TrueBlueJay wrote:McDermott stands for Mid Season COY
sciencejay wrote:In the presser yesterday, McD and Wop made it clear that Wop reinserted himself into the game. Mo said that the trainer rubbed ice on his knee after the original contact with Sumner and he did some squats (really!) and it felt much better. So he checked himself back in. He and McD had that kind of trust--when Mo felt like he was ready to go back in, he went. It's been this way all season. Mo made his own decision.
So those who blame McD should reevaluate their position. McD didn't even realize Mo checked himself back in, but when he did, he assumed that Mo and the trainer were in agreement that all was good. And then it wasn't. Retrospectively knowing the seriousness of the injury doesn't change the decision-making process that teams (coaches/players/medical staff) use to evaluate injuries on the fly and determine whether a player needs to be held out or not. As others said, Mo went down hard against Butler, but got up and was good to go.
It's easy to sit in an arm chair and criticize others. Often it makes the criticizer look foolish when all the facts come out.
cu blujs wrote:I don't think explaining will do any good. The guy is clearly a troll looking for a reaction. Put him on ignore and move on.
sciencejay wrote:FDS: maybe you've never encountered a coach/manager/boss that was an enabler of others' success rather than a micromanager? To me the situation is simple. McD has a tremendous relationship with each of his players and each member of his staff. Each player/staff member has a role, and each is trusted to execute his/her responsibilities without continuous oversight. In this case, a player was injured. The staff evaluated the injury and determine that it likely wasn't serious and that the player could return. The player checked it out himself, talked to the trainer and determined that he wanted to go back in. The trainer didn't alert McD to the possibility that it was serious because it did not appear to be (based upon his own physical evaluation and Watson's commentary on how the knee was feeling--he was able to do squats on it after all). And as he had done countless times previously, Wop checked himself back in. Then it went 'pop'. And the rest is history to be critiqued by all.
Again, knowing after the fact that the injury was more serious than it first appeared, doesn't make him negligent. If you were the coach, then maybe you would have acted differently. Maybe you would have (somehow) just known that this time it was different, and that you should personally evaluate the player yourself (even though you aren't a medical professional) to determine whether he should return or not.
I like the idea that McD recruits smart kids who he can trust to understand the team philosophy and enable them to get out there and execute. Each player has a stake in the team, not just themselves and their own numbers. I believe that creates a system where the ceiling can be higher. I'm in academic research, and I can say unequivocally that grad students that come in and take ownership of a project will be more successful than those who are given projects and have to be managed on a regular basis. I'm not saying there's no oversight, but you empower individuals to be successful, and then you let them go do it.
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