicing.

ESPN has been fun. I mean, it’s incredible what ESPN has done. I was there 8 1/2 years ago and it’s an amazing transformation. The town of Bristol now is the capitol of sports TV. And why I have no idea. But it is. And it’s growing and growing. When I used to be there, it was so much slower and smaller. It was a small town when I was there 8 1/2 years ago. Now it’s a big city. It just blows my mind.

Q: Do you think you have a future there?

A: It’s not something that I necessarily want to do the rest of my life. I would probably rather stay in the gym.

Q: Have any coaching opportunities come up yet?

A: No. I’m hoping they don’t come this quickly.
Taking a team in the middle of the year is not the most advantageous situation. We had a helluva ride here [32-8 following Jeff Bzdelik (13-15) and Michael Cooper (4-10) in 2005]. It’s the only time I’ve really ever done it. I’m sorry — when I went back to Seattle in ’92, I guess [27-15 following K.C. Jones (18-18) and Bob Kloppenburg (2-2)]. Seattle was desperate to get back in.

There are parts of how my life is now that I’m enjoying. I’m enjoying scheduling time to see my family, hanging out at my kid’s school and being involved in the neighborhood and all that good stuff. As you get older, you probably like that more.

Having more time being at home, being with Kim and Kaci and some more time to socialize, and then I have my time to go to ESPN, which connects you. And I have some other endeavors, doing some videos and talking about maybe doing a book. I’m not a big book writer because I don’t think I want to tell all the truth right now. I think that’s the next chapter.

Q: When you’re done?

A: There are some things, like cancer and the empathy and the consciousness I would like to bring to my story, a lot of people say it would be a good story. There are some other possibilities. Teaching. Maybe talking about what I think about my career and my life, not a biography but more what I’ve learned. What I’ve learned from people. What I’ve learned from Phil Jackson, what I’ve learned from Dean Smith, what I’ve learned from Larry Brown, what I’ve learned from Doug Moe. And then also maybe have a writer go talk to them about me, because I’m not afraid of somebody saying, ‘Well, I think George is a jackass.’ That’s been written before.

Q: Have your views changed at all about what happened to you here?

A: I still don’t have a tremendous understanding of it. It’s funny, when I walk around Denver, people still think I’m the coach. They’re like, ‘Hey, good luck tomorrow!’

Q: Do you watch the games?

A: When I have a relaxed moment, I do. I don’t ever say, ‘I can’t do that because I have to watch the Nuggets game.’ It’s really strange but in my discussions with ESPN and amongst other situations in TV and radio, Denver doesn’t come up. It just seems like the rest of the nation doesn’t think they’re relevant. So I think they’ve got to re-prove themselves.

Q: They’re playing better lately.

A: (Nods). JaVale [McGee] getting hurt, one, opened up the lane, and two, I think it makes it easier to coach the team. You can find minutes for four guys and you have one big guy, which you probably need. Against 30 or 40 percent of the teams, you need a big guy. But about 60 percent of the teams, the spirit of the team is to play fast.
Even in the first 10 games, I think it’s shown that they play better when they play fast. They’re actually playing at a faster pace than we did last year. I mean, it’s close.

Q: The original plan seemed to be to feed JaVale in the post. Can that work?

A: The thing we went to three or four or five years ago, of attacking, attacking, attacking, the first couple years we had Melo and we tried to balance it. We tried to attack and get Melo his isos and then he had some post-ups. What we found after the Melo trade was it’s better to say, ‘This is the way we play.’

What the whole thing comes down to is you can’t lose the strength of the team, and I think the last three or four games the game’s been tilting back to playing very aggressive. So it’ll be interesting where it ends up.

I love Ty (Lawson) having a great year. I’m happy for him. I’m happy for Timo (Mozgov) because in a lot of ways, I thought, what happened the last three or four years, the two guys that got screwed by me, by my decisions, were Birdman [Chris Anderson] and Timo. Both of them now seem to have found a place and that makes me happy.

Q: What’s your take on JaVale?

A: He came here as a player that played 30 minutes [in Washington] without earning that responsibility, was given that responsibility because they were a bad team. My year with him last year, I was trying to figure out what he was. I thought at the end of last year he earned the right to get more minutes this year but I don’t think he earned the right to be given 30 minutes.

Q: Did you ever have a sit-down within the organization about JaVale’s role?

A: I don’t remember that conversation directly, one-on-one, either with [owner] Josh [Kroenke] or even [former general manager] Masai [Ujiri]. I think they tried to lobby through my assistants quite frequently, especially Masai. But we were having such a fun year last year that the opportunity probably didn’t come up until we lost to Golden State.

