Byron Scott

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  • ex carrabba fan
    I'll thank him for you
    • Oct 2004
    • 32744

    #1

    Byron Scott

    Last night, as the Lakers were throttling the point guardless Grizzlies, I was looking ahead to the game against the surging Hornets [tonight]. I was thinking that after Phil calls it quits, I want Byron Scott to be the successor. What he's doing with the Hornets, and their rail thin team with only one All-Star is very very impressive. Ironically I just came across an article on Scott and his thoughts on returning to Los Angeles. It's a great read.

    Scott no longer blinded by Hollywood lights

    As Byron Scott kept notes under Pat Riley and Larry Brown, the biggest coaching seat in Los Angeles was always in the back of his mind.

    He wanted to be a coach.

    He wanted to go home again.

    As an Inglewood kid raised in the shadows of the Fabulous Forum, the Showtime running mate for Magic Johnson, there would turn out to be one more connection that could’ve delivered Scott to the Staples Center. Eleven years ago, Kobe Bryant had come to the Lakers and Jerry West brought Scott back to mentor him. Bryant insists that Scott taught him his most important lessons on professionalism.

    “As long as Kobe is there, you would think about that job because of the relationship I had with him,” Scott said.

    As much as a part of the New Orleans Hornets coach will be a Laker for life, the strangest thing has happened in his four years with the most fragile franchise in the sport: Out of the rubble, and losing and moving boxes, Scott has come to an improbable truth: His dream job found him.

    The Lakers play the Hornets on Wednesday night in New Orleans, two startling candidates for the Western elite colliding on terrific tears. These are good young teams, threatening to be something serious this season. Scott never did want to see Kobe leave the Lakers, and even considered offering some of that old, big brother advice over the summer.

    “There were times when I thought that I should give him a call, but I knew he was going to be OK,” Scott said. “Once the season started, all the other stuff was going to die down and Kobe would be Kobe on the court. One thing about him is that he’s able to focus, able to play great, under the craziest of situations of any athlete I’ve ever seen.”

    Outside of Phil Jackson, maybe Scott would’ve been the most worthy candidate to command the respect of Bryant. Nevertheless, Jackson left in 2004, returned a year later, and with the development of Andrew Bynum, appears determined to chase his 10th title into the foreseeable future. Back then, the residue of Scott’s firing in New Jersey made him barely a blip in the search for Jackson’s successor.

    There had been such an unfair movement to distance Scott and the Nets’ unprecedented success. When the Lakers didn’t want him in 2004, the Hornets did and maybe it was the best thing to ever happen to him. Most considered this a dismal job, and Hurricane Katrina compounded the program’s degree of difficulty.

    Still, the reclamation of this franchise has gone arm-and-arm with that of Byron Scott’s coaching reputation. The Hornets are 23-11 with the worst home court in the NBA, with no bench and, best of all, no excuses. For the greatness of Chris Paul, these Hornets are such a reflection of Scott’s resolve and toughness. There’s a purity of Scott’s character, an honesty that so clearly spills onto the floor with them.

    “As much as I love the Lakers organization, I can see myself with these guys here until Chris (Paul), Tyson (Chandler) and David (West) are ready to retire,” Scott said. “I’d like to be the Jerry Sloan here, and have a run like he did with Stockton and Malone. I would love to be here and see these guys through winning a championship.

    “A few years ago, I thought a lot about going back to coach the team that I grew up with, that I loved, but that’s not the case anymore. For me, this has become a dream job.”

    Under Scott, the Nets had gone to consecutive NBA Finals in ’02 and ’03. Halfway through ’04, he was gone. For all of its years of futility, the franchise’s transformation had been so sudden, so unexpected, no one understood how to handle success. Jason Kidd had loyalties to assistant coaches, not Scott. The locker room largely followed Kidd; where he went, so did they. Eventually, there were staff and players scrambling to carry out agendas, pushing power plays, and with a 22-20 record, Nets president Rod Thorn fired Scott.

    In the wake of the Shaq-Kobe divorce, Jackson left the Lakers that spring in ’04 and Jerry Buss and Mitch Kupchak never seriously considered Scott. Scott had Magic and Kobe on his side, but there had been so much damage done to his professional reputation – attacks on his work ethic, suggestions that he was merely a figure-head coach – that no momentum grew to bring him back to Los Angeles.

    As hell broke loose, Scott was remarkable in the center. He didn’t try to win the public-relations battle. He didn’t try to gather his guys in the press. He didn’t fight back. Coaches can be the most paranoid people because they see conspiracies everywhere. Someone is always out to get them. Mostly, it’s imagined, but in this instance, with Scott, they were truly out to get him. His dignity was unblemished.

    “Believe me, I heard everything that was going on in Jersey and the one thing I told myself was that I was not going to stoop that low and become a part of that stuff,” he said. “The bottom line is that I knew I could coach. The first thing I asked from George Shinn was that I need to have full control over who I hire. I just didn’t want anyone on my coaching staff that I didn’t OK. I wanted to pick guys who I knew well, and who I knew that I could trust.”

