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Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

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  • Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

    I'm very curious to see where everyone lands on this with their explanations. I know for a fact that answer to this question won't be unanimous, so I'm hoping for some fascinating reasoning/arguments. We'll see!

  • #2
    Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

    Brown was great when he first came here, he along with the help of veteran player Byron Scott helped turned this team from perennial 1st round losers to a consistent elite team. So Brown will always have a special place in my heart.

    The end of Browns run here, he flat out gave up on our team, even he says he did. He says it's one of his biggest regrets as a coach.

    I believe Carlisle was just as much the head coach as Bird was after Brown left. Bird/Carlisle did a much better job with the same cast of players that Brown had.

    Carlisle also got more out of the Pistons the year before Brown took over. Brown's first season with the Pistons they were reeling and going nowhere. People were already questioning if getting rid of Carlisle was the right choice and if Brown was the right guy for that team. That was until Detroit had a 6'11 low post defensive and offensive stud gift wrapped and handed to them for NOTHING, yes I'm still bitter about that. After they acquired Sheed everything fell into place and they took off and the rest is history. Would they have continued to flop without acquiring Sheed, we'll never know.

    I would easily take Carlisle over Brown right now, 1994 Brown I'd take in a heartbeat. I don't think Brown is near the coach he once was.

    I made this short and to the point, I'm sure much better and more in depth analyst will take place. Hoop ducks and waits for the attacks to start flying.
    "Just look at the flowers ........ BANG" - Carol "The Walking Dead"

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

      I feel pretty strongly about Larry Brown as a coach. I think I’d have to in order to type out this lengthy passage from a book. But I feel we can learn a lot through stories, and so I will present this narrative pertaining to Larry’s coaching of the 1980 UCLA Bruins and their infamous championship run to the finals.

      The excerpt is taken from Keith Glass’s "Taking Shots" (pp. 40-43). I highly recommend this book to any basketball fan.

      Originally posted by Keith Glass
      After fourteen games, we were eight up and six down. At UCLA, that’s the same as being 0-14. Larry and I were leaving practice on the Friday night before our return engagement with Notre Dame and Digger Phelps. As we exited Pauley Pavilion, we were surprised to find about a hundred students in sleeping bags. We stopped to ask what was going on. We were informed that they always sleep out on the night before big games since the seating in the student section is on a first come, first serve basis. Larry never knew this, and I could see that this really touched him. He promised the students that if they were out there before the USC game in two weeks that we would sleep out there with them.

      You have to understand that Larry was not what they were used to at UCLA. He was different in many ways from the coaches that preceded him. Coach Bartow and Coach Cunningham were excellent coaches, but not in Larry’s mold. Even Coach Wooden had a laid-back image, at least, though I doubt that that was really the case.

      This incident has always (at least to me) marked the beginning of our turnaround at UCLA that season. The next afternoon, on national TV, we trounced Notre Dame and somewhat avenged our earlier tough loss at South Bend. We won by thirty-something, but it was the way we won that was important. Our young kids were starting to blend in with Kiki and James Wilkes, and we were really defending. It wasn’t that we caught fire at this point, but we were now a tough out.

      Word of our encounter with the hundred or so students spread as well. Sure enough, the night before the USC game, the students were there, and they were daring Larry to keep to his word. They didn’t have to. Larry was planning on it all along. The only difference was that this time there weren’t a hundred students – it was more like three thousand. Larry and I got air mattresses, and Larry ordered out for about three thousand donuts and coffee from Stan’s Donut Shop in Westwood. Larry Brown was about to become a cult figure in Los Angeles.

      He kept up his attacks on everybody, but now he did it with a purpose. When I told him that the band was really upset with his criticisms, he was genuinely surprised. Rather than leave it there, he went to band practice. He told them that they didn’t understand, that we really needed them. They were important to our success. I don’t think any former UCLA head basketball coach attended band practices.

      The following day during our JV game, I heard a commotion, and the band launched into the UCLA fight song. Larry, in shirtsleeves, had come out to watch our game, and the four thousand fans erupted. This would continue, only louder, for the rest of the season. The student section went wild for him. Every time he showed his face, they went crazy. All the fans, alumni, and students stayed for the whole game, no matter what. And they got there on time, too. Whatever happened on or off the court the rest of the season, it seemed to further magnify Larry as “The Man.” In our last home game of the season, with an NCAA tournament bid possibly in the balance, Larry went back to the seniors for their final home game. He didn’t just start them for show. They played. He started Kiki and James as usual, went back to Darrell Allums in the middle, and started Gig Sims, the backup center at one forward and Chris Lippert, who never played, at the other.

      The students went nuts. The seniors played their asses off. We lost at the buzzer on a thirty-five-foot shot. The NCAA tournament, which Larry Farmer had not-so-jokingly referred to as the “UCLA Invitational Tournament,” was now in serious jeopardy, which was unheard of at UCLA. We went back solemnly to the locker room. We heard a lot of shouting and commotion outside on the court. Eight thousand students – the entire student section – were standing and cheering and wouldn’t leave until Larry came out to speak to them. He did. Farms just shook his head in disbelief. He had seen many major events at this place, but never anything like this. Think of it this way: We had come in run the program into the ground, and Larry was becoming the most popular coach they had ever seen.