Q: Have you relived that series much, or replayed it in your head?

A: Gallo’s injury took our defense. Say we were above average defensively, and I think that probably would be a good way of phrasing it. And we went from above average to ordinary. We had no versatility in our defensive schemes. Wilson [Chandler] was the only guy that we could maneuver around. And we run into an offensive team that was the best at what we did the worst — cover the three ball.

And then you take your versatility out and you’re playing two small guards that their guards can shoot over even with good defensive position. They took the momentum from us in Game 2, shooting the hell out of it, and Games 3 and 4, that building was, it had a karma to it. We took it to Game 6. It wasn’t my favorite series I’ve coached. I wish I would have done a better job trying to figure out how to give confidence to our offense and/or our defense. Even in our two wins, I thought they were on guts and grit more than they were on good basketball cohesiveness. I think we were trying to find answers quite often in that series and didn’t find answers. And that falls on the coach.

Q: Do you think Andre Iguodala was Mark Jackson’s “mole”?

A: No question.

Q: Does that bug you?

A: I just think that’s media hype. I mean, that series was not a physical series. Everybody wants to be more aggressive with the guy kicking your ass, so . . . .

Q: The media didn’t say it. Jackson said it.

A: I thought Mark had a lot of tricks in that series that were bush- . . . I don’t know. I don’t know what they were. Almost high-schoolish. They were beneath the NBA level. And they might have worked. They might have motivated his young team in a good way. You know, he’d announce a starting lineup and start another guy. C’mon, man. You think we’re not ready for that?

Q: Is your goal still to coach in the NBA again?

A: One more time.

Q: I’ve thought the best chance would be a situation like the one when you came here, a team that’s underperforming with nothing to lose.

A: It bothers me a little bit that no one realizes that coach Grg [Tim Grgurich] and I were two of the guys that started player development, and our history of developing ordinary players into better players is off the charts. It bothers me that our practice habits and how we prepare before the game and work our guys out is being copied by 10-15 teams in the NBA. It bothers me that not only did you have a winning program, you had a culture that was admired by other NBA people.
And I’m not saying it can’t be duplicated or done better. I know it can. But in the same sense, there’s a chance it can’t. I just thought it was a year too early, maybe two years too early to not try one year more to see if it would go a little further. Because it was pretty impressive. Statistically, it’s extremely impressive.

It might have a little Moneyball to it. It works in the regular season, doesn’t work in the playoffs. We’re aware of that. We’ll listen to that criticism and see how we’ll change it. I think Oakland [baseball's Athletics, the Moneyball model] has tried to change some of its philosophies with the Moneyball system.

Q: Are you still frustrated about the ending?

A: I’m not frustrated with eight and a half great years, fun years. The window of frustration is small compared to, I found a home and an unbelievable eight and a half years. To take not winning in the first round of the playoffs as your scapegoat, I don’t think you evaluated it fairly. That’s just my opinion. Obviously, there was a bigger opinion somewhere else.

Q: When did you decide that Denver would be your permanent home? Seemed like you really liked Milwaukee, too. Any other stops in the running?

A: My hope was to coach another two or three or four years, ride out this chapter of development and, you know, fade into the sunset. I would never live in Cleveland. I don’t think I’m a California guy. Seattle, it just rains too much. So I think you’re right, Milwaukee, when you get older I think you look for a home a little bit more, probably. But you know Boise has always had a good proximity to my first family. We hang out in McCall, Idaho in the summer time. My idea before Denver was I’d probably move to Boise and have a winter home in Phoenix or Tucson or someplace.

But now, Denver’s weather, its beauty . . . The street has always been nice to me. It still is. I get a lot of, ‘I’m a Nuggets fan but I’m more a George Karl fan because of what you’ve gone through.’ A lot of cancer patients, survivors, feel friendly enough to come talk to me about their story.

Q: What’s your foundation up to?

A: We do lots of work locally, including with the Boulder Community Hospital. We raise $100,000 a year and donate it to other charitable organizations that I think are really good for cancer in Denver. I have no desire to be in a national program. I want, whatever my foundation does, I think it’s all going to be in Colorado.

Q: Why is that?

