These young players all have tremendous potential, all any of them needed was playing time, and Cheeks is playing Calvin Booth and Kevin Ollie!
Kevin Ollie And Calvin Booth actually played more in the second half of the season (14 mpg combined) than they did in the first half of the season (12 mpg combined).
Which actually proves my point! The player getting the majority of the minutes now going to the young players was the guy who got traded, Kyle Korver. Once Cheeks didn't have him he went to his other vets instead of the young players, even though Stefanski told him to play the young ones.
A smart coach would have tried to develop Rodney Carney, realizing that his physical ability gives him twice the upside of a Kyle Korver. He would have never played Korver at the 4 spot if he was a smart coach!
It isn't fair to Kyle, but the Sixers would never have developed into the team they have if he wasn't traded. The blame lies with Cheeks, and the cure was Stefanski. Ed may have to get rid of Mo to get the Sixers to the next level. He just isn't the kind of a coach willing to take the risks necessary to develop his players potential.
In fairness to Cheeks, what really killed the Sixers were the referees, who haven't given the Sixers a fair shot the entire series. In the third and fourth quarters of last night's game, nearly every call went against the Sixers and for the Pistons, fouls weren't called that should have been. Calls that should have been charges were blocks if the Pistons were driving, and Calls that should have been blocks were charges when the Sixers were driving. Best thing Cheeks could have done was scream at the refs, and force them to make calls or throw him out. In that way he could get a fine and get to tell the papers how his team is getting shortchanged by the refs at every turn.
At the same time, Cheeks did nothing to help the Sixers at the end of the game, and allowed the Pistons to run out the clock. I saw no deliberate attempt to foul to stop the clock or give the Sixers a chance to get back into it, and I saw no hustle or desperation at the end. Simply a team that was going through the motions.