      We were now 15-9, with our last two games being Pac-10 games on the road at California and Stanford – not easy, especially on the road. We won both to finish at 17-9 for the year. The NCAA, however, only seeded forty-eight teams in those days – not today’s sixty-four. A 17-9 record was shaky at best. If it weren’t for the past glory of UCLA, I doubt that we would have been the forty-seventh team invited, as we were. Thanks, Coach Wooden.

      From a purely basketball point of view, let’s examine how things got turned around. Larry had always been a passing-game type of coach in the pros. In all of his stops along the way in his coaching career, that has always been his preference. In fact, as a player, Larry was the all-time leader in assists for the ABA. And he is the linear coaching descendant of Dr. Naismith – via Phog Allen and Dean Smith at Kansas.

      The passing game is designed to allow players to make plays. There aren’t many rules. You can pass and cut, pass and screen off the ball, or pass and replace yourself. Pretty basic stuff. It was the offense he installed at UCLA. The only trouble was that we discovered we didn’t have passing-game type players. We did not have the type of guys who could make a play for themselves or anybody else.

      We had some shooters, but not creative guys. We had no true center. Mike Sanders, who I would later represent throughout his eleven-year NBA career, was a center in name only. He was not an inside presence. He was as great a kid to coach as there ever was, but his game was defending bigger guys and drilling fifteen-foot jumpers. We called Mike “Slew” after the famous racehorse Seattle Slew because he was a thoroughbred. He listened to everything all of us told him, and we realized that he was trying to please the four of us and was being driven crazy. Larry told us to leave Mike alone – “Slew” was his.

      Recognizing that this was not the way this team should play, Larry approached Farms about Caoch Wooden’s high-post offense. One of the many keys to being a great coach is the ability to recognize and, therefore, change according to the type of players you have. Larry Brown is a great coach. He has his faults as far as actually fulfilling the lengths of his contracts, and that leads to questions regarding his loyalty, but no one can ever dispute that he was and is among the finest coaches in the country.

      He realized in the middle of the season that our players were better suited for a more structured offense. He decided to try Coach Wooden’s UCLA high post. The high-post offense enabled our shooters who were having trouble getting their own shots to get the ball where they were comfortable and score. Kiki, Wilkes, Sanders, Holton, and Foster started to thrive because they knew when and where they were going to shoot the ball. When you had Kiki, Rod, and Slew coming off a double low screen for a jumper, it was “money.”

      In addition, as well as with all Larry’s teams, everybody defended. (Well, maybe not Kiki.) Everybody also knew their role. Holton became a tenacious defender and a converted point guard. The Rocket scored on everybody, and Kiki basically carried us offensively.

      It was in this image that we entered the tournament.
      Last edited by sweabs; 12-14-2009, 02:01 AM.

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      • #4
        Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

        No poll?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

          I'm not sure how you judge something like this to be honest with you. Winning % is not really a fair way to go as Brown has often taken over teams that were not very good and built them up. Championships would not be fair either as Brown got his on a team Carlisle built.

          X & O's would be very hard to determine because ony Tbird would have the core knowledge to understand that stuff.

          However the only thing that I am going to say, and believe me I know it is purely my opinion and I may be wrong, but I think Larry Brown is the best in game adjuster I have ever seen.

          However as was stated before I think Larry's time really has come and gone in a way.

          Rick is still a fairly young couch although he does have a very good winning record.

          Both men grate on their players although Brown is legendary for this so while Rick has issues with this I don't think he is on Larry's level.

          However off the court I have never heard that anyone anywhere really had a problem with Larry that worked in the front office. As you know that can not be said for Rick.

          Both are really good coach's though and I wish we would have had Rick here without Jermaine.


          Basketball isn't played with computers, spreadsheets, and simulations. ChicagoJ 4/21/13

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

            I will say this: I became a Pacer fan in 1994.

            I have never lived anywhere near Indiana and didn't know anything about the players. But I became an instant fan after watching the Ps a couple times on TV.

            It wasn't until Larry Bird became coach a few years later that I had an epiphane: I was not a Pacer fan, I was a Larry Brown fan.

            But, the Bird teams performed well, and by then I was deeply entrenched in the soap opera that is the Pacer basketball franchise. So I have remained a big fan.

            But those Larry Brown Pacer teams exhibited some of the best fundamental awareness and smart basketball that I have ever seen on an NBA court. It's the best coaching I've ever seen in the pros.
            "Look, it's up to me to put a team around ... Lance right now." —Kevin Pritchard press conference

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

              To me, if Larry Brown would have stayed in college he would have been seen as one of the greatest ever. To me, he is the greatest coach or at least top 5 across all levels.

              I make the college statement because you get fresh players every 4 years and that's about how long Larry can coach a group before it explodes.

