Well, all I can say, Randy, is that this was not always the case with Jackson.
Before he signed with the Kings, he sat by his phone until late November that year, so ANY of the other teams in the League could have signed him. He proved himself to the Kings and the rest of the League with his contributions, and he is still the one player I feel Petrie should have shown the ultimate loyalty to. But the Maloofs were facing that damned luxury tax problem and felt they could not afford him - that he played himself into a better contract then they could give him.
He looks like a hell of a bargain now, doesn't he?
What I liked best about him was his 'don't take any cr*p' attitude., from opponents nor his teammates. He had no problem telling Peja he was playing soft, or Bibby was not distributing the ball, or telling Webber he was being outplayed so what was he going to do about it. He was a coach out on the floor and I have always felt the best teams always have a player coach somewhere on the roster.
That has mostly been true except with the Lakers, who had Phil Jackson, I guess, and did not need anyone else to do it.