Actually i was more focused on this statement...i should have been more clear
That type of nonsense is what brings teams down and who needs that.
Though his comments concerning comparing rodman and bynum are interesting, it seems his requirement for conformity is inversely proportional to how good a player is?
I wonder if he thinks Rasheed Wallace should conform?
I don't think 'group mind' obedience is what makes a team successful or unsuccessful...i think it's an antiquated archaic backwards way of thinking to require conformity...if Bynum wanted to see his own doctors for HIS KNEE, that's his right.
Also, Phil Jackson doesn't run or own the lakers, the buss familiy does, regardless of which on phil jackson is sleeping with and bynum seemed to be motivated by one of the buss family and is still pretty young....i think there's more to this than bynums 'conforming' to what phil wants.
You don't think 'group mind' obedience is what makes a team successful or unsuccessful? Do you know ANYTHING about basketball, or have you been jerking our chain all this time?
Definition of "team" - a cooperative unit (especially in sports). A group of people ...linked in a common purpose.
What you are losely calling a "group mind" obedience is what makes a team conform to an offensive or defensive game plan. Which is where players like Brown fail, and where players like Bynum, who apparently is not around the "team" very much, would have a hard time conforming to what the rest of the team is doing by not being there.
That "antiquated archaic backwards way of thinking to require conformity" on a team has worked out pretty well for hundreds of years. Sorry to hear you think it is a waste of time. But personally, watching five players lurching around the court without conformity, while being a bit confusing to opponents, might be a bit awkward to watch after a while.
And conformity regarding seeing specific doctors, especially sports doctors, can be even more unnerving. Sports doctors are specialist - often trendsetters in their fields. To not see your own team doctor, as this case shows, has led to the team not really knowing the status of Bynum's knee, or what to expect from it once he comes back. That makes no sense to any sports' team conformity and is just plain stupid to consider by the Lakers AND Jackson. But mostly, it appears Bynum is not with the team and is not working out with the team and is not conforming to what Jackson would need from a team member.
Please tell us how my 'antiquated' way of thinking regarding conformity hurts the team effort more then what you are suggesting?