A: In my history of advocacy, I think I’ve always thought about the national, federal side of it, and I think it’s too big to be successful. So over the last five or 10 years, I think you should work harder taking care of your community, being involved in your city, maybe even in your region, your town, because you can maybe have more of an impact. I used to write checks for presidential candidates and think whoever wins the presidency is important. Now I’ve come to the conclusion that the national government is basically a bank that’s kind of messed up. I don’t know that that’s the case with national cancer societies. I think the American Cancer Society of Colorado does a great job. But Colorado has an ability to be one of the top cancer care centers in the country. I think all of cancer care can be done better. I think we need to rethink how to do this better.

I’m a big advocate of integrative care. I think holistic and integrative care, bringing in meditation and acupuncture and massage and relaxation, I think we need to open our minds.

The society of cancer advocates reminds me of an NBA locker room. It has a lot of ego and a lot of money. Insurance companies — lot of ego, lot of money. Pharmaceutical companies — a lot of ego and a lot of money. Doctors — a lot of ego and a lot of money. Hospitals, non-profit, profit — ego, money.

I’m sure cancer is not the only situation like this. I’m sure diabetes might have the same nightmares.

Q: Do you address it the same way you address it in an NBA locker room?

A: I’ve never had the chance, but I would. I really think if we all would kind of work as a team, that we’ll all come out of it better off.

Q: How do you overcome ego and money?

A: (laughs). I’m better at ego than money, probably. I mean, millions of dollars have messed up a lot of parts of the game of basketball. If you’re playing for the money, I don’t know if you can be really good.

Q: Percentage-wise in the NBA, how many players in your experience are basically in it for the money?

A: More. It’s growing. Every year it’s gotten more.

Q: Less than half?

A: That would be interesting, to ask that question. I think almost all players now, in the summertime, are businessmen and are worrying about whatever, their brand and these words I keep hearing. But the great players still, when it comes October first or November first, they understand what 82 games is.

That’s why I admire LeBron a lot. I think he’s the best guy in basketball and he is possessed to win championships. I’m sure he understands that’s going to make him more money, but that’s not why he’s that way. He has a goal to catch Michael. He thinks he can. And he is driven.

If Julyan Stone would have that same passion, of just, ‘I want to get on the court, I want to play 15 minutes a game and I can do that,’ if that’s what his drive is, he’ll get there better than, you know, ‘If I get on the court I might make a couple million dollars a year.’ The drive’s got to be the passion for the game and I think the game has gotten so business-oriented, so agent-player relationship centered, that it’s hard to not say that money’s always going to be a part of the decision of where [a player] goes.

But I still think the great player is driven by the passion for the game and not by the check that he gets every two weeks.

Q: So what’s the plan? Wait for the phone to ring?

A: There are days I wish it would ring and there are days I don’t want it to ring. I mean, I watch the Knicks play and I wouldn’t want to be in that hell for a million dollars. It’s just New York City and the Garden and the immensity of the pressure. I think Mike Woodson is standing up to it with tremendous integrity.

Q: Best team in the West?

A: San Antonio, probably. I’m a Golden State fan. I’ve never seen a team with that many offensive weapons. David Lee and Bogut, you could run an offense through them and they could win games. If the Denver Nuggets had Bogut and David Lee, they’d be good. And they’re not among the top offensive options. Curry, Thompson, Barnes, Iguodala. They have so many weapons offensively that can blow up, and they’re doing a pretty good job with the defense. I think Houston and the Clippers are still in that stage of development that I think they could be very good by the end of the year, but they have their moments now when they struggle.

The team I like a lot and it bothers me is New Orleans. That Davis kid is coming and their three guys out front, Holiday and Gordon and Evans, can get to the rim, and they can score. Gordon can be a great shooter. And then they’ve got the Ryan Anderson kid who’s the best shooting four in basketball.

Q: So why does it bother you to like them?

A: I think they should be playing better. But I’m still on record that I like ‘em a lot. I like them because Anthony Davis is a basketball player. He’s not a big man. He’s a basketball player that’s seven feet tall. And I just think the game is about basketball players, not necessarily position players.




Monday, September 30, 2013

Karl joins ESPN

Last season's NBA Coach of the Year George Karl will join ESPN as a studio analyst.  Despite signing a multi-year contract, ESPN is aware that Karl desires to return to coaching and will keep his options open.

“I think they know and I know that in the right situation there’s always the possibility of going back to coaching,” Karl said. “I had a great time last year with Denver, but in the same sense I enjoyed my time there eight years ago, and it’s always fun to put yourself in kind of an analyst-type situation. And hopefully I can maybe give some insights that coaches are really important in this game. I think coaches are probably the key to winning championships as much as anything else.”



