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NBA coaches fail to challenge tests – and this is the cost of big games

If I were the President of the United States, I would do the first thing …

We all have boasted pie-in-in-shiki. But let’s be more realistic.

If I were the coach of an NBA team, I would do the first thing …

Wow, how can I narrow it? Okay, I am a …

The NBA playoffs have demonstrated a new problem coach, which needs to be addressed immediately before losing a larger game.

Issue: Challenges.

The two aspects of what was seen as a coach’s dream has proved to be disturbing.

First, the coaches have taken care of the risk-to-inam ratio of challenging a call completely.

And secondly, when it comes to this new concept, the players are clules.

Let’s start with the latter …

Recently saw a pickup basketball game? To drive. Missed shot. Dishonesty. No it was not. Yes it was…

time and time again.

This is what an NBA game resembles now. Except for a pickup game, where complaints are made to the opposing player, and in the first NBA competitions where the referee was the goals of oral attacks, the players are now shouting at their own coaches at the highest level of the game.

The NBA rules only allow a game for the challenge of a coach, honored with each other with each other if the first was successful. When failed, the team not only loses the right to challenge the rest of the game, but also loses a timeout.

Some people will argue a bad call in the first minute of a game, possibly harmful as a bad call in the last minute. These people should stay to become President.

In the final count during the regular session, 1,708 calls were challenged.

On 1,080 occasions, the coach team was rewarded with some foul shots, perhaps a basket, or perhaps an additional possession. Yippee, you won.

On 628 occasions, the coach lost the right to challenge one of his seven timeouts and now. Uh oh, it was a very big defect.

This is 63.2 percent success rate. In other words, originally on the free-thro line gianis Antateoconampo.

Hmm … perhaps this is why so many coaches roll dice on relatively low percentage cheese. They clearly think that Gianis is a better foul shooter, as much as he is really.

I digest

The worrying fact as a low success rate is that 229 of 1,708 challenges were made in the first quarter.

Uh, coach, a clue is found. Nothing can happen in the first quarter. Or the second quarter, for that case. And perhaps not even the third quarter.

No, when it can have the ability to advance the ball in the last second of a winning game. Or worse, the ability to ask for a second look when your man clearly fouls-but no calls-which appeared as a game-defeat shot.

The fact that 27.9 percent of the first quarter challenges was unsuccessful, only increases the stupidity of challenging an early call. The failed rate in the second (33.2 percent) and third (32.3 percent) quarters is worse.

Coaches should be more smarter than this, not them? Yes they do.

But it brings us who is actually strengthening these terrible decisions: player.

When Labron James asks you to challenge a collision, he traveled for a missed paste on the first possession of the game, you challenge the call.

i understand that. But I do not understand that at the same time. Because everyone thinks they are Lebron when it comes to receiving a shaft on a bad call.

The coach needs to be in charge, which brings me back …

If I were an NBA coach, I would have implemented this rule first:

You ask me to challenge a call and you are wrong, you are for the night.

This is equal to the man who brought basketball into a pickup game: you meet a dishonesty on my face, I am taking my ball and going home. Game over.

It takes the cool things down.

This new composition gave indoor intelligence to the new depth in Game 1 between Warriors and Rocket.

When Brandin Podzamsky crashed in Amen Thompson in a three -digit game with the remaining 6:33 last Sunday, several rockets came to defense their teammate, argued to challenge the foul call on the Houston Guard with coach Ima Udoka.

Podzamsky also looked at the sideline and demanded a challenge … He was not only looking at his own coach, he was also pointing for Udoka, going to him that the warrior thought would be an expensive mistake.

Udoka bit. He challenged and lost.

And will you not know it? On the next possession of Warriors, the ball drumond went out of the border out of Green, but the Golden State received a call. A clear mistake, but … no challenges left.

Warriors scored eight consecutive points to take a commanding lead, while Udoka did not have a very necessary timeout. Why? Because in view of his gaff, he had only one left and he wanted to save it for the end.

Seriously, basketball fans. Your game is submerged at this level.

If I am coaching, I promise you that I will be ready for a challenge.

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