    Looking back, Scott isn’t too stubborn to think that the winning disguised his mistakes on the job in Jersey. There was so much Riley in his style, so much bravado, that he knows his relationships with players suffered. Sometimes, Scott would say too much in public and too little in private.

    “At times I went too overboard,” Scott said. “I was too much of a disciplinarian. My communication is better now.”

    Paul will tell you that he loves playing for Scott, that they connected from the moment the Hornets drafted him. Scott has turned this team over to him, the way that Riley did with Magic. Yes, Scott still calls plays when there’s something he wants done, but his seasons in Showtime ingrained in him that the NBA belongs to the players, and too often the suits on the sidelines spoil the spontaneity of the genius.

    “The more freedom and trust you give them, the better they’re going to play,” Scott said.

    Among the Western Conference elite teams, they’ll privately tell you this: They’ll be even more fearful of this team in the playoffs if the Hornets can make a couple deals to improve the bench. Scott simply says that his bench has been “terrible,” and knows that he’s playing Paul, Chandler and West far too many minutes.

    “The minutes worry the hell out of me,” Scott said. “It worries me in the long run. In March and April, are they going to be so tired that they won’t have anything left?”

    Absorbing salary is always an issue for this cash-strapped team, last in the league in attendance. Yet they have such an opportunity to make a move in the West now, to elevate closer to the elite. The Lakers come to town on Wednesday and they’re as hot as the Hornets. This is the kind of night, the kind of packed house, they don’t get much in New Orleans. The people come to see LeBron James and they come for Kobe Bryant.

    “I understand that’s how it goes here now,” Scott said, “but maybe they’ll see us, see our team, and want to come back again.”

    The Hornets are still a tough sell in New Orleans, but the old Showtime shooting guard bought into it all. His team, his guys, his reclamation project. Here, Byron Scott earned back his good coaching name. No one can dare take it away again.
    __________________________________________________ ________________


    A couple points from the article-

    1. What the hell is up with the Hornets' attendance? I could've sworn they were once a literal Hornets' nest for visiting teams. Fans pack the Superdome for the Saints, but this year the Hornets have been playing in front of a ton of empty seats and it's a damn shame.

    2. Jason Kidd? Anyone know why he had issues with Scott? Two consecutive Finals appearances, and the next year Scott is fired. Classy stuff. That had to do with Kid.
  • 23
    yellow
    • Sep 2002
    • 66469

    #2
    Re: Byron Scott

    The Lakers should've offered the guy the job when he was sitting in his bedroom waiting for them to call instead of stalling on him for Phil.

    Scott would've been nice in LA and the team would've been totally devoid of alot of the drama that they dealt with.

    Comment

    • catcatch22
      Or should I
      • Sep 2003
      • 3378

      #3
      Re: Byron Scott

      Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
      1. What the hell is up with the Hornets' attendance? I could've sworn they were once a literal Hornets' nest for visiting teams. Fans pack the Superdome for the Saints, but this year the Hornets have been playing in front of a ton of empty seats and it's a damn shame.
      Wasn't that oklahoma city where the building was packed.

      Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
      2. Jason Kidd? Anyone know why he had issues with Scott? Two consecutive Finals appearances, and the next year Scott is fired. Classy stuff. That had to do with Kid.
      When the firing happened, many people here in the new york area agreed that the loss of the wizard coach (who was supposedly the brains behind their extremely effective princeton halfcourt offense) was the reason for their slow start in 04. Kidd complained many a time that Byron couldn't coach and once was said to say that TJ (his son) could coach a better game than Scott.

      Back then Scott had great assistants and used their expertise heavily. Unfortunately Scott was not ashamed to use the resources he had behind him to help him coach the team. This hurt his aura to the team, making him seem as a "figure head" rather than the leader.

      Comment

      • ex carrabba fan
        I'll thank him for you
        • Oct 2004
        • 32744

        #4
        Re: Byron Scott

        Yeah Dre, I was definitely shocked reading that the Lakers weren't even considering him at all. I'm definitely thankful PJ decided to give it another go in L.A., but I still believe Scott won't be able to say no once Jackson leaves town for good. He's an L.A. guy through and through and especially if Kobe still has some in the tank, they'll be reunited if the opportunity presents itself.

        Comment

        • ex carrabba fan
          I'll thank him for you
          • Oct 2004
          • 32744

          #5
          Re: Byron Scott

          Originally posted by catcatch22
          Wasn't that oklahoma city where the building was packed.



          When the firing happened, many people here in the new york area agreed that the loss of the wizard coach (who was supposedly the brains behind their extremely effective princeton halfcourt offense) was the reason for their slow start in 04. Kidd complained many a time that Byron couldn't coach and once was said to say that TJ (his son) could coach a better game than Scott.