Monday, June 17, 2013

Karl doesn't want to coach a rebuilding team

Veteran NBA coach George Karl recently stated that he'd like to coach 3 to 4 more years.  Karl has coached the Cavaliers, Warriors, Sonics, Bucks, and most recently the Denver Nuggets.  

"I don't want to coach a rebuilding team." Karl said 






Friday, June 14, 2013

George Karl addresses what went wrong in Denver

The NBA world was shocked when the Denver Nuggets and George Karl decided to divorce.  Karl recently spoke to the Denver Post about the decision that the Nuggets made to move in a different direction.


On his conversation with team president Josh Kroenke upon being fired: 
‘Josh was nice and complimentary, said he’d honor my contract and the coaches. The conversation was on the decision, and I said, ‘I think I should tell you, I think it’s very stupid.’ And since then, I don’t understand it.’ On this past season, winning 57 games, and criticism that he didn’t develop the team’s young players well enough. ‘We won 57 wins and are in a great place. Continuity, consistency, togetherness all are so much more valuable than they have on their priority list than playing JaVale McGee or the young players. And first of all, it shouldn’t be that I didn’t play young players, it’s I didn’t play young players enough, because we played a lot of young players — Kenneth Faried, Kosta Koufos, Evan Fournier at the end of the year, Ty Lawson. And I never had a meeting where that disappointment, in that part of it, was voiced to me. I never had that meeting. I heard through whispers. I’m sorry that 57 wins doesn’t make you happy.’ [...] 
On his relationship with the city and fans: 
‘I think the most important thing, whenever it all settles, is many fun chapters of coaching, and the most fun was the last 15-20 months with a team that is very young but also capable of being very good. Ten days ago, we were fired up, excited about the summer. My 8 ½ years, by far this is the most soulful connection I’ve had to the game of basketball, the city and the excitement of the city. A lot of it has to do what we’ve gone through. Initially you get Allen Iverson and that doesn’t work out, then you get Chauncey Billups and we’re near the top of the mountain. Then I get cancer. Then we come back. And so much of this stuff is all good – except we don’t win in the playoffs. I’m not going to stand here and justify my (playoff) record, I’m disappointed in my record.’”



Friday, June 7, 2013

Iguodala ponders future in Denver

With the recent departures of their GM and Head Coach, the direction of the franchise is unknown.  Yesterday after the firing of George Karl, soon to be free agent Andre Iguodala was reached via text by a member of the media and was asked how Karl firing would effect his free agent decision.  Iguodala responded with the following text:

"Good question. Need some time to let it sink in."

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Karl out as Coach

The Denver Nuggets and head coach George Karl have parted ways after Karl wanted to extend his contract with the franchise and the franchise declined.  Karl had just won the NBA's Coach of the Year Award a few short weeks ago.


Monday, June 3, 2013

Karl's future unknown

With the departure of Denver Nugget's GM Masai Ujiri to the Toronto Raptors, the immediate future of George Karl is unknown.  What is known is that the Los Angeles Clippers have interest in Karl but have yet to ask for permission from the Nuggets to speak to him.  Karl is under contract for next season with the Nuggets and guided the Nuggets to 57 wins this past season while also winning the NBA's Coach of the Year award.


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

NBA Coach of the Year Results: Top 10

1.  George Karl

2.  Erik Spoelstra

3.  Mike Woodson

4.  Gregg Popovich

5.  Frank Vogel

6.  Lionel Hollins

7.  Mark Jackson

8.  Tom Thibodeau

9.  Kevin McHale

10.  P.J. Carlesimo


And the NBA Coach of the Year is.........


Monday, April 1, 2013

And the NBA Coaches of the Month Are.....




Friday, February 1, 2013

And the NBA Coaches of the Month Are......



Sunday, January 13, 2013

Karl talks Sonics

With reports floating in NBA circles that the Maloofs are close to finalizing a deal that would essentially move the Sacramento Kings to Seattle and give rise to the Sonics, former Sonics head coach George Karl recently shared his thoughts on the franchise that he led to the 1996 NBA Finals.

“I think it’s a great sports city,” Karl said. “I think it has an East Coast feel. I think sports is always going to be (secondary) because Seattle is a little bit of an individual city – outdoors and entrepreneurs. There’s just a lot of mental action there. I don’t know if it’s ever going to be a great sports city because of that. They have a lot of things on Saturdays and Sundays.”


Monday, October 1, 2012

Q&A: George Karl

Courtesy of Benjamin Hochman


Q: Can you describe your anticipation for this season?

