I’m starting to come around on Mike Brown coaching the Lakers. Sure, the enormous pressure makes it a tough task, but he doesn’t sound intimidated:
“Maybe there will be a day where I’ll look back and say, ‘What did I do?’, or, ‘That was a lot harder than I thought,’ †Brown said. “But I was excited about the Lakers and the opportunity. I know and understand how it can be daunting to people because of the comments that people have made to me during the course of it.
“I’m looking forward to this challenge. I think this is a very good team. I think this team is extremely hungry because of the way it ended for them last year in their minds and their hearts. They feel like they’re better than that. The motivation is there. They have a history of knowing how to win.â€
Brown’s right. The Lakers are should be much better than the team that embarrassed themselves against Dallas. My initial reaction — “Mike Brown, Lakers, WHAAA?!†— was mostly to do with the way it happened and a bit of doubt that the players, specifically Kobe Bryant, would buy into his system. If they weren’t listening to Phil Jackson, why would they listen to Brown?
Thinking about it, though, it would be insane if they didn’t buy in. It’d be more surprising and more disappointing than the playoff collapse. Kobe must hate that they aren’t the favorites coming into this season. Pau’s got to prove last year’s poor playoff performance was an anomaly. After that sweep, this team shouldn’t need Brown, or anyone, to rally them.
We all know the other question about Brown: his offense. Even if the Lakers routinely abandoned the triangle, it was unstoppable when run properly. When L.A. began its coaching search I hoped it’d turn to Rick Adelman or stick with the triangle under Brian Shaw. Brown’s offense was definitely underrated in Cleveland, but it’s fair to wonder what exactly this team’s playbook is going to look like. It’s encouraging, however, that he’s been saying for a while that feeding Gasol and Bynum in the post will be a priority. Also encouraging is that he’s been preparing for this job for 15 months:
“I was intrigued with this job,” noted Brown. “And you know, I’m not one to talk about [or] look at jobs that are already filled and so it was common knowledge that Phil was going to step down. Early on. Even if a job is filled, you may watch teams and say, ‘I would do this, I would do that.’
“But this one in particular, because you knew Phil was going to walk away at the end of the year. I really watched it and studied it and you’re excited about the team because of the different players and so on and so forth… I knew I wanted to coach this year and if I had an opportunity, which I felt that I would have during the year, that I was going to take what I felt was the best opportunity.”
Via Mike Brown Has Been Ready To Coach The Lakers Since 2010, 10/20/11
Apparently Brown and his assistants have completed their offensive playbook. You already know he’s obsessive about watching film and he’s going to take care of the defensive side of the ball. If I was a Lakers fan, I’d be worried about depth, the PG spot, and Kobe staying healthy far more than I’d be worried about coaching. If they’re going to redeem themselves for last year’s exit, buying in is just the start.