              I think Larry Brown's track record is almost untouchable. His coaching has a lingering effect as well. Look at the Pistons, he taught them to play the right way, they stayed in that mode for years after they left, the Pacers, the same thing. He took a struggling Clipper team to the playoffs. He won an NCAA championship. I mean I don't think it's even a contest.

              He has his shortcomings, he needs a strong GM to not bow to his every personnel whim and he has a short shelf life.

              I give him a pass on NY, that was just a complete and utter mess. I don't think any coach could've done something in that situation.

              As for Carlise, I think he's probably one of the very best Assistant Coaches in the NBA, if not the best. I think this translate into an above average Head Coach.

              In my eyes, it's just not fair, cuz I see Brown as the very best.

              I've said this before, but i think there's probably only 4-5 coaches that are true difference makers and the rest fall in that average to slightly above average level. Sprinkle in a few guys that are just bad. That's the NBA, it's a players league.

              More on Coach Brown, if he stayed coaching college all these years, I think he would be seen right below Coach K, at this point in time. Just my opinion.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                Originally posted by Speed View Post
                More on Coach Brown, if he stayed coaching college all these years, I think he would be seen right below Coach K, at this point in time. Just my opinion.
                Who's your top five on this college coach list?
                "Look, it's up to me to put a team around ... Lance right now." —Kevin Pritchard press conference

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                  Originally posted by McKeyFan View Post
                  Who's your top five on this college coach list?
                  Don't laugh, but off the top of my head

                  Bob Knight-historically
                  Coach K-all time molder of men
                  Roy Williams-doesn't play the AAU butt kissing game
                  Rick Majerus-I got to see some of his practices at Ball State
                  Bob Huggins-troubled guy and historically a jackass, but he really knows the game

                  I know Dean Smith, John Thompson, Bill Self, Izzo, Calipari (not a fan) are not on this list and should be, I guess, or Boeheim, maybe. I know Huggins probably doesn't deserve to be on the list and Knight and Majerus aren't coaching, but these are guys I like.

                  Who are yours?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                    Wooden
                    Dean Smith
                    Coach K
                    Knight
                    Brown
                    "Look, it's up to me to put a team around ... Lance right now." —Kevin Pritchard press conference

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                      Originally posted by McKeyFan View Post
                      Wooden
                      Dean Smith
                      Coach K
                      Knight
                      Brown

                      Right Brown, but I didn't include him since most of his career was in the pros, good group though. Wooden is for sure, he just predates me by too much.

                      I guess for this thread, my point is, it's not even close with Carlise.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                        It's very tough to compare but interesting.

                        As said before you really can't just go by wins.

                        They are both very different I think it depends on what you look for.

                        Brown is a teacher and teaches mostly defense and rebounding.

                        Rick Carlise is more of an Xs and Os guy IMO. He is very good with that side of coaching and can put things on a clipboard and make it work on the court.

                        I don't really know who is better but i'll put it like this I think Brown would be better on the college level and I think Rick is better on the NBA level. Granted you could argue that last part.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                          Larry Brown took Rip and Chauncey and made them much more complete players, even Ben to an extent. He also actually reigned in Rasheed Wallace.. The idea that he just won with Carlisle's formula is silly.

                          It wasn't about being the team everyone loved, it was about beating the teams everyone else loved.

                          Division Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 1989, 1990, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
                          Conference Champions 1955, 1956, 1988, 2005
                          NBA Champions 1989, 1990, 2004

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                          • #14
                            Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                            Originally posted by Kstat View Post
                            Larry Brown took Rip and Chauncey and made them much more complete players, even Ben to an extent. He also actually reigned in Rasheed Wallace.. The idea that he just won with Carlisle's formula is silly.
                            Well in my defense I didn't mean that he used Carlisle formula, just some of the system that was in place. In other words Larry didn't really come in and change everything up, however he improved on what was there.


                            Basketball isn't played with computers, spreadsheets, and simulations. ChicagoJ 4/21/13

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Larry Brown versus Rick Carlisle - Who is the better coach?

                              I think Larry Brown is a genius as a coach. Brown teaches players how to win and how to play basketball. Carlisle is more of an NBA coach in that he puts his players in positions to be effective. Rick is great at not asking his players to do more than they are capable of doing. Brown is great at getting his players to do more than they are capable.

                              If I want a coach to teach players to be better there is no other coach in the history of the NBA better than Brown. if i want a coach to devise an offense and a defense system, X's & O's to fit the players I think Rick is great at that.

                              Example: Brown's team often struggle early in the season because he uses training camp to teach his players how to play basketball. Rick in training will teach his players how to run a certain offensive play or how to defend the pick and roll. Typically Rick's teams are more ready to start the season than Larry's teams are.

                              Brown is one of the best coaches ever to coach.

                              Brown is also fantastic at getting his players to become a team - it might take awhile, but he forms them molds them into a team. There were several excellent articles near the end of the '94 season about what he did to make that pacers team into a wining and together team.
                              Last edited by Unclebuck; 12-14-2009, 01:40 PM.

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