A: We just had a summer of constant positive momentum. The Olympics were great. And then you get (JaVale) McGee signed and Andre (Miller) signed, both really important to our team. All our young guys had good summers — Gallinari had a good summer with the Italian national team, Timo (Mozgov) was kind of a superstar for Russia (at the Olympics). And of course, the (Andre) Iguodala trade was the (big) piece that makes us a better basketball team, though to get a good player you've got to give up good players. We'll miss Arron Afflalo. There will be some games in which we'll say, "I wish we had Arron out there." But in the end, we think we made a step forward, and hopefully a step to get into the top-eight teams in basketball, maybe a little bit further. Our goal in the next three to four years is to build this thing and make steps toward a championship.

Q: You'll likely start Ty Lawson at point guard, Iguodala at shooting guard, Gallinari at small forward and Kenneth Faried at power forward. What about center?

A: Training camp is going to tell me who plays. My idea right now is Mozgov would start with Faried and JaVale would stay with (reserve point guard) Andre Miller. But again, I don't (care) about starting lineups, and you guys are already stirring the pot. It's all about how many minutes you play, who you play with, how well you play and how we play (when you're on the court). Kosta Koufos is in the mix, too. Let's make sure you understand that. In the last 15-20 games of the season, when Timo got hurt, Kosta not only played well but good enough to get us to the playoffs.

Q: Why do Miller and McGee connect so well?

A: I think Andre has such a distinctive ability to see a play before it happens. And JaVale has such a large, athletic space to get the ball to, above the defense. So the lobs and spins and all that stuff, Andre has the courage to throw the ball — and he throws it very well.

Q: What is your response when people say the West is just a race for third place, with the Lakers and Thunder the top two teams?

A: What I basically say is — that's summer talk. You have two teams that probably have the most talented players, especially in their top seven, but it's summer talk. ... I have a lot of respect for both of those teams. ... But that doesn't mean we never thought we could overtake them. Our goal this summer was: How do we get better? And how do we move closer to the top-echelon teams?

Q: What is the specific goal for this season? How do you approach that with your team?

A: We've got to make a step (Denver finished sixth last season). We've got to make a step. Continually groom the team into the culture and mentality that we're here to win a championship. Is the process going to take one year? Three years? Five years? That's going to be determined, somewhat by us and somewhat by our competition.

Q: Is this the nucleus that can grow to compete for a title in coming years? Or do you need one more guy?

A: My feeling is, how you blend and fit everybody here, will determine how successful we'll be. (Executive) Masai (Ujiri's) job is to make us better. He's aware of his responsibility, and he's always going to be out there, trying to make us better. But I don't think we've had a discussion at all about changing the makeup of the team this year. There's a good chance that the 15 guys on the roster are probably going to be with us.

Q: Can you explain to the fans why a full training camp is so beneficial to the Nuggets?

A: There's a big bucket of talent there. How I figure out how it fits, that's one reason why I'm excited about having a full training camp. If we had a shorter camp (like last season after the lockout), I think you'd gravitate to your first successes. As where we can tinker in the exhibition season, see who plays well with whom and give it a two- to three-game experiment. Also, the same with philosophies of defense, how aggressive we can be. I think our offense right now is third fiddle, behind defense and figuring out rotations.

Q: Why is Iguodala such a good fit for your system?

A: I don't think there's any question that defense is what we need to get better at. I don't think we're a bad defensive team, but I don't think we're a top-notch defensive team. We gave away Kenyon Martin and some of the "A" defenders that we used to have, and last year we weren't good enough defensively. We get a guy who fits how we play — he's an athlete, loves to run, he's a play-maker, but also a top-10 defender in the game. So how we build our defense with a great defender who can (defend) point guard, shooting guard, small forward and probably power forward.

Q: You toldNBA.comthe season should be 62 games, not 82. Why do you think that?

A: I'm just saying, philosophically, why do we start in October? It seems like a roadblock. You've got World Series, football, college football. To me, I'm saying — start after Thanksgiving. And come on, man, we all know the injuries and fatigue and four games in five nights, it's hard to keep the stamina and intensity of the game.

Q: Which team is the best in basketball?

A: That's easy for me: the Miami Heat. They proved it. ... The one thing I don't like is that everybody seems to like us a lot more. We're becoming the darlings of the league — and I like being under the radar or people telling us we're going to be bad.



Wednesday, November 9, 2011

George Karl keeping busy

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Karl biding time while waiting for NBA to unlock doors