          Back then Scott had great assistants and used their expertise heavily. Unfortunately Scott was not ashamed to use the resources he had behind him to help him coach the team. This hurt his aura to the team, making him seem as a "figure head" rather than the leader.
          Interesting stuff. Well didn't the Hornets split their home games between OKC and N.O.'s? I believe that was the case.

          As far as the Kidd/Scott dynamic, it's simply amazing to me that those two couldn't get along. They seem like a match tailor made for a coach/player relationship. I'm happy that Scott got another shot at coaching, and was allowed to pick his OWN assistants in N.O.'s.

          Comment

          • jmood88
            Sean Payton: Retribution
            • Jul 2003
            • 34639

            #6
            Re: Byron Scott

            Originally posted by ex carrabba fan


            A couple points from the article-

            1. What the hell is up with the Hornets' attendance? I could've sworn they were once a literal Hornets' nest for visiting teams. Fans pack the Superdome for the Saints, but this year the Hornets have been playing in front of a ton of empty seats and it's a damn shame.
            People don't like Byron Scott. He has talked **** about New Orleans and clearly doesn't want to be in the city so he can go to LA if he wants.
            Originally posted by Blzer
            Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

            If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

            Comment

            • ex carrabba fan
              I'll thank him for you
              • Oct 2004
              • 32744

              #7
              Re: Byron Scott

              Originally posted by jmood88
              People don't like Byron Scott. He has talked **** about New Orleans and clearly doesn't want to be in the city so he can go to LA if he wants.
              Naw Mood, I don't think that's the case.

              “As much as I love the Lakers organization, I can see myself with these guys here until Chris (Paul), Tyson (Chandler) and David (West) are ready to retire,” Scott said. “I’d like to be the Jerry Sloan here, and have a run like he did with Stockton and Malone. I would love to be here and see these guys through winning a championship.

              “A few years ago, I thought a lot about going back to coach the team that I grew up with, that I loved, but that’s not the case anymore. For me, this has become a dream job.”

              What makes you say he wants to leave the city? Even if people "don't like Scott", that's not good enough reason to be the worst city in attendance. The Hornets are clearly a top team in the league, and are only going to get better once they can acquire more talent. They're young, and have the best point guard in the league. Are the ticket costs too high or something?

              Comment

              • DTX3
                Hall Of Fame
                • Jun 2003
                • 13022

                #8
                Re: Byron Scott

                Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
                Yeah Dre, I was definitely shocked reading that the Lakers weren't even considering him at all. I'm definitely thankful PJ decided to give it another go in L.A., but I still believe Scott won't be able to say no once Jackson leaves town for good. He's an L.A. guy through and through and especially if Kobe still has some in the tank, they'll be reunited if the opportunity presents itself.
                Thats if Mitch and Jerry, even offer him the job. I would've loved to see him brought in when Phil left, seeing Rudy Tomjanovich on the Lakers bench was ehh. With that being said, tonights game should be exciting.
                XBL: DTX3
                PSN: DTX987
                WII U: DodgerBlue760

                Comment

                • ex carrabba fan
                  I'll thank him for you
                  • Oct 2004
                  • 32744

                  #9
                  Re: Byron Scott

                  Originally posted by Makaveli
                  Thats if Mitch and Jerry, even offer him the job. I would've loved to see him brought in when Phil left, seeing Rudy Tomjanovich on the Lakers bench was ehh.
                  Well Rudy T. did have titles. I guarantee Scott's name will surface when Phil steps down. Look at what he's doing with the Hornets in that cities' circumstances.

                  Comment

                  • jmood88
                    Sean Payton: Retribution
                    • Jul 2003
                    • 34639

                    #10
                    Re: Byron Scott

                    Originally posted by ex carrabba fan
                    Naw Mood, I don't think that's the case.

                    “As much as I love the Lakers organization, I can see myself with these guys here until Chris (Paul), Tyson (Chandler) and David (West) are ready to retire,” Scott said. “I’d like to be the Jerry Sloan here, and have a run like he did with Stockton and Malone. I would love to be here and see these guys through winning a championship.

                    “A few years ago, I thought a lot about going back to coach the team that I grew up with, that I loved, but that’s not the case anymore. For me, this has become a dream job.”

                    What makes you say he wants to leave the city? Even if people "don't like Scott", that's not good enough reason to be the worst city in attendance. The Hornets are clearly a top team in the league, and are only going to get better once they can acquire more talent. They're young, and have the best point guard in the league. Are the ticket costs too high or something?
                    He said it in interviews when they were in Oklahoma City and talked about how he wished that they just stayed there instead of going back to New Orleans. That may not be the only reason but it's a big reason. You also have people who still don't have their money for their houses and would rather spend what little extra money they have on the Saints(who are a much bigger part of New Orleans) than the Hornets.
                    Originally posted by Blzer
                    Let me assure you that I am a huge proponent of size, and it greatly matters. Don't ever let anyone tell you otherwise.

                    If I went any bigger, it would not have properly fit with my equipment, so I had to optimize. I'm okay with it, but I also know what I'm missing with those five inches. :)

                    Comment

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