Natebishop3
Don't tread on me!
- Joined
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If a team hired a male assistant, who had extensive basketball experience but not in the NBA, except as an intern, no one would question the hire.
The Spurs hired a female assistant, who has extensive basketball experience but not in the NBA, except as an intern, but people question the hire.
And insist it has nothing to do with sexism.
Personally, I wish there were more coaches that had a lot of coaching experience. So I wish the first woman coach in the NBA was someone with an extensive background in coaching. I find that coaches who have spent time working their way up the chain (high school, college, NBA) usually have the best minds for the game. Most of the people who jump directly from playing into coaching, usually aren't very good. They might have the leadership quality that a coach requires, but they don't seem to have the x's and o's that the really good coaches possess.
With that said, the current trend in the NBA seems to be former players starting as assistant coaches and then working their way into a head coaching gig, so I really see no problem at all with a woman taking that same route.
